The Failure of Fixed Rates
The inability of governments to maintain fixed exchange rates in the face of opposing market forces is only further proof of their impotency.
The inability of governments to maintain fixed exchange rates in the face of opposing market forces is only further proof of their impotency.
The corn, sugar, and ethanol industries in the US are all part of a complex system of government subsidies and other favors, writes Dave Albin.
This article argues that while there are a few transparent similarities between politics and markets, the fundamental differences between them rend
Most academic participants in the ongoing debate over income redistribution are aware that it is not possible, ever, for government to tax one set
The interest of scholars in the application of mathematics to the social sciences is particularly lively at the present time.
Fiscal Sociology and the Theory of Public Finance merits the serious attention of scholars interested in public economics, Austrian economics, and libertarianism alike.
Douglass North has written many essays and books over forty or more years in which he has sought to reintegrate economic theory and economic histor
In this article, Walter Block reviews Bryan Caplan’s The Myth of the Rational Voter: Why Democracies Choose Bad Policies.