Winter 2004 Vol. 23 No. 3 A Monetary History of the United States after 40 Years Share Articles Reflections on A Monetary History By Milton Friedman Why A Monetary History Has Had a Long Life By Anna. J. Schwartz A Monetary History as a Model for Historians By Allan H. Meltzer A Monetary History from a Policymaker’s Perspective By William Poole Misconceptions Regarding Rules vs. Discretion for Monetary Policy By Bennett T. McCallum Does Increased International Mobility of Factors of Production Weaken the Case for Free Trade? By Donald J. Boudreaux Property Rights and the Wealth of Nations: A Cross-Country Study By Bernhard Heitger Measuring Bad Governance By Evan Osborne Economic Liberalization and International Order By John A. Tures Pension Reform in China: A Question of Property Rights By James A. Dorn The Edgewood Voucher Program: Some Preliminary Findings By John Merrifield U.S. Elections Are Increasingly Biased against Moderates By William A. Niskanen Book Review Basic Economics: A Citizen’s Guide to the Economy and Applied Economics: Thinking Beyond Stage One by Thomas Sowell By R. Bastiat The State of Democratic Theory by Ian Shapiro By Ilya Somin Latest Issues Fall 2021 Spring/Summer 2021 Winter 2021 Fall 2020
Does Increased International Mobility of Factors of Production Weaken the Case for Free Trade? By Donald J. Boudreaux
Basic Economics: A Citizen’s Guide to the Economy and Applied Economics: Thinking Beyond Stage One by Thomas Sowell By R. Bastiat