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A bowl of noodles and vegetables in a hand. Photo by Terrillo Walls on Unsplash.

EconLog Price Theory: Veggies or Noodles?

This is the latest in our series of posts in our series on price theory problems with Professor Bryan Cutsinger. You can see all of Cutsinger’s problems and solutions by subscribing to his EconLog RSS feed. Share your proposed solutions in the comments. Professor Cutsinger will be present in the comments for the next couple… MORE

Date Icon 06/02/2026

Author Icon By Bryan Cutsinger

Article Icon 2 min

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If you want to change the world, how you spend your 80,000 working hours may be the most important decision you can make. Benjamin Todd, founder of 80,000 Hours, joins EconTalk’s Russ Roberts to dismantle the career advice you’ve been fed since childhood. “Follow your passion” turns out to be a trap. Chasing a big… MORE

Date Icon 06/01/2026

Article Icon 1 min

Article Icon EconLog
Photo by Helena Lopes on Unsplash

Sam Enright works on innovation policy at Progress Ireland, an independent policy think tank in Dublin, and runs a publication called The Fitzwilliam. Most relevant to us, on his personal blog, he writes a popular link roundup; what follows is an abridged version of his and Links for April. Blogs and short links 1. Rest… MORE

Date Icon 05/29/2026

Author Icon By Sam Enright

Article Icon 16 min

Article Icon EconLog
Photo by Jakub Żerdzicki on Unsplash

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

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In recent years, fears of inflation and the possibility of recession have grabbed headlines, particularly as the Federal Reserve has raised interest rates to curb inflation. In a recent article published in The Washington Post, historian Meg Jacobs and economist Isabella Weber suggest an alternative way to fight inflation.1 Rather than fight inflation by raising… MORE

Date Icon 09/05/2022

Author Icon By Rosolino Candela

Article Icon 8 min

Article Icon Article

It was Don Lavoie, not Friedrich Hayek, who coined the term “knowledge problem” in his seminal 1985 National Economic Planning: What Is Left?1 (itself a more accessible and policy-focused distillation of Lavoie’s thesis, under Israel Kirzner, entitled Rivalry and Central Planning: The Socialist Calculation Debate Reconsidered). Lavoie reformulated and clarified the knowledge problem as developed… MORE

Date Icon 08/07/2023

Author Icon By Cory Massimino

Article Icon 21 min

Article Icon Article

“Do people do things for us because those people are good, because they love us? Sometimes they do. Your family loves you, and your friends would sacrifice things for you. But for most of us, family and friends is a pretty small group…. Something other than love, and altruism, has to organize all the thousands… MORE

Date Icon 08/01/2005

Author Icon By Michael Munger

Article Icon 12 min

EconTalk

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Don Boudreaux on Energy Prices

Date Icon 06/16/2008

Article Icon 1 min

Podcast Icon Podcast

Charles Platt on Working at Wal-Mart

Date Icon 06/15/2009

Article Icon 1 min

EconLog

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Making Money…Less Useful?

Date Icon 04/28/2026

Article Icon 5 min

Article Icon EconLog

AI and Comparative Advantage

Date Icon 05/15/2026

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

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

Video Icon Video

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

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
Article Icon Biography

If any twentieth-century economist was a Renaissance man, it was Friedrich Hayek. He made fundamental contributions in political theory, psychology, and economics. In a field in which the relevance of ideas often is eclipsed by expansions on an initial theory, many of his contributions are so remarkable that people still read them more than fifty… MORE

Date Icon 02/05/2018

Article Icon 11 min

Encyclopedia Icon Encyclopedia

Modern economists excel at identifying theoretical reasons why markets might fail. While these theories may temper uncritical views of the market, it is important to note that markets do, in fact, work incredibly well. Indeed, markets work so thoroughly and quietly that their success too often goes unnoticed. Consider that the number of different ways… MORE

Date Icon 02/05/2018

Author Icon By Donald J. Boudreaux

Article Icon 8 min

Article Icon Biography

  Ludwig von Mises was one of the last members of the original austrian school of economics. He earned his doctorate in law and economics from the University of Vienna in 1906. One of his best works, The Theory of Money and Credit, was published in 1912 and was used as a money and banking… MORE

Date Icon 02/05/2018

Article Icon 5 min

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