Mises Wire
Digital Cash: Another Dangerous New Idea in Monetary Policy
"Digital cash" is the latest terrible idea from those who want to give central banks more power to meddle in the economy.
Will China Reverse Its Trade Surplus with the United States?
Even if Trump and Xi both desire to reduce America's trade deficit with China, it's unlikely it will shrink in the short term.
Every Law “Legislates Morality” — From Abortion to Minimum Wage
Virtually all laws involve "legislating morality." When people use this phrase they often really just mean "I want laws to back my version of morality, not yours."
The Irrelevance of “Worker Need” and “Employer Greed” in the Determination of Wages
In the conditions of a labor shortage, which necessarily materializes if wage rates go below the point corresponding to full employment, the payment of higher wages provides exactly the same benefit to employers.
The EU, Not Brexit, Killed British Steel
EU regulations greatly increased costs for British Steel, and eventually doomed the company. And British Steel would have become insolvent even if the Brits had never voted for Brexit.
Two Reasons Why Socialism Repeatedly Fails
Socialism will always encounter two big problems when regimes attempt to implement it: 1) the impossibility of economic calculation without true market prices, and 2) the lack of an incentive to produce only what consumers actually want.
The Risk of Trump’s Trade War Is More Than Just Higher Prices
It is the lethal combination of tariffs and the end of the expansionary phase of the credit cycle which should concern us.
Anti-Establishment Populists Gain Again In Euro Elections
"Green" parties gained too, and unfortunately, the big winners share an important similarity: they all advocate for more government interventionism in one way or another.
The US Supreme Court Is Right to Rule In Favor of Tribal Sovereignty
In two recent cases, Neil Gorsuch joined the "liberal" wing of the Court to side with Indian tribes in enhancing tribal sovereignty. This is a good thing for limiting and decentralizing government power.