Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics, vol. 21, no. 2, 2018

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
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Karl-Friedrich Israel

The Economic Theory of Costs contains valuable criticism of the standard neoclassical approach and some original ideas on how to develop causal-realist economics in the Mengerian tradition.

Mateusz Machaj

Machaj, a contributor to McCaffrey’s The Economic Theory of Costs, replies to Israel to clarify and develop his point on imputed value and price formation.

Mark Thornton

It is possible to have greater income equality and greater economic growth. It simply requires more free market policies and less government interventionism.

Several generations have benefited unknowingly from Mariana's courageous efforts to defend private property and freedom against the tyrants of his day.

G. P. Manish

Money, Interest and the Structure of Production covers a broad range of topics in a manner that is intellectually courageous, provocative, and thought provoking.

Juan de Mariana

Translation of the appendix to Juan de Mariana's most libertarian book De rege et regis institutione.

Carmen Elena Dorobăț

This an engaging and intriguing account of how global currencies, such as British sterling and the U.S. dollar, have risen to global dominance in the international monetary arena, and how currencies such as the Chinese renminbi could follow in their footsteps.

Alexandre Padilla

Austrian economics can shed new light on questions that scholars in other fields are interested in answering, questions that mainstream law and economics scholars might  refrain from tackling because they cannot be addressed using their preferred methodology.

Jason Morgan

The Earth’s climate is extraordinarily complex. We need facts and dispassionate interpretation not quacks or snake oil salesmen who see science as a bandwagon.