Literature Library
The most complete online offering of the literature of the Austrian School and libertarian ideas, including books, journal articles, and other writings, sorted by author or any method you choose.
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Source: Online Books: 510 records
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Wall Street, Banks, and American Foreign Policy
Murray N. Rothbard Updated 11/3/2011
This fiery monograph shows a side of Murray Rothbard not seen in his theoretical treatise: his ability to employ "power elite" analysis to understand the relationship between money, power, and war. Rather than allow the left to dominate... -
A Foreign Policy of Freedom
Ron Paul Updated 11/3/2011
There is one and only one voice in Congress for a foreign policy of freedom, and it belongs to Ron Paul, who has stood alone for freedom for many years. Ron is the seemingly impossible: a voice for reason and truth in a den of thieves. A Foreign Pol... -
Walk Away: The Rise and Fall of the Home-Ownership Myth
Doug French Updated 11/3/2011
Housing, a central priority for government policy for many decades, collapsed in 2008; even in 2011, millions of homes are under water. This poses many economic and ethical issues. This elegant and fact-filled book by Mises Institute president Do... -
We
Eugene Zamiatin Updated 11/3/2011
“[Zamyatin’s] intuitive grasp of the irrational side of totalitarianism– human sacrifice, cruelty as an end in itself–makes [We] superior to Huxley’s [Brave New World].” –George Orwell An inspiration for George Orwell’s 1984 and a precursor to th... -
The Case for Legalizing Capitalism
Kel Kelly Updated 10/26/2011
What's the "American system" of economics? Most people would say it is capitalism, which thereby deserves all fault when anything goes wrong. Well, Kel Kelly responds to this myth in this fast-paced and darn-near comprehensive treatment... -
The Economics of Illusion
L. Albert Hahn Updated 10/7/2011
L. Albert Hahn was one of the most highly regarded economists and bankers in Germany before World War II, but he was unknown in the United States until this translation of The Economics of Illusion appeared in 1949. He immigrated to the United States... -
Thinking as a Science
Henry Hazlitt Updated 10/3/2011
It's incredible that this 1916 tutorial on how to think, by none other than Henry Hazlitt, would still hold up after all these years. But here's why. Hazlitt was largely self-educated. He read voraciously. He trained himself to be a great int... -
Fiat Money Inflation in France
Andrew Dickson White Updated 10/3/2011
In Fiat Money Inflation in France, Andrew Dickson White presents the still-largely-unknown story of a major factor behind the French Revolution. As John Mackay writes in the foreword, It records the most gigantic attempt ever made in the history... -
The Panic of 1819: Reactions and Policies
Murray N. Rothbard Updated 9/30/2011
The panic of 1819 was America's first great economic crisis. And this is Murray Rothbard's masterful account, the first full scholarly book on the topic and still the most definitive. It was his dissertation, published in 1962 but nearly impo... -
Money, Method, and the Market Process
Ludwig von Mises Updated 9/29/2011
Edited by Richard M. Ebeling This volume might be called the Mises Reader, for it contains a wide sampling of his academic essays on money, trade, and economic systems. Some of them, like "Observations on the Cooperative Movement,"... -
The Irrepressible Rothbard
Murray N. Rothbard Updated 9/26/2011
Summing up the work of libertarian economist and historian Murray N. Rothbard (1926–1995) and noting its stunning range, philosopher David Gordon once wondered "if there are really three, four, or five geniuses writing under his na... -
The Case for Discrimination
Walter Block Updated 9/22/2011
Walter Block has been writing on the economics of discrimination - and in defense of discrimination, rightly understood - for more than 30 years. This large hardcover collects nearly all of this writing to present a radical alternative to the mainstr... -
On Freedom and Free Enterprise: Essays in Honor of Ludwig von Mises
Mary Sennholz Updated 9/22/2011
This was the first Festschrift (1956) in Mises's honor, and the essays it contains have proven fruitful sources for decades. This reprint features a new introduction. Preeminently, it contains Rothbard's reconstruction of utility and welfare... -
A Short History of Paper Money and Banking
William M. Gouge Updated 9/20/2011
"The bank was saved but the money was ruined." So says William Gouge (1796–1863), one of the best political economists of the American 19th century. He is speaking of the panic of 1819, but his sentence could sum up the w... -
Capital and Production
Richard von Strigl Updated 9/19/2011
Richard Ritter von Strigl (1891–1942) was one of the most brilliant Austrian economists of the interwar period. As a professor at the University of Vienna he had a decisive influence on Hayek, Machlup, Haberler, Morgenstern, and other fourt... -
