Antón Chamberlin

Antón Chamberlin holds a PhD in economics from Middle Tennessee State University, as well as Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees from Loyola University New Orleans and Troy University. He is currently pursuing an MA in Theology through the Echo Graduate Service Program at the University of Notre Dame. With over a decade of studying free market economics, he has published in peer-reviewed journals and on popular websites promoting economic liberty. His primary interests are Austrian economics, Mexican economic history, Catholicism, and sports economics.

What Do Consumers Know That GDP Aggregates Don’t?

Rising costs, reduced mobility, and policy uncertainty may explain why households feel squeezed even when headline growth is good.

What Do Consumers Know That GDP Aggregates Don’t?

When Production Isn’t Production and Prices Aren’t Prices

When we use economic terms loosely, we smuggle in assumptions that the theory itself does not support.

When Production Isn’t Production and Prices Aren’t Prices

Shutdown Lessons on Institutional Fragility

FAA system outages underscore the risk of concentrating critical infrastructure in a single federal agency. Decentralized alternatives offer resilience that centralized systems struggle to match.

Shutdown Lessons on Institutional Fragility

States Are Reaffirming Property Rights at the Racetrack

First use establishes property rights, even if neighbors don't agree. States are formalizing owners' claims to protect them from "aesthetic interventionism.”

States Are Reaffirming Property Rights at the Racetrack