1. Featured video of the week: Viv Forbes talks about the most impressive of topics: his own free-market advocacy.
  2. Traffic Economics — practical Australian businessman, Neville Kennard, joins fellow Economics.org.au staff member and entrepreneur, John Singleton, in demanding privatisation of all roads.
  3. Ron Manners on Lang Hancock — The great Ron Manners with some personal insights into Australia’s biggest taxpayer, Lang Hancock.
  4. Two brilliant Bert Kelly articles that have not been republished in over 40 years:  “Is the Budget a cargo cult?,” The Australian Financial Review, August 13, 1971, p. 3; and “Will we end up subsidising one another?,” The Australian Financial Review, August 20, 1971, p. 3.
  5. Sideshow to Dr Steven Kates’ criticism of the Mises Seminar: Davidson vs Hoppe on Adam Smith — the editor-in-chief of Economics.org.au, Benjamin Marks, on Professor Sinclair Davidson’s chastising of Hoppe.

From our archives, and still in the “news”:

  • On car industry protection, see Bert Kelly’s classic series of articles from 1981 — part 1, part 2, part 3 — making a mockery of it all; and this one from 1971: “Has Santa socked it to car makers?,” The Australian Financial Review, December 24, 1971, p. 3.
  • On government intervention in supermarkets, see Lennie Lower, “The Grocers Ask For It,” Smith’s Weekly, August 26, 1944, p. 9.
  • On Gina Rinehart buying media, see the words of our staff member, Lang Hancock: In 1979, he said: “We in Australia are in the ‘intolerable’ category suffering under the most diabolical of economic dictatorships … How then is this central bureaucratic power to be broken? … It could be broken by obtaining control of the media and then educating the public.” In 1981, he said: “Sir, If Rupert Murdoch wishes to buy a television station and has the money to do so, good luck to him. It is none of my business and none of the Government’s. If the Government has the taxpayers’ interests at heart, it should sell him the ABC, thus saving the public a lot of money.” More of relevance at www.LangHancock.info and https://economics.org.au/events/the-sale-of-the-abc-to-murdoch/.
  • On politicians going back to Canberra after their paid holidays, see Neville Kennard and Bert Kelly on why politicians would be better staying home.