Economics for Real People
Gene Callahan Updated 9/16/2011
The second edition of the fun and fascinating guide to the main ideas of the Austrian School of economics, written in sparkling prose especially for the non-economist. Gene Callahan shows that good economics isn't about government planning or sta... -
One Is a Crowd
Frank Chodorov Updated 9/15/2011
This is a treasure: One Is a Crowd. It collects Frank Chodorov's most profound essays on the topic of individualism, many of which have otherwise been unjustly lost to history. The reader will be riveted by his biographical essay on the meanin... -
The Bubble that Broke the World
Garet Garrett Updated 9/15/2011
What caused the stock-market crash of 1929 and the Great Depression that followed? This book blows away the conventional interpretations, not only in its contents but that the book exists at all. The Bubble that Broke the World was written in 1931.... -
The Quotable Mises
Ludwig von Mises Updated 9/13/2011
The Quotable Mises is 300-plus pages of some of the most thrilling words on economics and politics ever written. In some ways, it is the perfect introduction to Mises's thought, a collection of hundreds of attention-grabbing quotations that pro... -
Rehabilitation of Say's Law, A
William H. Hutt Updated 9/9/2011
With A Rehabilitation of Say's Law, Professor William H. Hutt produced a magnificent work that Austrians would love to claim as one of their own, but that Hutt himself viewed as thoroughly classical in nature. The topic addressed here is Say&... -
Capital in Disequilibrium
Peter Lewin Updated 9/7/2011
A theoretical treatise is a rare event, a moment to celebrate. This is what Peter Lewin has provided in his Capital in Disequilibrium. Taking capital seriously is a distinguishing mark of the Austrian School. The Austrians see capital as decisive in... -
The Origins of the Federal Reserve
Murray N. Rothbard Updated 9/6/2011
Where did this thing called the Fed come from? Murray Rothbard has the answer here -- in phenomenal detail that will make your head spin. In one extended essay, one that reads like a detective story, he has put together the most comprehensive and fas... -
Imperialism and Social Classes
Joseph Schumpeter Updated 9/5/2011
Joseph Schumpeter was not a member of the Austrian School, but he was an enormously creative classical liberal, and this 1919 book shows him at his best. He presents a theory of how states become empires and applies his insight to explaining many his... -
The Myth of a Guilty Nation
Albert Jay Nock Updated 9/2/2011
This was Albert Jay Nock's first great anti-war book, a cause he backed his entire life as an essential component of a libertarian outlook. The book came out in 1922 and has been in very low circulation ever since. In fact, until this printing,... -
How Diplomats Make War
Francis Neilson Updated 9/1/2011
Francis Neilson (1867–1961) was a member of the British Parliament, one of the last truly educated British aristocrats, a colleague and friend of Albert Jay Nock's, and an amazing historian and stylist. He is also the author of this his... -
Understanding the Dollar Crisis
Percy L. Greaves, Jr. Updated 8/31/2011
In the year that President Nixon closed the gold window forever and the US government removed the last vestiges of the gold standard, nonstop dollar turmoil was unleashed. In that same year, Percy L. Greaves, a student of Ludwig von Mises's, rele... -
The Gold Standard: Perspectives in the Austrian School
Llewellyn H. Rockwell Jr. (ed.) Updated 8/31/2011
This anthology contains seminal essays on the ideal monetary system. From Sennholz's discussion of Mengerian monetary theory to Ron Paul's espousal of a political agenda that champions a gold standard, readers will find that this book serves... -
The Merchants of Death
H.C. Engelbrecht Updated 8/30/2011
Here is the archetype of all post–World War I revisionism of a particular variety: the hunt for the people who made the big bucks off the killing machine. The Merchants of Death was, in many ways, the manifesto of a generation of people who... -
The Ethics of Liberty
Murray N. Rothbard Updated 8/29/2011
Murray Rothbard's greatest contribution to the politics of freedom is back in print. Following up on Mises's demonstration that a society without private property degenerates into economic chaos, Rothbard shows that every interference with pr... -
The Clash of Group Interests
Ludwig von Mises Updated 8/26/2011
In this thrilling essay written in 1945, Mises lays out a theory of social organization in response to the Marxist critique of the free society. He explains that the Marxist view is wrong concerning its claim that there is a clash of group interests... -
The Kohler Strike: Union Violence and Administrative Law
Sylvester Petro Updated 8/26/2011
Are labor unions merely an example of "free association"? Perhaps in some dreamland, but the real history of American labor organizing tells a different story. This 1961 book by labor economist Sylvester Petro tells a story of the d... -
