Mises Wire

Andrew Moran

Racists are often willing to pay higher prices for the psychic profit of living in certain neighborhoods. J. Dallas Bowser was happy to take their money.

Frank Shostak

New York Fed Chief Dudley recently suggested asset bubbles "emerge from the way market participant’s process information and trade" — thus ignoring the role of the central bank.

Jacob G. Hornberger

Proponents claim that if the government just "cracks down" even harder, the drug problem will be solved. The reality in Mexico and the Philippines shows how wrong this idea is.

Chris Calton

In the early years of the United States, legal systems were far more localized and flexible. But elites preferred consistency over flexibility, and the rich could afford the more bureaucratic legal institutions that ordinary people could not. 

Antony P. Mueller

Even a degenerate capitalism produces more prosperity than the best socialism. Therefore, the task ahead cannot be to remove capitalism in favor of socialism but to make capitalism better.

Robert P. Murphy

Selgin thinks fractional reserve banking critics are akin to "flat-earthers", but he gets some important points wrong. 

Kai Weiss

In last weekend's election, Swedish voters appear to have handed more power to a populist party.

José Niño

The government's near-monopoly on education services has destroyed innovation and choice. Meanwhile, little is gained from relentless increases in spending.

Alasdair Macleod

John Law's disastrous Mississippi Company bubble can still instruct us today.

Titus Gebel

Private cities may seem outrageously radical or utopian, but  we are already using this approach very successfully in other areas of our lives. The transfer to our social order is only the last step in a development already under way.