Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics - Single Articles

The Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics (QJAE) is a refereed journal that promotes the development and extension of Austrian economics and the analysis of contemporary issues in the mainstream of economics from an Austrian perspective..

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Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics
Displaying 241 - 260 of 496
Robert F. Mulligan

Time preference, one of the fundamental concepts of economics, is the ratio between the present values of present and future goods. Mises (1949) holds that time preference is the only reason 

Pierre Desrochers

Patents have a long history as a proxy for inventive activity.  Although these data lost ground in the early 1960s to other measures of technical innovation, they have once again become fashionable in the last decade. 

Mark Thornton

Recent events in the US — high unemployment, record federal deficits, and unprecedented financial distress — have raised serious doubts about the future of the dollar.

Richard Vedder

Margo concludes what Austrian economists have surmised all along, namely that the rise in real wages during this period very closely approximated the rise in worker productivity.

Lowell E. Gallaway Richard Vedder

It appears that the obvious intent of the recent paper by Professor Barnett and Professor Block (2006), “Gallaway and Vedder on Stabilization Policy,” is to reveal to the Austrian community

John P. Cochran

This article presents two alternative interpretations of the role of banks in the monetary transmission process. The interpretation based on the work of Mises, Hayek, and Rothbard leads to the conclusion that central banking and monetary policy are "generators of the business cycle." The other interpretation presents a Keynesian theory minus the liquidity preference theory of the rate of interest.

Murray N. Rothbard

Rothbard realizes that the economy is not competitive, that it is shot through with elements of monopoly. The left-wing Chamberlinians used this as a beautiful handle to combine with the Marxists

Salim Rashid
In 1998 I presented a paper which argued that no theory of money was possible—in the sense of there being a stable relationship between a few explanatory variables.
Art Carden

Profits and losses provide powerful incentives. This essay explores the roles of profits and entrepreneurs in a market economy. 

John P. Cochran

In a recent study, Keeler (2001) attempts to provide historical/empirical evidence for the Austrian business cycle theory by examining the effect of interest-rate changes on various components 

William Barnett II Walter Block

Selgin and White commence their defense of monetary systems with fractional-reserve banking, provided they are based on gold specie money.

David Sanz Bas

Hayek is seen as one of the main opponents of Keynes because of the debate about macroeconomics that they had in the early thirties. 

Gregory M. Dempster

In this article, we will attempt to demonstrate that the Austrian method of dealing with both theory and history is informed by its perspective on uncertainty as the core concept uniting the various characterizations of Austrian thought. 

Michael Brooks

In this paper I clarify the long-running debate between Block and Demsetz over the potential impact of psychic income on the Coase Theorem. Each of the protagonists appear to have erred on how to integrate

Alexandre Padilla

The insider trading debate traditionally discusses the pros and cons of insider trading and draws a conclusion about the desirability or undesirability of public regulation of insider trading. 

Philipp Bagus David Howden

Recognizing different types of savings allows for a more fruitful analysis of the business cycle. Sustainable investment activities must be financed by an equivalent amount of savings, both in length of availability and quantity. 

Robert F. Mulligan

Complexity, Risk, and Financial Markets completes Peters’s trilogy by presenting the underlying philosophical case for chaos theory, which turns out to be grounded on distinctively Austrian views 

Guido Zimmermann

In my opinion there is a reason why Austrian monetary policy views are largely not shared by the mainstream. It is not due to a grand conspiracy against Austrian scholars but due to their monocausal,

William Barnett II Walter Block

What sets Austrians apart from mainstream economists is methodology and consequent analyses. The first section contains an analysis of their methods, which are found wanting. 

Spencer J. Pack

This article argues that Murray Rothbard does indeed have scathing criticisms of Adam Smith in Rothbard's recent work on the history of economic thought.