Are Markets Like Language?
Economics and language as fields of study overlap in ways that give economists a legitimate interest in both.
Economics and language as fields of study overlap in ways that give economists a legitimate interest in both.
If capitalism has been so bad for the poor, how can it be that the standard of living for the poor has vastly increased?
What should be done to end the Progressives influence over government and the economy and to promote the public good?
Entrepreneurship is a double-edged sword. Using policy to support entrepreneurship is a balancing act between productive and unproductive behavior.
This is a short and informative but easy to read answer to both how and why the Scandinavian welfare states seem to work so well.
This paper looks at the differences between investment and cash building and if either one offers additional benefits.
Furthering the discussion about “How can we reconcile the idea that there are laws of human action, that manifest themselves in market prices and the structure of production, with the idea that there is also freedom of choice?”
This is a discussion of the debate on indifference within the remit of praxeology, as unfolded between Hans-Hermann Hoppe and Walter Block.
Furthering the debate of whether or not Garrison's secular growth is consistent with neoclassical growth theory, in particular with Solow’s model.
The present paper clarifies ambiguities from earlier discussions of whether Garrison’s usage of “secular growth” is more likely to resonate with a neoclassical or Austrian reader.