Spring/Summer 1985 Vol. 5 No. 1 The Political Economy of Poverty Share Articles Have Antipoverty Programs Increased Poverty? By James D. Gwartney and Thomas S. McCaleb The Politics of Poverty and the Poverty of Politics By Dwight R. Lee The Poverty of Nations By Karl Brunner Property Rights, Land Reform, and Economic Well‐Being By Victor Canto Resources, People, and the Neomalthusian Fallacy By David Osterfeld A Public Choice View of the Minimum Wage By Thomas Rustici In Defense of the Invisible Hand By Norman P. Barry End the Postal Monopoly Is Social Security Politically Untouchable? By Loren Lomasky The Safety and Efficacy of New Drug Approval By Dale H. Gieringer Labor Law and the First Amendment Deregulating Urban Transportation By Robert Cervero Job Protection in Urban Mass Transit By Simon Rottenberg Rights, Contract, and Utility in Policy Espousal By Leland B. Yeager Life in the Gulag: A Property Rights Perspective By Gary M. Anderson and Robert Tollison State Education: Have Economists Made a Case? By Jack High Privatization: A Strategy to Cut the Budget By Stuart Butler The National Budget Referendum: Proceed with Caution By Bruce R. Bolnick Reply to The National Budget Referendum: Proceed with Caution By Roger A. Arnold and Thomas L. Wyrick Book Review Political Economy and Freedom by Gertrude E. Schroeder By G. Warren Nutter Power and Privilege: Labor Unions in America by Morgan O. Reynolds By Thomas J. DiLorenzo The Theory of Public Choice — II Edited by James M. Buchanan and Robert D. Tollison Latest Issues Fall 2021 Spring/Summer 2021 Winter 2021 Fall 2020
Reply to The National Budget Referendum: Proceed with Caution By Roger A. Arnold and Thomas L. Wyrick