Prepping for the Next Pandemic

If you are like me, you spend a certain amount of time trying not to remember the pandemic experience. But COVID-19 pandemic did cause more than one million American deaths. In a world of sane and sensible prioritizing and policy-making, spending some time and effort focused on how to reduce the risks and costs of…

Prepping for the Next Pandemic

The (deeply underwhelming) Budget

Michael Reddell writes –  There were good things in the Budget. There may be few/no votes in better macroeconomic statistics and, specifically, a monthly CPI but – years late (for which the current government can’t really be blamed) – it is finally going to happen.

The (deeply underwhelming) Budget

US State-Level Abortion Regulations: Causes and Effects

Regulations about abortion are often wildly controversial. But what effects to they actually have? Caitlin Myers addresses these issues in “From Roe to Dobbs: 50 Years of Cause and Effect of US State Abortion Regulations” (Annual Review of Public Health 2025, pp. 433-446). As a starting point, consider the years before and after the 1973 US Supreme Court…

US State-Level Abortion Regulations: Causes and Effects

The cost of Labour’s botched pay equity scheme

The Herald reports: During her Budget presentation, Willis said that pay equity costs in 2020 were initially expected to reach $3.7b but there had since been a “blowout” with costs rising steeply, especially due to Labour’s 2022 decision to fund claims in the “funded sector”. The exact figure isn’t known, but as they have announced […]

The cost of Labour’s botched pay equity scheme

An interesting paper about the first 50 years of Nobel Prize winners in economics

The first Nobel Prize in economics was awarded in 1969, to Ragnar Frisch and Jan Tinbergen. The fiftieth prize was awarded in 2018, to William Nordhaus and Paul Romer. In total up to that point, there had been 91 Nobel laureates in economics. This 2019 article by Allen Sanderson (University of Chicago) and John Siegfried (Vanderbilt…

An interesting paper about the first 50 years of Nobel Prize winners in economics

Why “cheaper” wind and solar raise costs. Part I: The fat tail problem

by Planning Engineer (Russ Schussler) Wind and solar power are often touted as the cheapest sources of electricity in many regions, capable of delivering low-cost energy for the vast majority of the time. At first glance, this might suggest that an energy mix heavily weighted toward renewables would be the most economical choice. However, this […]

Why “cheaper” wind and solar raise costs. Part I: The fat tail problem

Excusing the Government

An excerpt from Chapter 3 of *Unbeatable*

Excusing the Government

Pro-Market & Pro-Business: Firms Strive to Satisfy the Customer

Econ 101 is Underrated: Pharma Price Controls

Econ 101 is often dismissed as too simplistic. Yet recent events suggest that Econ 101 is underrated. Take the tariff debate: understanding that a tariff is a tax, that prices represent opportunity costs, that a bilateral trade deficit is largely meaningless, that a so-called trade “deficit” is equally a goods surplus or an investment surplus—these […]

Econ 101 is Underrated: Pharma Price Controls

David Friedman Explains Why Trump’s Tariffs Will Fail | IEA Live

Kevin Gentry Talks With Me About Trade and Phil Gramm’s and My New Book

TweetThanks for the honor, Kevin! The post Kevin Gentry Talks With Me About Trade and Phil Gramm’s and My New Book appeared first on Cafe Hayek.

Kevin Gentry Talks With Me About Trade and Phil Gramm’s and My New Book

Fiscal starting points

Not that long ago, New Zealand’s fiscal balances looked pretty good by advanced country standards. Sure, the fiscal pressures from longer life expectancies were beginning to build – as they were in most of the advanced world – but in absolute and relative terms New Zealand still looked in pretty good shape. Just a few […]

Fiscal starting points

He should have apologised

The ABC reports: There are concerns that former Victorian Liberal leader John Pesutto will be bankrupted after being ordered to pay costs of $2.3 million after losing his defamation battle with Moira Deeming. … The Federal Court order handed down on Friday morning, raises the prospect Mr Pesutto will be bankrupted and forced out of…

He should have apologised

Propping up the film sector or stimulating growth?

Ani O’Brien writes –  On Friday night, having imbibed a few wines I strayed onto X to unwisely engage in some (slightly drunk) opinion sharing. I tweeted:  

Propping up the film sector or stimulating growth?

David Friedman on markets, governments and whether we need either?

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NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

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STOP THESE THINGS

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