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- Search found 10 items for:
- Jeffrey M. Herbener
- Booms and Busts
Media Asset
Author:
Jeffrey M. Herbener
Online Publish Date:
Recorded at the Toronto Stock Exchange; September 16-17, 1999. [32:39]
Media Asset
Author:
Jeffrey M. Herbener
Online Publish Date:
From the “Money and the Fed” panel. Recorded at the 2014 Austrian Economics Research Conference in Auburn, Alabama, on 21 March 2014.
Media Asset
Author:
Jeffrey M. Herbener
Online Publish Date:
Recorded at the Mises Institute Supporters Summit in Auburn, Alabama, 12-14 October 2023. Sponsored by Paul Dietrich. Download the slides from this lecture at Mises.org/SS23_PPT_17
Mises Daily
Author:
Jeffrey M. Herbener
Online Publish Date:
Murray Rothbard called the central puzzle of the business cycle the “cluster of entrepreneurial error.” During the boom, most entrepreneurs and investors appear to be geniuses, earning extraordinary profits year after year. During the bust, their fortunes are suddenly reversed, and they seem like dunces and suffer losses year after year.
Mises Daily
Author:
Jeffrey M. Herbener
Online Publish Date:
Economists have been counseling inflation to cure Japan’s ills, while warning of the grave dangers of deflation. This is sheer nonsense. Nothing apart from war has damaged economic prosperity in the 20th century as much as the loose money and credit policies of the world’s central banks, from Germany in the 1920s to China in the 1940s, to various
Free Market
Author:
Jeffrey M. Herbener
Online Publish Date:
The Free Market 16, no. 1 (January 1998) When the IMF declares a country an “economic miracle,” look out. A financial crisis cannot be far behind. First it was Japan, the juggernaut that was said to be on the verge of supplanting the U.S. as an economic superpower. Then it was Mexico, the model of how former banana republics can be transformed
Free Market
Author:
Jeffrey M. Herbener
Online Publish Date:
The Free Market 16, no. 12 (December 1998) With huge segments of the world economy mired in depression, can we conclude that capitalism has failed or that the market behaves irrationally? That seems to be the consensus among many commentators, so we hear a wide range of calls for government intervention to patch things up. Monetarists are