Economics In Two Lessons? Nope, Hazlitt’s One Lesson is Enough
John Quiggin's hit piece on Henry Hazlitt, Economics In Two Lessons, is just a run-of-the-mill center-left essay on how we need more government intervention.
John Quiggin's hit piece on Henry Hazlitt, Economics In Two Lessons, is just a run-of-the-mill center-left essay on how we need more government intervention.
Help us distribute Hazlitt’s Economics in One Lesson to thousands of young people all across the country.
The real money-creating machines are commercial banks. Loan dollars become deposit dollars. Lots of lending means the money aggregates increase. Little lending means the opposite.
You don’t make people better off by artificially making energy more expensive. You only make them poorer.
Financial markets are neither perfectly efficient, nor animally spirited, but eventually adjusting.
Economic theory must have only one purpose — to explain economic activity. However, statistical methods are of no help in this regard.
The number of jobs that require an occupational license now covers 30% of the US workforce, up from 5% in 1950.
Joseph Stiglitz has written a new book that calls for massive state control over the economy.
Socialism, democratic or otherwise, rides on the back of force and violence. When they drop the veil, its a government agent pointing a gun.
The effort to nullify gun laws at the county level illustrate how the relationship between citizens and government can be quite different at a more local level.