Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics, vol. 22, no. 3, 2019

In this issue, articles on business cycles, monetary policy, theory of the firm, Brazilian economic freedom, Brazil’s recent recession, and French interventionism. Plus six book reviews.

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.

The QJAE Blog Editors and Editorial Board Submission Information

Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12
Mark Thornton

Professor Arkadiusz Sieroń has written an important new book on the Cantillon effect, indicating that the effect of new money on the economy depends on where it is injected.

Brazil's most severe recession in over a century, which lasted over two years and saw unemployment of nearly 12 percent, offers empirical support for the Austrian business cycle theory.

The Fraser Institute's Economic Freedom of North America report provides the method of evaluating the economic freedom of Brazilian states. Results suggest that Brazilian states' freedom scores have been declining.

Pascal Salin

Pascal Salin investigates the contrast between French collectivism and it production of liberal intellectuals.

David Gordon

George Stiglitz professes great concern for the poor, while arguing that most people require control by enlightened experts such as himself.

David Gordon

Randall Holcombe's has written an impressive new book on political capitalism (or "crony capitalism") and contributes a discussion on political and economic elites.

Jason Morgan

While Otaki appropriately criticizes stimulus spending, he inexplicably attributes Japanese stagnation to the failure to follow Keynes.

Audrey D. Kline

Stephen Halbrook's book documents the efforts of a totalitarian regime to disarm its citizens.

Aidan Walsh Malcolm Brady

Rule-following and hierarchy, as decision-making and coordination mechanisms, can enrich the Austrian theory of the firm.

Mark Gertsen

Can policy-induced deviations from the natural rate of interest increase roundaboutness in production? Mark Gertsen studies 28 developed economies using an ARDL model, and finds Austrian boom-bust dynamics.

Tomáš Frömmel

Tomáš Frömmel contends that a negative inflation target combined with the Taylor Rule can be a non-distortionary monetary policy consistent with Austrian business cycle theory.