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Gene Callahan
Gene Callahan is an American economist and writer.
He is an adjunct scholar with the Ludwig von Mises Institute,
a charter member of the Michael Oakeshott Association, and is
the author of two books, Economics for Real People and
PUCK.
Callahan has written for Reason, The Freeman,
The Free Market, Slick Times, Java
Developer's Journal, Software Development, Dr. Dobb's Journal, Human Rights
Review, Independent Review, NYU Journal of Law
and Liberty, Review of Austrian
Economics, and other publications. He is also a frequent
contributor to LewRockwell.com.
Originally from Connecticut, Callahan has a Master's degree
from the London School of Economics,
and currently lives in Brooklyn, NY.
Economics For Real
People
David Gordon's review of Callahan's Economics for Real
People in the Mises Review states:
- Wittgenstein famously said, "whatever can be said, can be
said clearly"; but does this apply to economics? Callahan, like his
great predecessor, Henry Hazlitt, shows that it does. If the
theme of Hazlitt's Economics in One Lesson is
the indirect effects of intervention in the economy, Callahan's
dominant thread is the role of monetary calculation in making
possible cooperative activity on a vast scale.[1]
According to economist Richard Ebeling, Callahan's book,
- ...neatly explains why socialist central planning must
inevitably result in failure because the abolition of private
property, market competition, and money prices eliminates the
institutional prerequisites for economic calculation, without which
the central planner is left with no rational method to determine
whether or not the resources under his control are being applied in
an efficient manner.[2]
Notes
- ^
Gordon, David. "Hazlitt For Our Time". The Mises Review,
Vol. 8, No. 3. Fall 2002. Ludwig von Mises Institute.
- ^
Ebeling, Richard. "Book Review". Future of Freedom Foundation.
November 2002.[1]
External
links