Collected Works of Carl Menger (in German) Volume III
Carl Menger Updated 8/24/2011
London School of Economics, 1934... -
Collected Works of Carl Menger (in German) Volume I
Carl Menger Updated 8/24/2011
London School of Economics, 1934... -
Collected Works of Carl Menger (in German) Volume IV
Carl Menger Updated 8/24/2011
London School of Economics, 1934... -
Collected Works of Carl Menger (in German) Volume II
Carl Menger Updated 8/24/2011
London School of Economics, 1934... -
The Privatization of Roads and Highways
Walter Block Updated 8/23/2011
The Mises Institute is pleased to introduce Walter Block's remarkable new treatise on private roads, a 494-page book that will cause you to rethink the whole of the way modern transportation networks operate. It is bold, innovative, radical, comp... -
Study Guide to the Theory of Money and Credit
Robert P. Murphy Updated 8/22/2011
Consider the timing of this wonderful study guide to the best book ever written on money and credit. The book itself was written 100 years ago. The world economy is in the throes of another financial and debt crisis. Keynesianism has completely fai... -
Free Banking: Theory, History, and a Laissez-Faire Model
Larry J. Sechrest Updated 8/22/2011
Free Banking: Theory, History and a Laissez-Faire Model by Larry Sechrest is a magnificent work, now rescued from undeserved obscurity with this new edition. Published in 1993, it is a formalization and extension of literature in the free banking are... -
Requiem for Marx
Yuri N. Maltsev (ed.) Updated 8/19/2011
After the fall of communism, and certainly after this wide-ranging demolition of Marxism by Austrian scholars, who can possibly defend Marxism? Plenty of people, many of them smart otherwise but uneducated in economics. This book is the antidote, cov... -
Praxeology and Understanding: An Analysis of the Controversy in Austrian Economics
George A. Selgin Updated 8/18/2011
George Selgin argues that what Mises called praxeology is ultimately rooted in a conception of economic logic that is undeniable and not subject to the claims of those who would extend the idea of "subjectivism" beyond its appropriate bound... -
A Treatise on Currency and Banking
Condy Raguet Updated 8/16/2011
This remarkable hard-money treatise appeared in 1840. It is by Condy Raguet (1784-1842), a noted Pennsylvania politician and economist who worked as a merchant in several Latin American countries. He was wholly dedicated to free trade, the free marke... -
Profit and Loss
Ludwig von Mises Updated 8/15/2011
In 1951, Mises gave an outstanding paper that made the summary case for the price system under capitalistic economic systems. In "Profit and Loss," he explains how cost accounting is the critical institution that ferrets out social waste, e... -
Economic Controversies
Murray N. Rothbard Updated 8/12/2011
After Murray Rothbard finished his theoretical magnum opus - Man, Economy, and State - he turned his attention away from pure positive theory toward dealing with the opposition to Austrian theory. The result was a long series of fantastic scholarly a... -
Deflation and Liberty
Jörg Guido Hülsmann Updated 8/12/2011
This monograph addresses a critically important issue: the prevailing view that deflation (falling prices and/or falling money stock) is a catastrophe that must be stopped. Jorg Guido Hulsmann shows that deflation is nothing to fear. The government s... -
A Free-Market Monetary System and The Pretense of Knowledge
Friedrich A. Hayek Updated 8/11/2011
Here are two of Hayek's greatest essays in one small and beautiful volume at a very low price. It is a perfect way to introduce yourself and others to this giant of the 20th century. The book begins with Hayek's most excellent essay on mo... -
The Strike-Threat System
William H. Hutt Updated 8/10/2011
The classic from the great labor economist W.H. Hutt argues that it is not the strike but the strike threat that makes unions so incredibly costly to American prosperity. It hangs over unionized companies like the sword of Damocles, intimidating prop... -
Taxpayers in Revolt: Tax Resistance During the Great Depression
David T. Beito Updated 8/9/2011
David Beito has brought to light a remarkable and previously unknown chapter of the Great Depression: its tax revolts. They were widespread and systematic, and they made such huge progress that in some places they threatened to bring local and state... -
Gertrude Coogan's Bluff: Greenback Populism as Conservative Economics
Gary North Updated 8/8/2011
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Tiger by the Tail
Friedrich A. Hayek Updated 8/8/2011
F.A. Hayek said that his biggest regret in a lifetime of writing was that he never wrote a book-length refutation of Keynesian economics. He seriously doubted that Keynesian style planning would ever captivate governments, so he focused on differ...

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