The Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics 19, no. 1 (Spring 2016)
This new issue features important contributions to monetary theory and policy, a novel program for re-establishing gold money, and much more.
This new issue features important contributions to monetary theory and policy, a novel program for re-establishing gold money, and much more.
If we want gaming to develop as a vibrant community of original content creators, we must first and foremost reject protectionism in the world of ideas.
The FOMC appears to be downbeat about job gains, stating that the "pace of improvement in the labor market has slowed."
Elizabeth Warren wants to help low-income and powerless people. However, she supports interventions that will hurt the people she wants to help.
The Fed admits the jobs data is worsening, and sees no way to raise rates without torpedoing the tepid recovery.
The Bank of England warns of financial panic if Britain votes to leave EU.
Henry Hazlitt describes "the open conspiracy" among politicians to refuse to address the national debt.
Thanks to government funding and a lack of intellectual diversity, critical thinking has become a mere afterthought at American universities.
The American public is "unaware" that the homicide rate in the United States has fallen by 49 percent over the past twenty years.
Inflation isn't an increase in prices, and deflation isn't what causes economic depressions.