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Photo by Jakub Żerdzicki on Unsplash

The Bank Doesn’t Own Your House (Neither Does the Government)

There’s a common trope among people who have collateralized debt that, until the debt is cleared, they never truly own their property. For example, the bank holds the mortgage, and if mortgage payments aren’t made, the bank can seize the house. The trope says that  the “pay to stay” nature of the loan means the… MORE

Date Icon 05/28/2026

Author Icon By Jon Murphy

Article Icon 6 min

Recent

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By Federation Against Copyright Theft and Motion Picture Association - YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P-pYiWGSN8w – View/save archived versions on archive.org, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=147849222

In a controversial conversation platformed by the New York Times and recently discussed in The Atlantic, streamer Hasan Piker implied that he might steal a car if it carried no consequences. In the interview, author Jia Tolentino also casually admits to shoplifting lemons from Whole Foods. Although petty theft is common, the interview clip spread… MORE

Date Icon 05/26/2026

Author Icon By Joy Buchanan

Article Icon 4 min

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What does a lifelong atheist do when his dead father appears above him in the emergency room? Author and war reporter Sebastian Junger nearly bled to death in 2020 from a ruptured aneurysm, and what he saw in those moments sent him on a journey into physics, near-death experiences, and the nature of consciousness itself.… MORE

Date Icon 05/25/2026

Article Icon 1 min

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Christopher Columbus points forever to his next conquest in the Zona Colonial in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.

March 2026 marked the 250th anniversary of the publication of An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1776). However, Adam Smith was also the author of The Theory of Moral Sentiments (1759) and it was through his continuous revisions of this earlier work that his more famous book emerged. One… MORE

Date Icon 05/22/2026

Author Icon By Peter Boettke

Article Icon 4 min

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A ship passes by an iceberg off the coast of Greenland. Photo by Hubert Neufeld on Unsplash

In recent years, the Arctic has returned to the center of public attention: the renewed interest in Greenland, the progressive opening of maritime routes due to ice melt, and the claims over areas like the Svalbard archipelago are clear signals that Arctic policy will remain in the public eye. Regarding the Svalbard archipelago, located in… MORE

Date Icon 02/12/2026

Author Icon By Maurizio Bovi

Article Icon 9 min

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“Whether restaurant owners should allow smoking is not a public-policy problem. It’s a totally private issue, and the person who should make the decision is the property-rights owner.” Should restaurants allow smoking or not? Should schools teach evolution or intelligent design or both? Should insurance companies cover contraception? Should I be able to take off… MORE

Date Icon 04/02/2012

Author Icon By David R. Henderson

Article Icon 9 min

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People browse a night market in the foreground while high rise towers are visible behind them. Photo by Mitchell Luo on Unsplash.

“Much of Book 3 is dedicated to a historical account of how and why the feudal order that prevailed throughout Europe for many centuries eventually gave way to a liberal, commercial order—that is, how a world dominated by hierarchy, dependence, and intrastate conflict was superseded by one in which the rule of law reigned and… MORE

Date Icon 03/25/2026

Author Icon By Dennis C. Rasmussen

Article Icon 13 min

Videos & Conversations

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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

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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

Date Icon 02/25/2020

Article Icon 5 min

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Israel Kirzner, Professor Emeritus at NYU, is among the foremost scholars in the continuing development of the Austrian school of economic theory. He has extended our understanding of the workings of a free society, illuminated the role of entrepreneurs in the process of economic discovery, and shed new light on the dynamics of market forces.… MORE

Date Icon 09/18/2013

Article Icon 4 min

The sovereign himself can never have either interest or inclination to pervert the order of justice, or to oppress the great body of the people. In the capital his presence overawes more or less all his inferior officers, who in the remoter provinces, from whence the complaints of the people are less likely to reach him, can exercise their tyranny with much more safety.

— Adam Smith

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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One of the most fundamental requirements of a capitalist economic system—and one of the most misunderstood concepts—is a strong system of property rights. For decades social critics in the United States and throughout the Western world have complained that “property” rights too often take precedence over “human” rights, with the result that people are treated… MORE

Date Icon 02/05/2018

Author Icon By Armen A. Alchian

Article Icon 14 min

Article Icon Biography

Harold Demsetz made major contributions to the economics of property rights and to the economics of industrial organization. He also coined the term “the Nirvana approach.” Economists have altered it slightly but use it widely. Demsetz was one of the few top economists of his era to communicate almost entirely in words and not math.… MORE

Date Icon 03/24/2020

Article Icon 9 min

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Intellectual property is normally defined as the set of products protected under laws associated with copyright, patent, trademark, industrial design, and trade secrets. The U.S. Constitution expressly allows for intellectual property protection, albeit for a limited time, in the form of protection of “writings and discoveries” in order to promote “science and useful arts.” This… MORE

Date Icon 02/05/2018

Author Icon By Stan Liebowitz

Article Icon 17 min

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