Mises Wire

Mises Institute

Mises Daily Wednesday by Frank Hollenbeck: The Europeans have decided to limit funding and credit extended to the Greeks. This puts the Greek financial system under pressure, but there are free-market solutions that could set the Greeks on the path to a sound economy.

John P. Cochran

Martin Feldstein, Professor of Economics at Harvard, President Emeritus of the National Bureau of Economic Research, and chair of Ronald Reagan’s Council of Economic Advisers from 1982 to 1984 joins  Joe Salerno and most Austrians by speaking out against the Fed’s and central banks in general fear of deflation and by implication their irrational commitment to a 2% inflation target.

Mises Institute

Mises Daily Tuesday by Gary Galles: The Jones Act and similar laws have been behind a precipitous decline in global American shipping. Passed for "national defense" purposes, such laws only serve to raise the cost of shipping to US ports while restricting consumer access to goods.

Mises Institute

Today would have been the 89th birthday of Murray Rothbard. In this 1988 essay, Ron Paul explores Murray Rothbard's importance in Paul's own political career and the importance of education and scholarship in changing political realities. 

Mises Institute

Mises Daily Friday by Brendan Brown: 

Janet Yellen testified before Congress this week, but the Senate Republicans, who claim to be the guardians of monetary sanity, failed to show any true understanding of monetary policy and the damage the Fed has inflicted.

John P. Cochran

"The drunken behavior of the Fed is due in large part to its "dual mandate" to maintain price stability and full employment — potentially conflicting goals that can produce schizophrenic behavior."
 

Ryan McMaken

That drop in the gas prices came just in time. Ground beef was once a simple, basic, and easy source for protein. Now, not so much. But at least iPads are cheaper, right? 

Mises Institute

This week's Mises Weekends:

Jeff Deist and Jay Taylor, host of Taylor’s Hard Money Advisers, discuss the role of Austrian economics in understanding the market crash of 2008.

Joseph T. Salerno
Imagine that you need a cash loan to tide you over to your next paycheck, but banks cannot or will not lend to you. So you stop at a machine that looks very much like an ATM.