Mises Wire
Texas Creates Gold Depository As Next Step Toward Wider Use of Gold and Silver as Legal Tender
Joe Salerno earlier mentioned that Texas might create a
Magna Carta and the Fantasy of Legal Constraints on States
Magna Carta turns 800 years old today.
Review of Organizing Entrepreneurial Judgment
The new issue of Economica features Tomasz Mickiewicz’s tho
The Most-Read Mises Daily Articles and Mises Wire Posts
Over the past two weeks, the top five most-read Mises Daily articles are:
A Big Piece of the Secret “Free Trade” Deal Was Voted Down
But just because the Trans Pacific Partnership deal may be dead for now doesn't mean it won't be back in modified form. In any case, as I noted earlier this month in Mises Daily, we need real free trade, not the latest global deal for state-controlled trade and regulation.
“Maybe Yellen Will Read Too Much Austrian Economics”
James Pethokoukis at The Week suggests that Hillary Clinton will win because the economy is so good. In the other hand, something bad could happen such as Janet Yellen reading "too much austrian economics."
St. Onge: Let’s Hope Machines Take Our Jobs
Mises Daily Thursday by Peter St. Onge:
What if machines took most of our jobs? Things would become less expensive, and humans would become wealthier in real terms, just as has happened since the Industrial Revolution began. Fear of labor-saving technology continues unabated, nonetheless.
Russell and Langemeier on Austrian Business Cycle Theory: Evidence from Kansas Agriculture
Levi Russell and Michael Langemeier examine Kansas agriculture as a case study illustrating Austrian Business Cycle Theory:
In first-world economies, the agriculture sector is characterized by investment in expensive and highly-specialized equipment. While some agricultural products are “close to consumption,” the network of highly specialized processing and transportation equipment necessary for the functioning of modern agriculture indicates that this sector is characterized by more roundabout production processes. Since the ABCT is primarily a theory of malinvestment in the more roundabout stages of production, analysis of the agricultural sector of the economy is relevant to the study of ABCT.This paper examines data for the production agriculture industry to determine whether business cycles in industry are consistent with the ABCT. Time series analysis using vector autoregression and other methods is conducted. Results are mixed, but strong arguments in favor of ABCT effects in agriculture are made.