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A Fairness Trilemma in Hiring

Economists like to draw triangles. In trade, you can’t have high tariffs, no retaliation, and unchanged prices. In monetary policy, you can’t fix interest rates, fix the money supply, and promise perfect stabilization. In hiring under unequal starting conditions, there is a similar triangle that most debates about fairness in hiring glide past. When firms… MORE

Date Icon 05/12/2026

Author Icon By Tarnell Brown

Article Icon 7 min

Recent

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What do the inventor of the periodic table, the novelist Isabel Allende, and the almost-creators of the iPhone have in common? Join author David Epstein and EconTalk’s Russ Roberts to explore a counterintuitive idea: that boundaries, and not unlimited freedom, often make us more creative, productive, and fulfilled.… MORE

Date Icon 05/11/2026

Article Icon 1 min

Article Icon Biography

Anne O. Krueger Introduction As an American economist studying international trade and protectionism, Anne Krueger had her own method: she traveled to poorer countries to talk, not just to government officials, but also to businesspeople in those countries. She also often asked to see the businesses’ books, not just the books that they prepared for… MORE

Date Icon 05/08/2026

Article Icon 14 min

Article Icon EconLog
Photo by Arlington Research on Unsplash

“There are two things you are better off not watching in the making: sausages and econometric estimates. This is a sad and decidedly unscientific state of affairs we find ourselves in. Hardly anyone takes data analyses seriously. Or perhaps more accurately, hardly anyone takes anyone else’s data analyses seriously.” That is the scathing critique that… MORE

Date Icon 05/07/2026

Author Icon By James B. Bailey

Article Icon 6 min

Featured

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Encyclopedia Icon Encyclopedia

The gold standard was a commitment by participating countries to fix the prices of their domestic currencies in terms of a specified amount of gold. National money and other forms of money (bank deposits and notes) were freely converted into gold at the fixed price. England adopted a de facto gold standard in 1717 after… MORE

Date Icon 02/05/2018

Author Icon By Michael D. Bordo

Article Icon 11 min

Article Icon Article

I recently sat down with Milton Friedman, a few days before his 94th birthday, to discuss the impact of two of his most important contributions to economics and liberty: A Monetary History of the United States, 1870-1960 [co-written] with Anna Schwartz, and Capitalism and Freedom. The ideas in both books had tremendous influence on the… MORE

Date Icon 09/04/2006

Author Icon By Milton Friedman and Russell Roberts

Article Icon 41 min

Article Icon Article

“A policeman’s lot is not a happy one” — The Pirates of Penzance , Gilbert and Sullivan The Bank of England has decided to increase the interest rate at which she lends money to commercial banks from a very low 0.50 percent to 0.75. Not a breath-taking rise but still a change from the policy… MORE

Date Icon 09/03/2018

Author Icon By Pedro Schwartz

Article Icon 12 min

EconTalk

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Golfing Alone (with Gary Belsky)

Date Icon 05/04/2026

Article Icon 1 min

Podcast Icon Podcast

Benn Steil on the Battle of Bretton Woods

Date Icon 02/16/2015

Article Icon 1 min

EconLog

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AI vs the Rent Seekers

Date Icon 04/23/2026

Article Icon 4 min

Article Icon EconLog

Making Money…Less Useful?

Date Icon 04/28/2026

Article Icon 5 min

Videos & Conversations

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Recognized as one of the most influential voices in the areas of market structure, the theory of the firm, law and economics, resource unemployment, and monetary theory and policy, in this 2001 interview, Armen Alchian (1914-2013) outlines the “UCLA tradition” of economics which he founded and explores the many unanticipated consequences of self-seeking individual behavior.… MORE

Date Icon 12/11/2013

Author Icon By Amy Willis

Article Icon 4 min

Video Icon Video

Nobel laureate Ronald H. Coase (1910-2013) was recorded in 2001 in an extended video now available to the public. Coase’s articles, “The Problem of Social Cost” and “The Nature of the Firm” are among the most important and most often cited works in the whole of economic literature. Coase recounts how he tried to encourage… MORE

Date Icon 09/06/2013

Article Icon 5 min

Video Icon Video

On April 10, 2013, Liberty Fund and Butler University sponsored a symposium, “Capitalism, Government, and the Good Society.” The evening began with solo presentations by the three participants–Michael Munger of Duke University, Robert Skidelsky of the University of Warwick, and Richard Epstein of New York University. (Travel complications forced the fourth invited participant, James Galbraith… MORE

Date Icon 09/04/2013

Article Icon 1 min

Man wants liberty to become the man he wants to become.

— James M. Buchanan

From the Concise Encyclopedia of Economics

A B C D E F G H J K L M N O P Q R S T V W Y
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  Carl Menger has the twin distinctions of being the founder of Austrian economics and a cofounder of the marginal utility revolution. Menger worked separately from William Jevons and Leon Walras and reached similar conclusions by a different method. Unlike Jevons, Menger did not believe that goods provide “utils,” or units of utility. Rather, he… MORE

Date Icon 02/05/2018

Article Icon 5 min

Encyclopedia Icon Encyclopedia

The Austrian school of economics was founded in 1871 with the publication of Carl Menger’s Principles of Economics. menger, along with william stanley jevons and leon walras, developed the marginalist revolution in economic analysis. Menger dedicated Principles of Economics to his German colleague William Roscher, the leading figure in the German historical school, which dominated economic… MORE

Date Icon 02/05/2018

Author Icon By Peter J. Boettke

Article Icon 17 min

Encyclopedia Icon Encyclopedia

Adam Smith struggled with what came to be called the paradox of “value in use” versus “value in exchange.” Water is necessary to existence and of enormous value in use; diamonds are frivolous and clearly not essential. But the price of diamonds—their value in exchange—is far higher than that of water. What perplexed Smith is… MORE

Date Icon 02/05/2018

Author Icon By Steven E. Rhoads

Article Icon 8 min

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