Mises Wire

Ryan McMaken

In order to abolish tuition fees, governments must find other ways to limit costs. These methods are not without their down side. 

Arkadiusz Sieroń

The history of shadow banking development confirms Mises’s thesis that each government intervention leads to unintended consequences.

Gary Galles

Just because some judges agreed with a law in the past doesn't make that law good or moral. 

Frank Shostak

To keep market share, business owners must respond to increases in consumer demands — even if owners suspect demand is being goosed by money printing.

Ryan McMaken

The Vatican's latest document on the financial system calls for a variety of laws and sanctions to stop people from being greedy. 

Gary North

Mises always maintained that the war for liberty is won or lost on the battlefield of ideas.

Tate Fegley

Some members of Congress are pushing for new laws to make police a protected group in a way similar to "hate crime" legislation. 

Richard M. Ebeling

It is unfortunate that a scholar as careful as Robert Skidelsky has chosen to downplay the historical reality of the failure of central banking.

Henry Hazlitt

The broken-window fallacy, under a hundred disguises, is the most persistent in the history of economics. It is more rampant now than at any time in the past.

Restrained by both ideology and public sentiment, central banks were once kept from the sort of antics they now regularly indulge in.