Mises Wire

The State versus Entrepreneurs: Prosperity Always Loses

Bureaucracy and RegulationEconomic PolicyThe EntrepreneurEntrepreneurship

Blog2 hours ago

While governments claim to want the well-being of their citizens, they inevitably attack the real source of prosperity: entrepreneurship.

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The False Framing of Protectionism

Economic PolicyFree MarketsProtectionism and Free TradeU.S. Economy

Blog7 hours ago

Protectionists falsely claim that free trade provides only negative consequences to the economy while simultaneously claiming protectionism provides net benefits.

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Donate $5, Get Rothbard’s Greatest Myths!

Blog7 hours ago

Help us destroy the greatest myths of our time. If you donate during Fall Campaign, your gift will be doubled!

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The Dangerous Myth of a "Soft Landing"

Money and Banks

Blog09/27/2023

If the only antidote offered to prevent a 2008-style contraction is monetary easing, then the risk of stagflation is even higher. Without drastic cuts to deficit spending, or a recession, the likely outcome is stagflation.

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Real Economic Growth Depends on Savings

Monetary PolicyCapital and Interest Theory

Blog09/27/2023

Keynesians claim that the source of economic growth is consumer spending. Austrians know that net savings are the key to a growing economy.

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The Menendez Indictments: Understanding Business as Usual in Washington

Big GovernmentCronyism and CorporatismWar and Foreign Policy

Blog09/27/2023

Official Washington is shocked—shocked!—at the alleged influence peddling by Senator Robert Menendez. But it is the pursuit of empire and attempts by Washington to meddle everywhere that make such peddling so profitable.

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Bringing the Truth

Blog09/27/2023

The best people in the world support the Mises Institute. Will you join them?

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Do Monarchs Always Have Low Time Preferences?

DemocracyWorld History

Blog09/26/2023

Hans Hoppe theorized that monarchs, as opposed to democratically-elected political authorities, would have lower time preferences and would be less likely to engage in reckless government spending. Unfortunately, at least one Medieval Danish king acted like a modern politician.

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