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- Search found 10 items for:
- Capital and Interest Theory
- Peter G. Klein
Media Asset
Author:
Peter G. Klein
Online Publish Date:
Recorded at the 2003 Supporters Summit: Prosperty, War, and Depression . (29:32)
Media Asset
Author:
Peter G. Klein
Online Publish Date:
What determines market prices? Buyers and sellers must know of feasible trades. They can learn from their mistakes. They prefer higher profits to lower profits. They think in discreet terms. Both participants win in market exchanges. Prices allocate resources to their highest uses. It is welfare-maximizing in any meaningful way. Prices are
Media Asset
Author:
Peter G. Klein
Online Publish Date:
1996 Mises Institute Supporters Summit, San Francisco, California; February 9-10, 1996.
Media Asset
Author:
Peter G. Klein
Online Publish Date:
Interviewed by host John O’Donnell, Peter Klein discusses income inequality cause and effect, role of Fed intervention in capital markets, malinvestment in boom-bust cycles, and the 99% vs the 1% myth. Klein also discusses why boomers are working longer and the impact of youth joining the
Media Asset
Author:
Peter G. Klein
Online Publish Date:
A strong member of the “second generation of the Austrian school of economics,” Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk (1851–1914) and his works are discussed by Peter Klein. Böhm-Bawerk did much to extend and further develop Menger’s theories of value, price, capital, and production. Included in his work of the two volume Capital and Interest is a devastating
Media Collection
Author:
Joseph T. Salerno
Peter G. Klein
Joseph T. Salerno and Peter G. Klein are two of the most productive micro-economists in the Austrian School today. This seminar provides an introduction to Austrian Economics. Presented at the Mises Institute, 11-15 June
Mises Wire
Author:
Peter G. Klein
Online Publish Date:
[Cross-posted at Organizations and Markets ] Over the years I’m increasingly convinced that Israel Kirzner’s metaphor of entrepreneurship as costless discovery — a form of arbitrage, exploiting differences between actual prices and their Walrasian equilibrium values — is a misleading way to think about entrepreneurship. Emphasizing knowledge,