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Book Review

The War That Never Ends

A Book Review of Manufacturing Militarism: U.S. Government Propaganda in the War on Terror, by Christopher J. Coyne and Abigail R. Hall.1 It’s been over 20 years since the 9/11 attacks. Ever since those horrible attacks, the United States government has been waging a “war on terror” both at home and abroad. The war on .. MORE

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The Fragility of Civil Society

Friedrich Hayek Philosopher-economist Friedrich Hayek remains profoundly relevant, even three decades after his death in 1992 at the age of 92. Hayek received the 1974 Nobel Prize in economics for having advanced a simple but seemingly paradoxical theme: civil society as we know it emerged from “human action” but not from “human design.”1 This is .. MORE

Article

Undoing Past Policies: How Likely Are Repeals in the 119th Congress?

After every presidential election, including the most recent, the new majority wants to repeal a list of previous regimes’ policy enactments. Political observers always look to the next two years, wondering what to expect from the party in power. With the 2024 elections delivering unified Republican control of the national government, a lot of attention .. MORE

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Trade Barriers

The trade debate revisited

By Scott Sumner

Economic History

Of ChatGPT’s Sense of Humor

By Pierre Lemieux

Cross-country Comparisons

My Weekly Reading for April 20, 2025

By David Henderson

Cost-benefit Analysis

Free Stuff is Expensive

By Art Carden

International Trade

Public Statement in Favor of Free Trade and Against Tariffs

By David Henderson

Economics of Crime

Businesses are Suffering

By Scott Sumner

Political Economy

Why Hold Laws As Binding On the Rulers

By Pierre Lemieux

Books: Reviews and Suggested Readings

What is the Role of the Expert?

By Jon Murphy

EconTalk

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econtalk-podcast

Megan McArdle on the Oedipus Trap

When physician Walter Freeman died in 1972, he still believed that lobotomies were the best treatment for mental illness. A pioneer in the method, he was a deeply confident and charismatic man who eagerly spread the technique in America, long after the rise of alternative treatments that were less destructive. Listen as journalist Megan McArdle and EconTalk’s .. MORE

econtalk-extra

Holy Shiitake Mushrooms!

How much thought do you put into how you acquired the food you eat? I don’t mean where did you  buy it, but who grew it, found it, caught it, killed it? I admit that the answer for me is, “not much.” I have a small garden patch in the summer and forage a bit .. MORE

EconLog

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Cost-benefit Analysis

Free Stuff is Expensive

There is an endless list of ways we want to improve cities and help the poor. The list of problems plaguing poor communities is long. Every major US city has areas where the schools are terrible, crime is rampant, the sidewalks and streets are little more than rubble, fresh food is in short supply, and .. MORE

International Trade

Public Statement in Favor of Free Trade and Against Tariffs

  America’s prosperity is today, as it has always been, rooted in principles of entrepreneurship and voluntary economic exchange. For 250 years, the United States of America has demonstrated to the world that a people left free to innovate and produce for themselves, and for all who trade with them, will enjoy increasing abundance, higher .. MORE

LIBERTY CLASSICS SERIES

Explore the lasting legacies and
continued relevance of our classic titles.

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Book Titles

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The Economics of Welfare

By Arthur C. Pigou

WHEN a man sets out upon any course of inquiry, the object of his search may be either light or fruit—either knowledge for its own sake or knowledge for the sake of good things to which it leads. In various fields of study these two ideals play parts of varying importance. In the appeal made .. MORE

The Man Versus The State, with Six Essays on Government, Society, and Freedom

By Herbert Spencer

The Man Versus The State by Herbert Spencer was originally published in 1884 by Williams and Norgate, London and Edinburgh. The book consisted of four articles which had been published in Contemporary Review for February, April, May, June, and July of 1884. For collection in book form, Spencer added a Preface and a Postscript. In .. MORE

Book Reviews and Suggested Readings

The Tyranny of the National Interest

By Pierre Lemieux

Statements such as “public policy X is (or is not) in the national interest” are omnipresent. For example, Peter Navarro and Greg Autry claim that “some American CEOs” are acting against “our national interest.”1 In reality, the concept of national interest is, at best, meaningless. At worst, the concept of national interest is a tool .. MORE

Inside Leviathan: Lessons from Gordon Tullock’s Bureaucracy

By Stefanie Haeffele and Anne Hobson

Bureaucracy has a reputation of being a ‘necessary evil’ in modern western society. We are quick to blame bureaucracy for long waits at the DMV [Department of Motor Vehicles], lengthy approval processes for building permits, and for the piles of paperwork at work. Bureaucracy is the source of mandatory workplace trainings and the reason for .. MORE

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Profile in Liberty: Friedrich A. Hayek

The twentieth century witnessed the unparalleled expansion of government power over the lives and livelihoods of individuals. Much of this was the result of two devastating world wars and totalitarian ideologies that directly challenged individual liberty and the free institutions of the open society. Other forms of expansion in the provision of social welfare and .. MORE

VIDEO

A Conversation with Anthony de Jasay

Anthony de Jasay, a regular columnist for Econlib, was one of the most original and independent thinkers on the relationship between the individual and the state. Through his published works, he challenged the reigning paradigms justifying modern democratic growth. His deeply challenging theoretical works include The State, an analysis that views the state as acting .. MORE

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Conversations with some of the most original thinkers of our time

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College Economics Topics

Supplementary materials for popular college textbooks used in courses in the Principles of Economics, Microeconomics, Price Theory, and Macroeconomics are suggested by topic.

Economist Biographies

From the Concise Encyclopedia of Economics

Economic Regulation, Government Policy, Labor, Taxes

Redistribution

The federal government has increasingly assumed responsibility for reducing poverty in America. Its primary approach is to expand programs that transfer wealth, supposedly from the better off to the poor. In 1962, federal transfers to individuals (not counting payments for goods and services provided or interest for money loaned) amounted to 5.2 percent of gross .. MORE

Economies Outside the United States, International Economics

Eastern Europe

In late 1989 the countries of Eastern Europe broke loose from the Soviet Union, threw off communism, and began to construct democratic institutions and market-oriented economies. This great transformation is founded on the idea that freedom and prosperity can best be advanced by adopting the institutions and practices that have proven successful in Western Europe .. MORE

Corporations and Financial Markets , Economics of Legal Issues, Money and Banking, The Marketplace

Stock Market

The price of a share of stock, like that of any other financial asset, equals the present value of the sum of the expected dividends or other cash payments to the shareholders, where future payments are discounted by the interest rate and risks involved. Most of the cash payments to stockholders arise from dividends, which .. MORE

Quotes

The power of a theory is exactly proportional to the diversity of situations it can explain.

-Elinor Ostrom

In the state of isolation, our wants exceed our productive capacities. In society, our productive capacities exceed our wants.

-Frederic Bastiat Full Quote >>

To balance a large state or society, whether monarchical or republican, on general laws, is a work of so great difficulty, that no human genius, however comprehensive, is able, by the mere dint of reason and reflection, to effect it.

-David Hume Full Quote >>