Brian C. Albrecht

Fellow

Brian Albrecht is Chief Economist of the International Center for Law & Economics (ICLE). Brian’s research focuses on price theory, information economics, competition and innovation, and political economy.

He has published in both academic journals, such as Contemporary Economic Policy, Public Choice, PLoS ONE, Journal of Macroeconomics, and the Journal of Economic Methodology, as well as popular media like the Boston Globe, Star Tribune, The Hill, and City Journal. Brian also writes the Economic Forces newsletter.

He earned his PhD in economics from the University of Minnesota in 2020. He previously earned his M.A. in economics, also from the University of Minnesota, and an M.Sc. in economics of public policy from the Barcelona Graduate School of Economics. He received his bachelor’s in physics and political science from St. Olaf College.

When Can Waffle House Raise its Prices?

"Instead of being evidence that markets are 'no longer controlled by competition,' firms raising prices together is evidence of supply and demand at work." ~ Brian C. Albrecht

When Can Waffle House Raise its Prices?

The Fed’s Decentralized System and the Spread of Economic Ideas

Reserve Banks brought monetarism and rational expectations into the monetary policy discussion, and, more recently, they have fostered dissenting views on the Fed’s role as a lender of last resort…

The Fed’s Decentralized System and the Spread of Economic Ideas

Freer Trade and Economic Growth: Evidence of the Relationship

Even if the reduction of trade barriers accounts for only a small part of the observed increase in growth, the cumulative gains from reform appear to be substantial.

Freer Trade and Economic Growth: Evidence of the Relationship

The Zero Lower Bound was Irrelevant

If the binding zero lower bound did not prolong the last recession, it may not prolong the next.

The Zero Lower Bound was Irrelevant

Are Financial Crises Driven By Supply Or Demand Shocks?

In a new NBER working paper, Felipe Benguria and Alan M. Taylor consider whether financial crises usually stem from the demand or supply side of the market.

Are Financial Crises Driven By Supply Or Demand Shocks?

The Gold Standard, FDR, and the Recovery of 1933

In a recent NBER working paper, Margaret M. Jacobson, Eric M. Leeper, and Bruce Preston argue that FDR’s abandonment of the gold standard helped bring an end to the Great…

The Gold Standard, FDR, and the Recovery of 1933

Sovereign Bonds Since The Battle of Waterloo

The history of sovereign debt appears to be a history of default, repudiation, and limited debt enforcement. Why, then, do investors keep going back?

Sovereign Bonds Since The Battle of Waterloo

The History of Money and the Future of Cryptocurrency

In a recent NBER working paper, Barry Eichengreen argues “there is no straight line from commodity money to fiat money and from there to crypto.”

The History of Money and the Future of Cryptocurrency

Why Are Many Households Unbanked?

A new NBER working paper raises doubts about the welfare gains from mobile banking.  

Why Are Many Households Unbanked?

Paper Money in Colonial North Carolina

In a new NBER working paper, Cory Cutsail and Farley Grubb offer a novel data set on North Carolina’s paper-money regime (1712-1774).

Paper Money in Colonial North Carolina