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Featured Post

Liberalism as a Vaccine

By Scott Sumner | Jan 20 2025
This post might be misinterpreted in a couple ways, so read the following two points carefully: 1. I’m not defining liberalism in the American sense of left-of-center Democrat. I am using the term in the international sense of supporter of free speech, human rights, a market economy, democracy, civil rights, opposition to nationalism, etc.   2. ...

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Confusions About Collectives

By Jon Murphy | Jan 14 2025

Humans work in groups all the time.  Indeed, I argue we are stronger because of it.  Specialization and trade allows for a team to achieve things no individual could accomplish on their own.  Economists since Adam Smith have highlighted the group efforts needed to produce even simple things such as wool coats, pencils, and bread.  .. MORE

Featured Comment

I was thinking more about real property ie land and not pretty thefts. You have to live in a country where this service is not well-provided to truly appreciate this service.

Mactoul, January 12

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Competition

Why Not Privatize the Post Office?

By Christopher Freiman | Jan 23, 2025 | 2

Given the news that the U.S. Postal Service could be privatized, it’s a good time to explore why privatizing mail delivery and opening it up to market competition is a wise idea. To start, it’s helpful to consider cases where privatization might be unwise and why mail delivery is different. In particular, many economists and .. MORE

Economics of Crime

Who likes pardons?

By Scott Sumner | Jan 22, 2025 | 16

January 20th, 2025 was an unusual day. It’s not often that two different presidents engage in highly controversial acts on the very same day. I am referring to the flurry of pardons at the end of the Biden administration and the beginning of the Trump administration. America has become so polarized that it is hard .. MORE

Labor Market

Labor Supply and Wages – Stranded Workers Edition

By Kevin Corcoran | Jan 22, 2025 | 4

In my recent post, The Wielders of One-Bladed Scissors, I talked about why supply-and-demand doesn’t automatically lead to the conclusion that the more workers there are, the lower wages become, and that it’s a fallacy to infer “more labor means cheaper labor.” After writing it up, a thought experiment occurred to me that helps make .. MORE

International Macroeconomics

History for the Books: Javier Milei & Argentina’s Budget

By Marcos Falcone | Jan 21, 2025 | 2

For most of 2023, Javier Milei advocated a number of libertarian policies aimed at reversing Argentina’s long economically downward trend. Among them was a proposal that was noted for its difficulty in a country known for its ever-increasing level of public spending. ‘It can’t be done,’ they said. Yet he did it: Under the presidency .. MORE

Economic Education

Cotton v Wool Price Theory: Cutsinger’s Solution

By Bryan Cutsinger | Jan 21, 2025 | 0

[Editor’s note: We’re bringing back price theory with our series on Price Theory problems with Professor Bryan Cutsinger. You can view the previous problem and Cutsinger’s solution here and here. Share your proposed solutions in the Comments. Professor Cutsinger will be present in the comments for the next two weeks, and we’ll again post his proposed solution shortly thereafter. .. MORE

Politics and Economics

I Win My Recent Inaugural Bet

By David Henderson | Jan 20, 2025 | 13

  On December 21, 2024, my friend Dan Klein, an economics professor at George Mason University, sent out an email to a list that I’m no longer on but cc:ed me, with the following offer: Anyone want to give me 8:1 odds that on Jan 21 Trump won’t have been inaugurated? He linked to this .. MORE

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Bloggers David Henderson, Alberto Mingardi, Scott Sumner, Pierre Lemieux, Kevin Corcoran, and guests write on topical economics of interest to them, illuminating subjects from politics and finance, to recent films and cultural observations, to history and literature.

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Book Club

Labor Market

Labor Supply and Wages – Stranded Workers Edition 4

In my recent post, The Wielders of One-Bladed Scissors, I talked about why supply-and-demand doesn’t automatically lead to the conclusion that the more workers there are, the lower wages become, and that it’s a fallacy to infer “more labor means cheaper labor.” After writing it up, a thought experiment occurred to me that helps make .. MORE

International Trade

My Weekly Reading for January 19, 2025 2

Regulations Keep Millions of Bedrooms Empty During a Housing Crisis by Howard Husock, Reason, January 17, 2025. Excerpts: The U.S. is facing a housing affordability crisis, and new data from Realtor.comhighlight an often missed contributing factor: millions of empty bedrooms. Census data reveal 31.8 million “excess” bedrooms in American homes—compared to just 4 million in .. MORE

History of Economic Thought

A Coase Story about Gambling 23

  Fellow economist Susan Woodward sent me this anecdote about Ronald Coase and gambling that I thought worth sharing. It led me to remember my own interesting story about gambling and one famous economist. Bob Hall [her husband] and I were talking about the 1987 Coase conference at Yale, which I attended but Bob did not. .. MORE

Book Reviews and Suggested Readings

Seeking Truth versus Seeking Esteem

By Arnold Kling

So we have a way of telling which political activists actually care about society and which are merely trying to portray themselves as caring: The ones who actually care will exert significant effort to make sure that their beliefs are correct. —Michael Huemer, Progressive Myths,1 p. 212 Michael Huemer believes that some important components of .. MORE

Misanthropy Springs from the Lust for Power: H.G. Wells

By Richard Gunderman

H.G. Wells Best known today for science fiction novels such as The Time Machine, The Invisible Man, and The War of the Worlds, H.G. Wells was in his own day widely regarded as a prophet. Trained in science, he predicted the wireless telephone, directed energy weapons such as the laser, and the production of human-animal .. MORE

In Search of Stable Money

By Arnold Kling

Under a gold standard, government bonds are nearly free of inflation risk but not of default risk. Under a fiat standard, the reverse is true. ——White, Lawrence H. Better Money: Gold Fiat or Bitcoin? (pp. 214-215).1 In his new book, Lawrence H. White compares three possible monetary systems: a gold standard, a fiat money standard, .. MORE

150 Years of the Austrian School of Economics

By Caleb Fuller

Carl Menger Is 1871 the most important year in the history of social science? I think so. That year, Austrian financial journalist Carl Menger published his Grundsätze der Volkswirtschaftslehre—or Principles of Economics. Later that year another eminent British economist, William Stanley Jevons, published his Theory of Political Economy. Both treatises offered a (similar) solution to .. MORE

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