Booms and Busts

Displaying 791 - 800 of 1767
Brendan Brown

The Japanese government claims it’s still fighting deflation, although there are no signs of it in Japan. Through a mixture of chance, habit, and economic sclerosis, prices have been stable in Japan, but Abenomics makes the future of the yen anyone’s guess.

Richard M. Ebeling

Richard Ebeling explains the basics of how central banks cause booms and busts.

Marc Abela

Marc Abela talks with us about the state of Austrian economics and the freedom philosophy in Japan.

Per Bylund

The Free Market 31, no. 11 (November 2013)

 

Mark Thornton

The Free Market 32, no.

Nicolás Cachanosky

The problem is a confused reading of how markets work, and how governments continue with deficit spending in the service of favored interest groups.

David Howden

There is trouble lurking in each of the book’s four chapters. The text gets off on a wrong foot as Bernanke overviews the origins and purposes of the Fed.

Jimmy Saravia

This paper identifies merger waves as parts of Austrian-type business cycles. According to Austrian business cycle theory, when loan rates are reduced below their natural level through bank credit expansion, this falsifies the monetary calculation of capitalist-entrepreneurs, and investments are initiated that calculation showed were not profitable before the interest rate reduction.

Anthony J. Evans

This article analyzes the housing boom witnessed in the UK economy from 1994–2007 in light of the Austrian theory of the business cycle (ABC). Ludwig von Mises’s parable of the “bricks” is utilized to provide empirical