Mises Wire
What Student Loans and Health Care Have in Common
When colleges or hospitals are guaranteed payment by a third party, such as Sallie Mae or a health insurance company, it's only natural to raise prices on the student or patient. In these cases, the user's ability to pay becomes almost irrelevant.
Money Printing Can’t Replace Saving and Production as the Real Engine of Economic Growth
The introduction of money does not alter the fact that individuals still have to produce something useful in order to secure some other useful goods for themselves.
When State Governors Tried To Take Back Control of the National Guard
In 1986, eight governors threatened to veto deployments of state troops to Central America. Washington generals and politicians responded by further destroying state independence and the Second Amendment's militia clause.
A Rothbardian Take on Negative Interest Rates
Joe Weisenthal is questioning whether people should be able to deposit their money in a checking account and be paid interest on it — Rothbardians have been saying that for decades.
Austrian Economics Can Help Investors Look Beyond Short-Term Thinking
Francsico García Paramés notes that economists who focus on near-term forecasting are generally useless to investors. But principles of Austrian economists — and a long-term view in general — can provide insights outside the mainstream.
From the Malthusian Trap to the Keynesian Trap: The British Economy from 1810 to 2019
The Keynesian obsession with avoiding deflation and pushing consumer spending has led to a serious decline in savings and capital accumulation.
The High Cost of Occupational Licensing
Occupational licensing may increase quality for some higher income customers. But licensing increases monopoly power for dominant firms while driving lower-income customers out of the marketplace.
A Prince of Liechtenstein Discusses Private Property and Political Discourse
"The biggest problem, not only economically but also politically, is the debt problem. It is unimaginable, how this madness of creating more and more debt and just pushing the economy by inflating the money supply will end."
If Deficits Are This Huge Now, What Happens When the Recession Hits?
It is troubling that after a decade of an economic expansion, the US government is still spending money as it does during and immediately following a recession. It is as if the economy is now in a state of permanent "stimulus."