This commemorative lecture pays tribute to the life, legacy, and contributions of Ralph Harris (1924–2006), a pioneering figure in economics, one of the original architects of modern free-market ...
This is the fourth in a series of articles about how ideological interest groups react when their institutional preferences are challenged by practical solutions. The risks of smoking could hardly be ...
FOR By Head of Lifestyle Economics, Chris Snowdon We have been hearing a lot about the slippery slope recently. Although slippery … Continue reading “Assisted Dying: For and Against” The IEA is an ...
An incredible collection which for the first time brings together the IEA's work on globalization and free trade Protectionism is back on the agenda as the financial crisis deepens. With calls for ...
We have been hearing a lot about the slippery slope recently. Although slippery slope arguments are technically a fallacy, the domino effect of regulation (or, less commonly, deregulation) can often ...
Urgent financial crisis: The government’s inflation based increase in 2025 tuition fees from £9,250 to £9,535 will generate only £330 million, less than the £370 million burden created by its budget.
We're sorry, but all tickets sales have ended because the event is expired. We’re excited to welcome Ron Manners AO, awardee of the Lifetime Libertarian Award 2024 ...
The IEA is an educational charity in the classical liberal tradition, whose mission is to improve understanding of the fundamental institutions of a free society by analysing and expounding the role ...
This is the third in a series of articles about how pressure groups often oppose a practical solution to a problem if they did not devise it themselves. “Not Invented Here” syndrome is a well known ...
This publication comprises a reappraisal of the work of John Maynard Keynes. It strengthens the view that the Keynesians went too far in supposing that the old economics had been overthrown by the new ...