The Economics and Ethics of Private Property

Hans-Hermann Hoppe

Austrian economics puts private property at the center of its analysis of value, price, and exchange. Respect for private property is also implied by the fundamental moral principle, “Do not steal.”

Hans-Hermann Hoppe has devoted his life’s work to the economics and ethics of private property. This book collects some of Hoppe’s most important essays on this topic. Hoppe, a leading student and colleague of Murray Rothbard whose works have been translated into a dozen languages, explores the economic, ethical, sociological, and historical aspects of private property, showing how property rights are vital to all aspects of society: employment, interest, money, banking, trade cycles, taxes, public goods, war, imperialism, and the rise and fall of civilizations.

Barron’s writes that “Hoppe’s writings are like a laser beam.... Be prepared for arguments that push you beyond your limits.” Hoppe carefully and consistently draws out the implications of property rights, and the state’s violation of the private property order, for society and prosperity. The book is filled with insights that push the reader to imagine a fully free, private, and successful social and economic order.

The Economics and Ethics of Private Property by Hans-Hermann Hoppe

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Meet the Author
Hans-Hermann Hoppe
Hans-Hermann Hoppe

Hans-Hermann Hoppe is an Austrian school economist and libertarian/anarcho-capitalist philosopher. He is the founder and president of The Property and Freedom Society.

Hans-Hermann Hoppe

Block’s call for total war and the indiscriminate slaughter of innocent civilians in Gaza is the complete and uninhibited rejection and renunciation of the nonaggression principle that constitutes one of the very cornerstones of the Rothbardian system.

View Hans-Hermann Hoppe bio and works
References

(1993) Boston, MA: Kluwer. Auburn, AL: 2007