Tag Archives: Mises Academy

New Course on BUBBLES, BOOMS and BUSTS

BUBBLESPlease join me in attending this course with a great teacher. See you in class!

He developed the “Skyscraper Index” to help identify the end of the boom.

 

 

Bubbles, Booms, and Busts

— with Mark Thornton

Cost: $59   Length: 6 Weekly Lectures
Dates: April 24, 2013 – May 28, 2013
Status: Upcoming

Click here to register for this course: http://academy.mises.org/courses/bbb/

 

This course will cover special topics in Austrian Business Cycle Theory, including the “Skyscraper Index,” the art of predicting downturns, and the causes of the housing bubble and burst that led to the 2008 financial crisis.

Lectures

Lectures will be Wednesdays at 5:30 p.m. Eastern time.

Reading

All readings will be free and online. A fully hyper-linked syllabus with readings for each weekly topic will be available for all students.

Grades and Certificates

The final grade will depend on quizzes. Taking the course for a grade is optional. This course is worth 3 credits in Mises Academy. Feel free to ask your school to accept Mises Academy credits. You will receive a digital Certificate of Completion for this course if you take it for a grade, and a Certificate of Participation if you take it on a paid-audit basis.

Refund Policy

If you drop the course during its first week (7 calendar days), you will receive a full refund, minus a $25 processing fee. If you drop the course during its second week, you will receive a half refund. No refunds will be granted following the second week.

Mark Thornton

Mark Thornton is an American economist of the Austrian School.[1] Thornton has been described by the Advocates for Self-Government as “one of America’s experts on the economics of illegal drugs.”[2] Thornton has written extensively on that topic, as well as on the economics of the American Civil War, economic bubbles, and public finance. He successfully predicted the housing bubble, the top in home builder stocks, the bust in housing and the world economic crisis.

Thornton received his B.S. from St. Bonaventure University (1982), and his Ph.D. from Auburn University (1989). Thornton taught economics at Auburn University for a number of years, additionally serving as founding faculty advisor for the Auburn University Libertarians. He also served on the faculty of Columbus State University, and is now a senior fellow and resident faculty member at the Ludwig von Mises Institute.[3] He is currently the Book Review Editor for the Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics.[4]

Prohibition studies

Libertarian organizations including the Independent Institute,[5] the Cato Institute,[6] and the Mises Institute have published Thornton’s writings on drug prohibition and prohibition in general. Thornton contributed a chapter[7] to Jefferson Fish‘s book How to Legalize Drugs. He has also been interviewed on the topic of prohibition by members of the mainstream press. His research and publications are the basis of the Iron Law of Prohibition which states that the enforcement of prohibition increases the potency and danger of consuming illegal drugs. [8] Thornton’s first book, The Economics of Prohibition, was praised by Murray Rothbard, who declared:

Thornton’s book… arrives to fill an enormous gap, and it does so splendidly…. The drug prohibition question is… the hottest political topic today, and for the foreseeable future…. This is an excellent work making an important contribution to scholarship as well as to the public policy debate.

Economic bubbles

Thornton has also written on economic bubbles, including the United States housing bubble, which he first described in February 2004.[9][10][11] He suggested that the “housing bubble might be coming to an end” in August 2005.[12] His work on market bubbles has been cited by journalists[13][14] and other writers.[15][16] Economist Joseph Salerno noted that “Mark Thornton of the Mises Institute was one of the first to jump on this—to start writing about the housing bubble.”[17] Similarly, economist Thomas DiLorenzo has written that “[i]t was Austrian economists like Mark Thornton . . . who were warning of a housing bubble years before it burst.”[1] He also called the top in the housing market. He developed and published his Skyscraper and Business Cycle model in 2005.[13] His Skyscraper Index Model successfully sent a signal of the Late-2000s financial crisis at the beginning of August 2007. [14][15]

Political activities

Thornton has also been active in the political arena, making his first bid for office in 1984, when he ran for the U.S. Congress. He became the first Libertarian Party office-holder in Alabama when he was elected Constable in 1988. He was the Libertarian Party Candidate for the U.S. Senate in 1996 (also endorsed by the Reform Party) coming in third of four candidates. Thornton also served in various capacities with the Libertarian Party of Alabama including Vice Chairman and Chairman. In 1997 he became the Assistant Superintendent of Banking and a economic analyst for Alabama Governor, Fob James.[2]

Thornton has been featured as a guest on a variety of radio and internet programs and his editorials and interviews have appeared in leading newspapers and magazines.

Books

Academy Courses

VALUE VAULT Additions, Unintended Consequences, Studying the Theory of Money and Credit

Before I speak, I have something important to say. —Groucho Marx

VALUE VAULT Additions*

  • You will find Money Management Interviews from 2005 to 2011, 1938 page PDF.
  • Howard Marks on the Human Side of Investing, 42 page PDF
  • Investors and Austrian Economics, 7 page PDF

All from generous, anonymous contributors. Thank you!

*Access to VALUE VAULT is given by emailing:  aldridge56@aol.com with VALUE VAULT in subject line. For your personal use only

Unintended Consequences of Goernment Action

Matt Damon in Good Will Hunting giving a 3-minute lecture on unintended consequences or Why I Won’t Work for the National Security Agency (NSA): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l8rQNdBmPek

Studying Von Mises’ Theory of Money and Credit at The Mises Academy

Readers should know that if ever I benefit from a reveral/advertisement, I will alert you upfront about any conflict of interest or incentive-based bias.

Mises Academy (http://academy.mises.org/) has an eight week course on Mises’ Theory of Money and Credit taught by Robert Murphy.  I have taken a few courses from Prof. Murphy, and he is an engaging lecturer. Go here: ( http://consultingbyrpm.com/blog).

This would be a great course–though advanced–to sink your teeth into Austrian monetary theory with an excellent teacher.  I will take this course and if enough people here are interested, I could try for a group discount. Your only risk is $25.00. But, I warn you, the course is demanding. See the texts below:

http://files.libertyfund.org/files/1061/Mises_0070_EBk_v6.0.pdf

http://mises.org/books/theory_money_credit_studyguide_murphy.pdf

The course:   Econ 400 — with Robert P. Murphy

Cost: $145 Length: 8 weeks       Dates: February 1, 2012 – March 27, 2012
Click here to register for this course

This course will tour Ludwig von Mises’ classic work, Theory of Money & Credit. Space constraints prevent us from covering the entire book. Instead we will focus on Mises’ two crucial achievements in the book: (1) His unification of “micro” and “macro” by successfully applying the modern subjective theory of value to money, and (2) his development of (what we now call) Austrian business cycle theory. The course will showcase not only Mises’ brilliance as a novel thinker, but also his excellent command of the literature and his selection of the best ideas from other schools.

Lectures

The video lectures are online. Lectures will be Wednesday evenings, 6:30 – 8:00 pm Eastern Time. They will be recorded and made available for enrolled students to download.

Reading

All readings for the course will be free and available online.

Grades and Certificates

The final grade will depend on quizzes. Taking the course for a grade is optional. The Mises Academy is currently not accredited, but this course is worth 3 credits in our own internal system. Feel free to ask your school to accept Mises Academy credits. You will receive a digital Certificate of Completion for this course if you take it for a grade, and a Certificate of Participation if you take it on a paid-audit basis.

Refund Policy

If you drop the course during its first week (7 calendar days), you will receive a full refund, minus a $25 processing fee. If you drop the course during its second week, you will receive a half refund. No refunds will be granted following the second week.

Academy Courses