Mises Wire

Joseph T. Salerno

The Mercatus Center at George Mason University has just launched the Program on Monetary Policy under the direction of Scott Sumner.

Carmen Elena Dorobăț

 A surprise move from Switzerland’s central bank (SNB) sent stock markets into panic today. In just a few minutes, the value of the Swiss franc rose by 30 percent, FTSE 300 dropped by 2 percent, Wall Street futures turned negative, and the recent feeble rise in commodity prices was reversed.

John P. Cochran

Nicolas Cachanosky has recently released a very timely and well thought out working paper, which should be of interest to all those serious about limiting the harm central control of money unleashes on economic activity.

Jeff Deist

Mr. Selgin was one of the first Mises Institute Fellows in the early 1980s. He recently posted an essay detailing his history with the modern school of Austrian economics.

Randall G. Holcombe

One by-product of the Paris terrorist attack on Charlie Hebdo was an outpouring of support for freedom of speech.

Joseph T. Salerno

EcPoFi recaps last year's development of the True Money Supply (TMS), a monetary aggregate developed by Murray Rothbard and myself in the 1980s.

Ryan McMaken

While insisting on prison and fines for peaceful Americans who only wish to engage in free trade, supporters of embargoes like the Cuban embargo have never made a convincing case for why taxpayers, merchants, and consumers should be forced to forego their property rights and bear the costs of the embargo’s war on free trade.

Ryan McMaken
Shawn Ritenour reviews Randall Holcombe's new Austrian econ textbook Advanced Introduction to the Austrian School ofEconomics in Libertarian Papers.  (I interviewed Dr. Holcombe about the book in The Free Market.) 
Matthew McCaffrey

Last year, British entrepreneur Mike Watts made headlines when he opened England’s first private toll road in more than a hundred years. The road has now been closed, but its brief history provides a sad (and all-too-typical) example of how government sabotages entrepreneurs and hurts their customers.

Randall G. Holcombe

... is that you know who your enemies and opponents are.