Mises Wire

Mises Institute

Mises Daily Weekend by Jonathan Newman: 

What if the government ran hair salons and the private sector provided auto registrations? Needless to say, getting a haircut would be a harrowing and soul-crushing experience. Meanwhile, registering your automobile would be another matter entirely.

Ryan McMaken

Today is the 116th anniversary of Hayek's birthday. Peter Klein summarizes his contributions in under 4 minutes here. Also, it's 20% off all Hayek books and memorabilia in the Mises store. 

Richard M. Ebeling

What should be most clear is that the Trans-Pacific Partnership is not a free trade agreement. Parts of it may, no doubt, lower some trade barriers, thus making easier the production, sale and purchase of a wider variety of imports and exports. However, TPP, like all other trade agreements in the post-World War II era is a managed trade agreement.

Patrick Barron

Max Ehrendfreund thinks the world is producing too much of things like oil and cotton. But how does he know what "too much" is? Without the price system, it's impossible to know. 

Mises Institute

Mises Daily Friday by Mark Thornton:

Communities like Baltimore and Ferguson have been crippled by government regulations and the American nanny state. Now is the time to allow local residents to break free of government wage controls, government schooling, and government prohibitions.

Mises Institute

Lew Rockwell and Jeff Deist invite you to join them at the Mises Circle on Thursday, May 7 with talks by a compelling slate of speakers: James GrantJudge Andrew P. NapolitanoDavid Stockman, and Joseph Salerno.  Listen LIVE here at 1:30 PM EST

 

Mises Institute

Mises Daily Thursday by Ryan McMaken: 

With huge debts and an immensely inflated supply of dollars, the US is vulnerable to its own "Suez moment" in which foreign regimes can nullify American foreign policy without firing a shot.

Mises Institute

Dr. Thornton appeared this week on Press TV to discuss the recent jump in the US trade deficit. 

Ryan McMaken

Krugman and Stiglitz think that massive spending increases constitute "austerity." 

William L. Anderson

The Keynesians who run Baltimore thought a bunch of high-priced, taxpayer subsidized stadiums and shopping centers would fix the local economy. It didn't.