Checks and balances on the judicial, legislative, and executive branches; Law and Economics; economic freedoms and rights in the Constitution
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Gene Epstein on Gold, the Fed, and MoneyJune 02, 2008, Featuring Gene EpsteinGene Epstein, Barron's economics editor, talks to EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the virtues of the gold standard relative to fiat money. Epstein argues that privately issued money, backed by gold, would lead to an economy with much greater price stability and fewer and milder recessions. Time: 1:07:23
Size: 30.9 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (47) Coyne on Exporting Democracy after WarApril 07, 2008, Featuring Christopher CoyneChristopher Coyne of West Virginia University and George Mason University's Mercatus Center talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about his book, After War: The Political Economy of Exporting Democracy. They talk about the successes and failures of America's attempts to export democracy after a war. In some cases, Japan and Germany, for example, after World War II, American efforts have led to stability and democratic institutions. In many other cases, Cuba, Somalia, and Haiti, for example, and so far, Iraq, American efforts have failed, often repeatedly and have sometimes made things worse. Coyne tries to identify factors that lead to an improved likelihood of success or failure. Ultimately, he concludes that a non-interventionist posture accompanied by unilateral free trade is more likely to benefit citizens under repressive governments. Time: 1:19:44
Size: 36.5 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (27) Cowen on Monetary PolicyMarch 17, 2008, Featuring Tyler Cowen
Time: 1:08:50
Size: 31.6 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (69) Easterly on Growth, Poverty, and AidFebruary 11, 2008, Featuring William EasterlyWilliam Easterly of NYU talks about why some nations escape poverty while others do not, why aid almost always fails to create growth, and what can realistically be done to help the poorest people in the world. Time: 1:01:38
Size: 28.3 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (18) Collier on the Bottom BillionJanuary 28, 2008, Featuring Paul CollierPaul Collier of Oxford University talks about the ideas in his recent book, The Bottom Billion, an analysis of why the poorest countries in the world fail to grow. He talks about conflict, natural resources, being landlocked, and bad governance, four factors he identifies as causes of the desperate poverty and stagnation in the countries where 1/6 of the world's poorest peoples live. Time: 1:08:47
Size: 31.5 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (13) Munger on the Nature of the FirmJanuary 14, 2008, Featuring Mike Munger
Time: 1:02:23
Size: 28.6 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (44) Karol Boudreaux on Property Rights and Incentives in AfricaDecember 17, 2007, Featuring Karol BoudreauxKarol Boudreaux, Senior Research Fellow at George Mason University's Mercatus Center, talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about her field work and research in Rwanda and South Africa. In Rwanda, she studied how a change in incentives and property rights for coffee farmers has allowed the coffee bean growers to improve quality and prosper. In South Africa's Langa Township, she looked at how renters were allowed to become homeowners and how the ability to own changed their lives. Time: 1:00:27
Size: 27.7 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (8) Yandle on the Tragedy of the Commons and the Implications for Environmental RegulationOctober 29, 2007, Featuring Bruce YandleBruce Yandle of Clemson University and George Mason University's Mercatus Center looks at the tragedy of the commons and the various ways that people have avoided the overuse of resources that are held in common. Examples discussed include fisheries, roads, rivers and the air. Yandle talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the historical use of norms, cooperative ventures such as incorporating a river, the common law, and top-down command-and-control regulation to reduce air and water pollution. Time: 1:24:32
Size: 38.7 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (20) Boudreaux on Market Failure, Government Failure and the Economics of Antitrust RegulationOctober 01, 2007, Featuring Don Boudreaux
Time: 1:06:33
Size: 30.5 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (36) Epstein on Property Rights, Zoning and KeloSeptember 17, 2007, Featuring Richard EpsteinRichard Epstein, of the University of Chicago and Stanford's Hoover Institution, makes the case that many current zoning restrictions are essentially "takings" and property owners should receive compensation for the lost value of their land. He also discusses the Kelo case and the political economy of the regulation of land. Time: 41.29
Size: 19.0 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (20) Weingast on Violence, Power and a Theory of Nearly EverythingAugust 13, 2007, Featuring Barry WeingastBarry Weingast, Senior Fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution and the Ward C. Krebs Family Professor in the Department of Political Science at Stanford University, talks about the ideas in his forthcoming book with Doug North and John Wallis, A Conceptual Framework for Interpreting Recorded Human History. Weingast talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about how violence shapes political institutions, the role of competition in politics and economics, and why most development advice from successful nations fails to lift poor nations out of poverty. Time: 1:05:22
Size: 30.0 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (10) Caplan on the Myth of the Rational VoterJune 25, 2007, Featuring Bryan Caplan
Time: 1:21:09
Size: 37.2 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (17) Bruce Bueno de Mesquita on Democracies and DictatorshipsFebruary 12, 2007, Featuring Bruce Bueno de MesquitaBruce Bueno de Mesquita of NYU and Stanford University's Hoover Institution talks about the incentives facing dictators and democratic leaders. Both have to face competition from rivals. Both try to please their constituents and cronies to stay in power. He applies his insights to foreign aid, the Middle East, Venezuela, the potential for China's evolution to a more democratic system, and Cuba. Along the way, he explains why true democracy is more than just elections--it depends crucially on freedom of assembly and freedom of the press. Time: 1:06:55
Size: 15.4 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (6) Boudreaux on Law and LegislationDecember 11, 2006, Featuring Don Boudreaux
Time: 1:13:27
Size: 16.9 MB
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MORE: Posted by Russ Roberts. Permanent Link | Comments (1) Clint Bolick Defends Judicial ActivismOctober 31, 2006, Featuring Clint BolickClint Bolick, co-founder of the Institute for Justice and President of the Alliance for School Choice makes the case for judicial activism. He and Russ Roberts discuss school choice, interstate wine sales, the Kelo eminent domain case and the crucial role the Supreme Court and the Constitution can and should play in securing economic liberty. Time: 55:39
Size: 12.8 MB
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