Austrian Economics Makes Managers Better
Recorded at the Arizona Biltmore Hotel in Phoenix, Arizona on October 7th, 2022.
The Turkish Way
Turkey's economy is reeling under inflation rates likely reaching 170 percent. Not surprisingly, the worst of it is felt by regular people just trying to make a living. Original Article: "The Turkish Way" This Audio Mises Wire is generously sponsored by Christopher
Bernanke’s Sordid Nobel Prize
Dr. Bob Murphy and Jeff Deist discuss the nauseating elevation of former Fed Chair Ben Bernanke to Nobel Prize winner.
The Left’s Attacks on Mises Continue to Miss
Matt McManus, a lecturer at the University of Michigan, has published in Jacobin an article under the less-than-engaging title “Ludwig von Mises Was a Free-Market Ideologue, Not a Hardheaded Thinker.” In the article, McManus raises some points of philosophical interest,
Edward Chancellor’s Much-Needed (But Not Heeded) Wisdom on Interest Rates
The subject of time and money has hit a boiling point. Just look at Sri Lanka and Iran, where food riots have turned deadly, or, shall we say, currency riots have. People can’t buy food, and “protesters angry at the
Does Bank Lending by Itself Set Off Boom and Bust Cycles?
What happens when banks lend money? It depends the lending process itself. If lending comes about because of an expansion of credit, then it creates problems. Original Article: "Does Bank Lending by Itself Set Off Boom and Bust Cycles?" This Audio Mises
The Economic Illiteracy of the Bitcoin Stock-to-Flow Model
In March 2019, the pseudonymous “PlanB,” who describes himself as a “former institutional investor with 25 years of experience in financial markets,” published a short article describing what he dubs the “stock-to-flow” (S2F) model of bitcoin pricing. Influenced by Nick
Breaking Away: The Case for Secession, Radical Decentralization, and Small Polities
Breaking Away differs from countless other books on secession and decentralization in that it considers examples and benefits of secession and radical decentralization in a much broader historical, geographical, and theoretical context. This book is for anyone interested in how