Remembering Roger W. Garrison, Who Led the Way

I first heard of Roger Garrison from Murray Rothbard. At a social gathering in 1973 of Rothbard and a few younger Austrian scholars and grad students in the New York City area, Rothbard excitedly recounted to the group the contents of a brilliant term paper he had just read involving a graphical comparison of Austrian and Keynesian macroeconomics. The paper was titled “Austrian Macroeconomics: A Diagrammatical Exposition” and its author was Roger Garrison, then an MA student. A week or two later, I received a copy of the paper in the mail.

Fiscal Responsibility, Formalization, and the Modern Fiscal State

In contemporary political discourse, fiscal adjustment is often celebrated as a moral achievement rather than recognized as what it fundamentally is: an institutional obligation. In economies marked by chronic deficits, inflationary pressures, and bureaucratic expansion, the mere restoration of budgetary discipline frequently appears heroic. From an Austrian perspective, however, fiscal responsibility is not an extraordinary accomplishment, it is the minimal condition for preserving economic calculation and social coordination.