- Cafe Hayek - https://cafehayek.com -

Some Links

Tweet [1]

I’ve encountered in print (although never, to my knowledge, in the flesh) people who believe that Cuban society today compares favorably – or at least not unfavorably – with American society.  These people should read Mike Munger’s just-published essay on Castro’s dystopia [2].

Here’s the Fraser Institute’s Alan Dowd on the importance of economic freedom [3].  A slice:

Economic freedom is one of the main drivers of prosperity and growth, and the evidence shows that states with low levels of economic freedom reduce the ability of their citizens to prosper economically, while states with high levels of economic freedom maximize their citizens’ ability to prosper economically.

Consider that in the most economically free U.S. states, the average per-capita GDP in 2012 (the most recent year of available data) was about $55,000, while in the least economically free states it was just $48,000. In fact, the jurisdictions in the least-free quartile on what my colleagues call “the world-adjusted, all-government index” had an average per-capita GDP of just $10,079, compared to $57,269 for the most-free quartile.

My Mercatus Center colleagues Veronique de Rugy and Jason Fichtner ask if Uncle Sam’s spending is too vast to be overseen [4]

Tim Fitzgerald explores frackonomics [5]

GMU Econ PhD candidate Abby Hall argues that prostitution should be legal [6].

Bob Murphy defends Uber’s surge pricing [7]

Merrill Matthews understands that many businesses who support hikes in the minimum wage do so for anti-competitive purposes [8].

Speaking of government’s cruel policy of stripping low-skilled workers of valuable bargaining chips, here’s Dan Mitchell [9].  (HT Ross Kaminsky)

Share [10] Tweet [11] Share [12] Email [13] Print [14]

Comments