• Initial Claims and Continuing Claims for Unemployment Benefits Fall in the Latest Week

    “Initial claims for unemployment benefits continue to decline, suggesting a strengthening labor market and improving economic outlook.” – Robert Hughes

    Initial Claims and Continuing Claims for Unemployment Benefits Fall in the Latest Week
  • Services Sector Expands Again in April

    “The services sector expanded again in April, but logistical and labor issues as well as shortages of materials are boosting pressure on prices.” – Robert Hughes

    Services Sector Expands Again in April
  • Policy Uncertainty Causes Sundry Shortages

    “Policymakers seem determined to force through as many policy changes as rapidly as possible, possibly in an attempt to create confusion over causes, much the way Covid and lockdowns became conflated in the public mind. They need to tread carefully, though, because our technological and military might will not save us if the core cause…

    Policy Uncertainty Causes Sundry Shortages
  • Biden’s Infrastructure Boondoggle

    “The immediate lesson from all of this is that Biden’s plan is a boondoggle waiting to happen (just as would have been the case with Trump). The longer-term lesson is that we should get the federal government out of the business of infrastructure.” ~ Daniel J. Mitchell

    Biden’s Infrastructure Boondoggle
  • Auto Sales Hit highest Level Since 2005

    “Light-vehicle sales rose again in April, moving above the recent range to the highest pace since 2005. The gain was broad-based across most segments and signals strength for consumer spending.” – Robert Hughes

    Auto Sales Hit highest Level Since 2005
  • From AI to UBI?

    “AI cannot credibly justify a radical policy like UBI at this point. Misunderstanding AI adds to a natural fear of the unknown though we know that technological change always proves beneficial to the economy and that society will have ample resources to aid anyone who might be displaced by AI in the future. People should…

    From AI to UBI?
  • The Covid-19 Emergency Did Not Justify Lockdowns

    “Whatever the novelty and dangers of Covid-19, the novelty and dangers of Covid-19 lockdowns are at least arguably of the same magnitude. The dismissal of the unknown possible horrors of lockdowns in order to focus attention exclusively on the unknown possible horrors of SARS-CoV-2 is as unjustified by science as it is unpardonable as policy.”…

    The Covid-19 Emergency Did Not Justify Lockdowns
  • Manufacturing Survey Suggests Strong Demand, Materials Shortages, and Rising Prices

    “The Institute for Supply Management survey of manufacturers suggests ongoing expansion for the sector in April, but also continued production and logistical issues as well as rising materials costs.” – Robert Hughes

    Manufacturing Survey Suggests Strong Demand, Materials Shortages, and Rising Prices
  • Bitcoin and a Lesson in Electricity Markets

    “We should indeed be skeptical of financial fads, of everything in the Everything Bubble. And we should argue over bitcoin’s many monetary attributes – mostly because we therefore highlight how other monetary regimes work. But the environmental accusations of Bitcoin’s mining operations is like hitting your head against brick walls – not a very useful…

    Bitcoin and a Lesson in Electricity Markets
  • Climate, CO2 Optimism

    “Climate alarmism, never proven, is speculative—and increasingly so. Climate models are overpredicting real-world warming by half. For climate economists, lower-range anthropogenic warming flips the alleged externality from negative to positive. In any case, as leading scientist Roy Spencer concludes, ‘There is no Climate Crisis. There is no Climate Emergency.'” ~ Robert L. Bradley

    Climate, CO2 Optimism

General Institutional Considerations of Blockchain and Emerging Applications

PC Earle, DM Waugh. The Emerald Handbook on Cryptoassets: Investment Opportunities and …, 2023

Decentralized Marketplaces with Privately Enforced Contracts: A Case Study of OpenBazaar.

PC Earle, M Gulker, EP Stringham. Journal of Private Enterprise 37 (4), 2022

The calculus of dissent: Bias and diversity in FOMC projections

TL Hogan. Public Choice 191 (1-2), 105-135, 2022

Framing affordable housing: an experimental test of changing attitudes

M Matheis, J Sorens. Housing Studies, 1-17, 2022

Situating Southern Influences in James M. Buchanan and Modern Public Choice Economics

A Carden, V Geloso, PW Magness. Standard of Living: Essays on Economics, History, and Religion in Honor of …, 2022

Gordon Tullock and the Economics of Slavery

P Magness, A Carden, I Murtazashvili. Available at SSRN 4318585, 2023

How pronounced is the U-curve? Revisiting income inequality in the United States, 1917–60

VJ Geloso, P Magness, J Moore, P Schlosser. The Economic Journal 132 (647), 2366-2391, 2022