Selgin on Modern Monetary Theory

Finding the Money, a video aimed at explaining Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) to a popular audience, debuted today on several streaming platforms and theaters throughout the U.S.  Whether it succeeded or not in its aim I will leave it for others to judge.    What I found most noteworthy and illuminating  in the 95-minute video was a brief clip of an interview with George Selgin, an economist of some note in free-market monetary po

MMT and Boiling Frogs

“Why do we borrow our own currency in the first place?”

Stephanie Kelton posed this question in her new documentary, Finding the Money, and a clip of Jared Berstein’s fumbled response to the question has gone viral on social media. Bernstein is the Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers to Biden, and so we would expect that he would have an articulate answer to Kelton’s question, but he did not.

What Can Carl Menger Teach Us about Falafel Sandwiches?

Earlier this year, I gave a short course on Carl Menger’s Principles of Economics for scientists and engineers at my institute. The course was brief, and I focused only on ideas that were relevant for researchers in engineering and the natural sciences. One of the ideas we talked about was supply and demand, in order to link it to the supply and demand of research-related things: the labor of researchers, research articles on specific topics, and so on.

Fraudulent Logic Guides the UK Smoking Ban

It is the waning days of the Sunak premiership, and the Conservative party still has a stonking majority despite its cataclysmic capitulation in the polls. The government is effectively a lame duck; everyone knows it has no support, yet it will still be around for a few more months. One would think that since the Conservative party still has a large majority in the House of Commons that it would let loose with policy and attempt real reform so that the MPs have something to take to the people when election time begins.

Amir Iraji is a scholar of Austrian economics with a background in journalism, writing, and editing from Iran.

How House Republicans Outsource Campus Speech Limits to George Soros

This week, the House passed H. R. 6090, a bill sold to the public as an “Antisemitism Awareness Act,” but effectively outsources the definition of actionable Civil Rights Act “antidiscrimination” violations to the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance. In doing so, the DC uniparty has granted a significant concession on the First Amendment at a time when its freedom of speech is facing a coordinated attack from powerful, globalist institutions.