Why don't politicians and judges see the deep relationship between economic and political rights?
Nikolai G. Wenzel
The country could be in serious trouble if its executive ever manages to use the sweeping powers entrusted to him (or her).
Friends of liberty must offer real alternatives for those exasperated by the growth of the state and the politicization of everything.
Most of the civilized world stood by as the communists absorbed Hong Kong into "just another Chinese city." Lai did not.
Does the executive order on "Promoting Competition in the American Economy" actually do the opposite?
The American Rescue Plan makes economic power grabs that would not be tolerated without the pretext of fighting a pandemic and a recession.
The CARES Act isn’t really a stimulus bill. Rather, it is good, old fashioned election-year welfare spending.
The inconsistencies between Clausing 1.0 and Clausing 2.0 are indicative of an economics profession that has eschewed its own humble insights.
Nikolai Wenzel gives a personal view on the protests in Hong Kong against the Chinese extradition bill.
We need to recognize that the first step—rather than further government "medicine"—is to stop poisoning the patient, and return to capitalism.
Economics is often a morality-free zone, and Paul Heyne shows why this is a mistake.
Munger’s framework leaves us with hope grounded in realism.
What principles really divide libertarians and conservatives?
Nikolai G. Wenzel is Professor of Economics at Universidad de las Hespérides and an Affiliated Senior Scholar with the American Institute for Economic Research. He is on the faculty of the Fund for American Studies, and is a member of the Mont Pelerin Society.