Robert Higgs–On A Century of Crisis and Leviathan–Videos

Posted on January 31, 2012. Filed under: American History, Banking, Blogroll, Business, College, Communications, Economics, Education, Employment, Federal Government, Federal Government Budget, Fiscal Policy, Foreign Policy, government, government spending, history, History of Economic Thought, Inflation, Investments, Law, liberty, Life, Links, Macroeconomics, media, Microeconomics, Monetary Policy, Money, People, Philosophy, Politics, Public Sector, Rants, Raves, Tax Policy, Taxes, Unemployment, Unions, Video, War, Wealth, Weapons, Wisdom | Tags: , , , , , , , |

Robert Higgs on a Century of Crisis and Leviathan 

Against Leviathan | Robert Higgs

Robert Higgs on War, Taxes, and Economic Crises

The Complex Path of Ideological Change | Robert Higgs

“Lecture presented by Robert Higgs at the Lugwig von Mises Institute’s annual Austrian Scholars Conference held at the Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama; March 16-18, 2006.”

 http://mises.org

The Market for Quality Assurance | Robert Higgs 

Regime Uncertainty – Then and Now | Robert Higgs

Robert Higgs on C-SPAN2′s Book TV, Part 1 of 3 

“…Originally aired 4/4/2009. Robert Higgs, Ph.D., Senior Fellow at the Independent Institute, discusses his work as an author and political economist in a featured interview with In Depth on C-SPAN2′s Book TV. …”

Robert Higgs on C-SPAN2′s Book TV, Part 2 of 3

Robert Higgs on C-SPAN2′s Book TV, Part 3 of 3

Robert Higgs on the Rise and Fall of Leviathan

“…Robert Higgs is an economic historian whose writings focus on the causes and means of government growth. He is the author of Crisis and Leviathan: Critical Episodes in the Growth of American Government (1989). Higgs speaks here at a Future of Freedom Foundation conference in 1995 on the ratchet effect- the idea that governments tend to grab power during emergencies but do not cede it completely after each crisis abates- and gives his own analysis of what it might take to slow the growth of government in the 21st century. …”


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