Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics

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Erik Lakomaa

Between 1830 and 1903, Sweden experienced one of the longest and most successful free-banking periods in history. During this period, private note issuing banks were allowed and prospered. 

Hans-Hermann Hoppe

Hoppe's response to Block’s foregoing criticism of his previously published notes on the subject of preference and indifference in economic analysis, including a summary of agreements and reconstruction of differences.

François Facchini

This article deals with the epistemological bases for the axiom of action and more particularly with man’s capacity to have an a priori knowledge.

Greg Kaza

At the beginning of World War I, the US Treasury secretary closed the New York Stock Exchange to stop the sale of dollar-denominated securities.

Miia Parnaudeau

The Austrian theory mainly deals with analyzing the effects of an increased credit offer on productive structures.

Peter G. Klein

The Austrian School of economics—the casual-realist, marginalist, subjectivist tradition established by Carl Menger in 1871—has experienced a remarkable renaissance over the last five decades.

Laurent Carnis

Governmental interventions in the economy take numerous forms, and they require the existence of a public authority, a bureaucracy, to implement them. 

Valerio Filoso

While corporate income taxation is a major issue in the debate over international finance, economic theory has no clear stance on who bears its burden.

Greg Kaza

This paper is a review of Austrian School references in business cycle studies published by the National Bureau of Economic Research. 

D.W. MacKenzie

Most historians claim that Herbert Hoover adhered to a policy of laissez faire after the stock market crash of 1929. This laissez faire policy is allegedly responsible for the severity and persistence of unemployment