Inequality Is Bad. The Solution Is Not Government Intervention

About two thousand and three hundred years ago, while walking on the peripatos of the idyllic Lyceum, Aristotle noticed something very interesting. He saw that the interest being paid on lending from the fortunate to the miserable for the fulfilment of their personal needs is unfair, and that the wages paid to slaves are too low. All too obvious, there was no market mechanism.

The Central Banking Establishment Is Genuinely Worried About Trump, but Not for the Reasons They Say

On Sunday night, Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell announced that Trump’s Department of Justice had served the Fed with grand jury subpoenas, threatening a criminal indictment of Powell.

The subpoenas concern statements Powell made to the Senate Banking Committee last summer about renovations to the Eccles Building—the Fed’s headquarters in Washington, DC.

The American Revolution and Classical Liberalism

[Editor’s note: 2026 is the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, and this year we will be featuring many of Murray Rothbard’s work on the American Revolution and its meaning. In this essay, Rothbard touches on many themes we find on his work on American history, such as his contention that the abandonment of the Articles of Confederation by the “founding fathers” was a counterrevolution against the ideals of the Declaration of Independence.] 

Cheap Credit Doesn’t Create Economic Growth – It Makes Us Poorer

Net Present Value (NPV) is a popular decision-making criteria used by firms to make key, crucial choices about how to allocate resources across an economy. Net Present Value forecasts temporally discount future cash flows to their present value to check whether a project creates value. If a project has an NPV greater than zero, it creates value. On the other hand, if a project has an NPV less than zero, the project loses value.

The Republicans’ Conservatism Is about Defending the Status Quo

Friedrich von Hayek explains in his article “Why I am Not a Conservative” that, given a choice between the progressive parties that destroy liberty, and the conservative parties that defend the status quo, the classical liberal will “generally have little choice but to support the conservative parties.” This is because there are many parallels between the classical liberal prioritization of individual liberty and the conservative principle of limited government in countries with a tradition o