Norman Barry


Related Freeman Articles

Article

The Americanization of Japan

Changes in Japanese Business Practices Are Renewing Its Economy

MAY 01, 2007 by NORMAN BARRY

Article

Europe: Still a Laggard Economy

Europe's Social-Democratic Outlook Hampers Its Recovery

MARCH 01, 2007 by NORMAN BARRY

Article

Japan, Germany, and the End of the Third Way

Free-Market Exchange with Limited Government Is the Only Successful Form of Capitalism

MAY 01, 2006 by NORMAN BARRY

Article

Arthur Seldon's Contribution to Freedom

A Celebration of the IEA's Cofounder

APRIL 01, 2006 by NORMAN BARRY

Article

New Labour

There Is No Feasible Alternative to Real Capitalism

DECEMBER 01, 2005 by NORMAN BARRY

As Britains New Labour governs for an unprecedentedthird term in the United Kingdom, it is time to look back a little, at least as a way of modestly predicting the future. The obvious domestic question is: will capitalism and the market economy beany safer in the next five years than they have been in the last eight? Or will the subtle and blatant departures from economic freedom that have occurred in the first two Labour terms accelerate and will the country be under old socialistic Labour in everything but name? Tony Blair has said he will stand down as prime minister at the end of the next Parliament, but has the damage already been done? Will the likely succession of Gordon Brown be that much different?

Article

Capitalism: Still on Trial

Market Mechanisms Remain the Best Protection Against Corporate Fraud

MARCH 01, 2005 by NORMAN BARRY

Article

The European Constitution: A Requiem?

The Constitution-Makers Are Unlikely to Succeed

OCTOBER 01, 2004 by NORMAN BARRY

Article

Estonia Moves to Liberty

The Most Successful of the Transition Economies Is the One Least Talked About

MAY 01, 2004 by NORMAN BARRY

Article

Pensions: A Wordwide, But Avoidable Crisis

Nationalized Pensions Are Going Bust

OCTOBER 01, 2003 by NORMAN BARRY

Almost every country in the economically advanced world is worried about nationalized pensions. American statisticians have some grisly fun predicting on what day of the week and in what year the Social Security system will finally go bust. Or whether Medicare will be broke first. And most young Americans think that there is as much chance of picking up Social Security when they retire as there is of a sighting of Elvis.

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May 2013

From natural systems to human systems, we start to notice patterns in nature that are products of good flow. Adrian Bejan discusses this crucial insight--and how it makes freedom even more needful--in this month's interview. Zachary Caceres looks at what emergence can tell us about the universe, the market, the heart, and the sacred; Mike Reid recounts the tragedies produced when the State tries to impose its order on people who have already developed their own; Gary Galles channels Leonard Read: the State is a clenched fist, he says, so it cannot create; Brad Taylor says democracy might just be another imposed order in some situations; Karl Borden wonders whether an individual's right to be left alone can be part of the order of things; and much, much more.Download Free PDF

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