From the Editor March / April 2024 snbchf.com (2024)

From the Editor March / April 2024 snbchf.com (1)by
Ryan McMaken
My articlesMy offerMy siteAbout meMy videosMy books
Follow on:LinkedINTwitter

Inflation Is Destroying Us

One of the most damaging shortcomings of modern statistics-based economics is that it all too often removes the individual human person from its analysis. In this setting, “economics” becomes a matter of “macro” aggregates and data factoids like GDP and CPI. This kind of “economics” removes the individual acting person as the central, key variable.

Austrian School economics, on the other hand, never loses sight of the importance of the individual in understanding economic analysis. This focus on the individual provides another advantage as well: Austrian School economists are far less likely to forget the fact that society and the economy are not machines to be fine-tuned and tinkered with. Rather, we understand that groups of individuals are far too diverse and complex to allow for central planning. We delude ourselves if we think we can anticipate, plan, or manage the wants and needs of millions of individuals.

Our focus has never strayed from seeing the flesh and blood of human beings behind every economic statistic, every easy-money scheme, and every new dangerous experiment in public policy.

In our current age of rampant monetary inflation and price inflation, good economics has become more relevant for ordinary people. Inflation, of course, is not some arcane matter of consumer price indices and statistics on the monetary base. Inflation, for many people, is simply ruinous on the personal level. Despite claims to the contrary, incomes are not keeping up with inflation in the real world. The prices of housing, education, and even groceries continue to force down the standard of living for millions of Americans. The CPI has increased by 20 percent since 2020. Cash savings and incomes have fallen significantly in their purchasing power, harming people of ordinary means. A new home is quickly becoming unattainable for first-time buyers.

The effects of this inflationary regime cannot be fully measured by numbers on spreadsheets. There are deeper societal effects as well. In this issue of The Misesian, Academic Vice President Joseph Salerno examines the effects of economics on our very ideas about ourselves as human beings with detailed examples in historical context. He writes: “Money and property are thus essential elements in the socioeconomic process conditioning what an individual human being is and can become. Without economic calculation based on sound money, not only is it impossible for entrepreneurs and businesses to reasonably calculate the outcome of alternative investment decisions, but it also becomes impossible for a person to even know who he is or to reasonably assess the possibilities of what he can become.”

This issue also contains a special Q and A with economist Nicolás Cachanosky, who is a native of Argentina, explaining how galloping inflation has demoralized and destroyed the Argentine middle class, leading to political victories for Javier Milei. Unfortunately, he notes, Argentina’s inflation-fueled problems go much deeper than what can be fixed in a few years. Argentina will need to embrace longterm reform to escape the inflationary trap.

Readers will also find in these pages two excellent book reviews from Senior Fellow David Gordon. In the first review, he covers topics critical to understanding our current economic malaise. In his second review, Dr. Gordon examines how even free-market economists can go wrong when they fail to understand the true nature of money. Good theoretical foundations are always essential to good economics and good policy.

As always, you will find in this issue news on past and upcoming Mises Institute events—including a brief on February’s Tampa conference on inflation and a rundown on this year’s Austrian Economics Research Conference—students, faculty, and more.

There is much more to come in 2024.

Full story hereAre you the author?

About Ryan McMaken

From the Editor March / April 2024 snbchf.com (2)

Ryan McMaken is the editor of Mises Wire and The Austrian. Send him your article submissions, but read article guidelines first. (Contact: email; twitter.) Ryan has degrees in economics and political science from the University of Colorado, and was the economist for the Colorado Division of Housing from 2009 to 2014. He is the author of Commie Cowboys: The Bourgeoisie and the Nation-State in the Western Genre.

My articlesMy offerMy siteAbout meMy books
Follow on:LinkedINTwitter

You Might Also Like

Ryan McMaken on the History and Benefits of Secession

2024-03-23

Tu ne cede malis, sed contra audentior ito

Website powered by Mises Institute donors

Mises Institute is a tax-exempt 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. Contributions are tax-deductible to the full extent the law allows. Tax ID# 52-1263436

The Decisive Driving Force to Victory for Javier Milei

2024-01-17

Much has been written in the international press, including within Argentina, about recently inaugurated Argentinian president Javier Milei, mostly about how he is an extreme right-winger (really wanting to taint him as a fascist among left-wing circles). Some independent journalists and observers have commented on how his announced plans could transform Argentina into a prosperous country by following classical liberal policies. One significant feature that has been neglected in the media to date is probably the deciding factor in his meteoric rise to political prominence and power: his conceptual clarity.
Milei says he is a theoretical anarchocapitalist, with practical political actions in the realm of minarchism. This is due to the enormous economic hardship that over 40 percent of

Expect More Currency Destruction and Weak Economies in 2024

2024-01-13

Markets closed 2023 with the strongest rally for equities, bonds, gold, and cryptocurrencies in years. The level of complacency was obvious, registering an “extreme greed” level in theGreed and Fear Index.
2023 was also an unbelievably bad year for commodities, particularly oil and natural gas, something that very few would have predicted in the middle of two wars with relevant geopolitical impact and significant OPEC+ supply cuts. It was also a poor year for Chinese equities, despite slower-than-expected but strong economic growth and robust earnings in the large components of theHang Seng index.
Markets rallied due to a combination of optimistic expectations for inflation and aggressive rate cuts from central banks. The question now is, what can we expect in 2024?
The year of

Immigration and Geopolitics: Should Latvia Have an Open Border with Russia?

2024-01-10

In the debate over immigration among laissez-faire liberals and libertarians, one aspect of the open-borders side becomes quickly apparent: the debate generally ignores problemsrelated to geopolitics such as international conflict, ethnic strife, and expansionist states. Rather, the libertarian advocates of open borders tend to focus overwhelmingly on why rich countries should open their borders to migrants from lower-income countries. These open-border arguments generally stick to listing thepracticalbenefits of immigration in terms of economic factors like productivity andper capita GDP. It is assumed that open borders will necessarily lead to a rising standard of living for the residents of the host country. Yet, we rarelysee these open-border arguments convincingly applied to

Previous postSee more for 6b.) Mises.org Next post
Tags: Featured,newsletter

From the Editor March / April 2024 snbchf.com (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Lidia Grady

Last Updated:

Views: 5679

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (65 voted)

Reviews: 80% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Lidia Grady

Birthday: 1992-01-22

Address: Suite 493 356 Dale Fall, New Wanda, RI 52485

Phone: +29914464387516

Job: Customer Engineer

Hobby: Cryptography, Writing, Dowsing, Stand-up comedy, Calligraphy, Web surfing, Ghost hunting

Introduction: My name is Lidia Grady, I am a thankful, fine, glamorous, lucky, lively, pleasant, shiny person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.