"[1] Through their official website, people can learn about the organization, from 2003, there are not only quarterly newsletters, but also various ways to present the views of Austrian economists on the economy, such as academic books, events, video, etc., or non-academics such as blogs or podcasts.
[2] The purpose of the establishment is not only to commemorate him, but also to develop the economy and politics of the Austrian school, and the research funds are from private donations.
The materials in this website are academic such as journals, forums, films, etc., published in each issue are scholars and experts visiting various fields.
Through the newsletter published every quarter, we can understand the friction between theory, environment and scholars from different schools.
The conclusions obtained according to these statements will be more objective and universal for the analysis of human behavior, however, there is a lot of space for the discussion of this inferential form of economics.
Center for Liberal Studies published and sponsored many newsletters, papers, periodicals, articles and special topics, etc.
It was founded by Murray and was based on non interventionism, liberalism, etc, And other political positions as the promotion place of the primary principle.
[8] Due to the early environment, there were only paper-based newsletters at the beginning, so most readers only have experts, scholars and students who are interested in or have research in this field.
[9] With the development of time, environment and technology, the current Australian economics newsletter is published online, and the style is different from the previous typesetting.
However, the current topics have been added to business cycles, calculation and knowledge, money and banking, monetary theory, and prices, etc., with up to 24 categories.
Their main proposition is "Say's law", which believes that the government should rule by inaction without being responsible for the market, because just like the most basic ethics of supply and demand in economics, someone will make up for the lack of supply and goods, and the price, cost and profit of all goods will return to the original line.
[11] There only when the government takes the lead in increasing expenditure and driving the employment rate can we improve people's income.
Because of the words, the whole article was a verbatim record of the Austrian Economics Newsletter’s editor and James grant.
Even some proper nouns or experts' names on the web page are attached with hyperlink, to let readers search more quickly.