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Free Markets Against Discrimination on eBay

By Art Carden | May 15 2024
I live in Alabama, where college football is the major religion. The two major denominations are the University of Alabama Crimson Tide and the Auburn University Tigers. They have fought a storied and ludicrously overwrought rivalry since 1893, except for the four-decade gap between 1907 and 1948 when they didn’t play one another because the ...

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Ryan Bourne’s Supremacy

By David Henderson | May 14 2024

  The quantity of rent-controlled apartments demanded thus becomes enormous. In New York City, some old rent-controlled units have become family heirlooms. A woman went viral on TikTok in 2021 after showcasing her redecorated $1,300 a month rent-controlled two-bedroom apartment on the Upper West Side, after inheriting the lease from her parents—a unit that would .. MORE

Featured Comment

Populists on both the left and the right continually whine about stagnant living standards.  Just imagine the boost to living standards if working class people could buy a high quality electric car for $10,000!

Scott Sumner, May 15

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Uncategorized

“Junk Fees” Typically Serve an Important Purpose

By David Henderson | May 17, 2024 | 4

Charging extra for specific preferences, such as a seat selection on a flight, enables lower basic prices, increasing access to no-frills options for lower-income customers, while allowing businesses to customize their services to individual customers’ preferences. Airlines unbundle in-flight food and checked bags, for example, leading to more profit opportunities and lower base fares. Yes, .. MORE

Adam Smith

Professor Hugh H. Macaulay: A Tribute on His Centennial

By Bruce Yandle | May 17, 2024 | 1

Click-a-ty-clack, click-a-ty-clack . . ., click-a-ty-clack.    Those were the sounds that regularly echoed down the second-floor hallway of Clemson University’s Sirrine Hall in the 1980s and before. Those sounds of metal-on-metal could be expected by the economists on the floor at 10:00 in the morning, carrying a clear message: “Time for coffee!”  The sounds .. MORE

Austrian Economics

My Life as an Austrian Economist: My Philosophical Vision and the Critique of Scientism

By Peter Boettke | May 17, 2024 | 4

As with any tale, it is useful to begin at the beginning.  And in my instance, all my beginnings related to Austrian economics are found at Grove City College.  How I ended up at Grove City is an extremely unlikely journey with zigs and zags, the probability of which defies all calculation.  I was not .. MORE

Labor Mobility, Immigration, Outsourcing

The Actual “Great Replacement”

By Scott Sumner | May 16, 2024 | 10

Some people on the right worry that immigration will cause America’s white population to be largely replaced by non-whites.  This hypothesis is sometimes referred to as “The Great Replacement”.  There is a great replacement occurring, but these worriers have things exactly backwards.  (As an aside, this post will not examine the pros and cons of .. MORE

Economics of Crime

How Drug Prohibition Increases the Rate of Crime

By Tarnell Brown | May 16, 2024 | 2

This is the fourth in my series on the social costs of drug prohibition. You can read part one here (prison-industrial complex), part two (police militarization) here, and part three (civil asset forfeiture).   Prohibition policies are often sold to a willing public on the grounds of crime reduction. This is especially true regarding the .. MORE

Energy, Environment, Resources

Some of the Awful Effects of Price Controls on Oil

By David Henderson | May 15, 2024 | 4

  Because the price control system was incomplete in that it didn’t cover every part of the U.S. oil market, the price controls were rarely binding. When they were, in the winter of 1972–1973, winter of 1973–1974, and early 1979, shortages occurred. During the rest of the 10 years, the price controls and entitlements program .. MORE

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Book Club

Books: Reviews and Suggested Readings

My Weekly Reading and Viewing for May 5, 2024 13

First, Happy Cinco de Mayo. Now to the content. Backpage: A Blueprint for Squelching Speech by Elizabeth Nolan Brown, Reason, April 29, 2024. Excerpt: From the beginning, this prosecution has been premised on a bogus rationale (authorities yammer on about sex trafficking though none of the defendants are charged with sex trafficking), overreaching in its scope (attempting .. MORE

Books: Reviews and Suggested Readings

Ryan Bourne’s Supremacy 9

  The quantity of rent-controlled apartments demanded thus becomes enormous. In New York City, some old rent-controlled units have become family heirlooms. A woman went viral on TikTok in 2021 after showcasing her redecorated $1,300 a month rent-controlled two-bedroom apartment on the Upper West Side, after inheriting the lease from her parents—a unit that would .. MORE

Books: Reviews and Suggested Readings

Legislators, Technology, and Michael Crichton 7

Michael Crichton once highlighted an unusual quirk in human thinking – something he called Gell-Mann Amnesia, after his friend Murray Gell-Mann. Chrichton said: Briefly stated, the Gell-Mann Amnesia effect is as follows. You open the newspaper to an article on some subject you know well. In Murray’s case, physics. In mine, show business. You read .. MORE

Book Reviews and Suggested Readings

Mir McLuhanism

By Arnold Kling

… digital media not only enhance information exchange and render offline life obsolete—they also reverse literacy and retrieve orality. … This book is about orality, which once was obsolesced by writing, and about literacy, which is now becoming obsolesced by digital media. —Andrey Mir, Digital Future in the Rearview Mirror: Jaspers’ Axial Age and Logan’s .. MORE

Liberty’s Discontents

By Arnold Kling

[t]he idea of decline consists of two distinct traditions. For every Western intellectual who dreads the collapse of his own society (like Henry Adams or Arnold Toynbee or Paul Kennedy or Charles Murray), there is another who has looked forward to the event with glee. —Arthur Herman, The Idea of Decline in Western History1 In .. 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

Subversive Innovation: A Strategic Reading of Nozick’s Framework for Utopia

By Max Borders

Most students of political philosophy have had some contact with Robert Nozick’s Anarchy, State and Utopia (ASU)1—specifically Part II. And for good reasons. Part II is essential, not only because it sets out devastating critiques of competing moral-political doctrines but also because it awakens our deepest intuitions about the coercion required to make those doctrines .. MORE