top 15 @ mises.org
This was posted to the mises.org/blog:Now, I realize they're asking for nominations for the top 15, and not for my top 15 nominations, and yet ... that's how many nominations I come up with:Best of 2004
Mises.org UpdatesThe Mises Institute is inviting nominations for the best 15 Daily Articles of 2004, and the best 5 scholarly articles from either the Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics (6.3-7.2) or the Journal of Libertarian Studies (17.4-18.3). Send your nominations to contact@mises.org. (We'll leave out best online books, since the the 2004 list is dominated by Menger, Rothbard, and Mises.)
- Capital Exports and Free Trade, by J.G. Hülsmann
- Perils of Outsourcing, by Cecil E. Bohanon and T. Norman Van Cott
- The American West: A Heritage of Peace, by Ryan McMaken
- Morality and Economic Law: Toward a Reconciliation, by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
- What Brought on the French Revolution?, by H.A. Scott Trask
- Inflation and the French Revolution: The Story of a Monetary Catastrophe, by H.A. Scott Trask
- Profits Do Not Cause High Prices, by William L. Anderson
- Fairness with Your Coffee?, by N. Joseph Potts
- The Mystery of Central Banking, by Robert P. Murphy
- Ten Recurring Economic Fallacies, 1774-2004, by H.A. Scott Trask
- What Does Marginality Mean?, by Robert Murphy
- Markets, Not Unions, Gave us Leisure, by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
- Do Capitalists Have Superior Bargaining Power?, by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
- The New Deal Debunked (again), by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
- That Taco Bell Boycott, by Daniel D'Amico
Notice that certain names appear more than once. Trask and DiLorenzo are committed to writing clear economic history, and Murphy is dedicated to writing clear economics in general.
Both Woods and D'Amico address Catholic "social justice" but their message would be well-targeted to many of the well-intentioned folks I know on the secular Left.
(I think of Potts's article whenever I pass the "Fair Trade" coffee display at the market down the block. Maybe I'll go take a picture of that display and see if I can do a little deconstruction of the message on this blog -- with Potts's points in mind.)
- Postscript:
- Jeffrey Tucker points out that I don't explain the order of my list. It is in chronological order of publication date. He also wants me to pick just one article for my nomination. (But that's exactly what I was trying to avoid doing!) I don't know what criteria others will use, but for me, a "best article" should teach something foundational and important to a new reader. It should appeal to a neophyte, and it should probably correct a misconception -- since so much of people's implicit economic understanding is based in misconceptions. I want the reader to come away thinking That's so obvious, now! about a claim that first seemed counterintuitive. Based on these criteria, I'd pick Trask's Ten Recurring Fallacies. (Let me know what you think.)
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