Mises Institute
Mises Institute
The Mises Institute, founded in 1982, is an educational institution devoted to advancing Austrian economics, freedom, and peace in the classical-liberal tradition. Our website offers many thousands of free books and thousands of hours of audio and video, along with the full run of rare journals, biographies, and bibliographies of great economists.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Oct 23, 2025 • 13min
The Myth of Planned Obsolescence
The concept of “planned obsolescence” makes no economic sense and is often an excuse for governments to harass and shake down innovative entrepreneurs. Much of so-called planned obsolescence is really entrepreneurship at work improving products for users and consumers.
Original article: https://mises.org/mises-wire/myth-planned-obsolescence

Oct 22, 2025 • 7min
New Rothbard Letters Show His Early Opposition to both Nixon and Reagan
“I see that you are preparing the groundwork for supporting Nixon,” Rothbard wrote Meyer. “Again, for shame! Is this what conservative principles are coming down to...?”
Original article: https://mises.org/mises-wire/new-rothbard-letters-show-his-early-opposition-both-nixon-and-reagan

Oct 22, 2025 • 56min
Yes, Tariffs Reduce Imports, but They Also Reduce Exports
In this episode of the Human Action Podcast, Bob unpacks Lerner’s Symmetry Theorem—the classic result that, under tight conditions, an import tariff is equivalent to an export tax. He applies the framework to recent 100% China‑tariff headlines, explaining why the dollar might strengthen in theory yet sometimes weakens in practice once retaliation and policy signaling are factored in.
The Human Action Podcast on Trump's Tariff Strategy: https://Mises.org/HAP522a
The Lerner Symmetry Theorem: https://Mises.org/HAP522b

Oct 22, 2025 • 12min
What Will the Next Gold Bust Look Like?
There have been four gold busts under the fiat dollar money regimes since the “freeing” of the gold price in March 1968. Will the current gold boom end in a similar bust?
Original article: https://mises.org/mises-wire/what-will-next-gold-bust-look

6 snips
Oct 21, 2025 • 9min
How Progressives Broke the Constitution and Praised Themselves for It
Juan Jeroen Joya, an insightful author known for his provocative views on constitutional interpretation, delves into how progressives have transformed the original Constitution. He argues that pivotal figures like Lincoln effectively overthrew its foundation. Joya also critiques the idea of presidents upholding a rewritten Constitution, discusses the coerced ratification of the 14th Amendment, and highlights how civil rights laws have effectively replaced the original text. Progressives, he asserts, proudly celebrate this constitutional replacement as a stride towards equality.

Oct 20, 2025 • 18min
Popular Media, Romanticism, and the Statist Insinuation
Popular views of capitalism and free markets are not shaped by the facts, but rather by anti-capitalist intellectuals and the media.
Original article: https://mises.org/mises-wire/popular-media-romanticism-and-statist-insinuation

Oct 18, 2025 • 31min
Silver’s $50 Moment
Mark Thornton shares a timely conversation from the Liberty & Finance podcast with Elijah K. Johnson. Mark explains why $50 silver is a psychological barrier, and how decades of tech shifts, by-product mining, and central-bank gold buying shaped today’s divergence between gold and silver. The thread tying it all together: easy money seeds malinvestment and fragility; metals hedge the fallout.
Be sure to follow Minor Issues at https://Mises.org/MinorIssues

Oct 11, 2025 • 15min
Monetary Metals 101: How Gold and Silver Work in a Free Market
Mark Thornton lays the groundwork for understanding gold and silver before politics gets involved. Mark explains why monetary metals emerge from market “evolution,” how their non-consumptive use creates massive above-ground stocks, and why the same metal serves multiple markets (money vs. consumption) with one price. He explains how demand shifts trigger conservation and recycling, why new mining lags price spikes, how “near-monies” substitute when people economize on cash balances, and why any apparent stability (even par relationships) reflects underlying market conditions, not decree. Today’s price volatility is largely the artifact of intervention, not the metals themselves.
Be sure to follow Minor Issues at https://Mises.org/MinorIssues

Oct 10, 2025 • 32min
Taxes, War, and the State are Freedom’s Biggest Enemies
Ryan and political scientist Joseph Solis-Mullen talk about how taxes, war, and the state are all part of a centuries-old formula for impoverishing the productive class while enriching the government class.
Be sure to follow Radio Rothbard at https://Mises.org/RadioRothbard
Radio Rothbard mugs are available at the Mises Store. Get yours at https://Mises.org/RothMug
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Oct 10, 2025 • 19min
Economics and the Infantilization of Culture
The yearning for a state-controlled system is not born of compassion for others but rather of infantile selfishness.
Original article: https://mises.org/mises-wire/economics-and-infantilization-culture


