Fall 1984 Vol. 4 No. 2 Planning America: Government or the Market? Share Articles Introduction: Planning America, Government or the Market? By James A. Dorn A “Supply-Side” Industrial Policy By William A. Niskanen U.S. Economic Policy and Productivity Growth By John W. Kendrick Comment on U.S. Economic Policy and Productivity Growth By Alvin Rabushka Economic Planning and the knowledge Problem By Israel M. Kirzner Comment on Economic Planning and the knowledge Problem By Leonid Hurwicz The Incentive to Innovate Under Alternative Property Rights By Steve Pejovich Comment on The Incentive to Innovate Under Alternative Property Rights By Deborah Duff Milenkovitch Two Varieties of Industrial Policy: A Critique By Don Lavoie Industrial Policy in Hungary: Lessons for AmerIca By Josef C. Brada Comments on Industrial Policy in Hungary: Lessons for AmerIca By Paul Craig Roberts and Janos Horvath Japanese Economic Success: Industrial Policy or Free Market? By Katsuo Sakoh Comment on Japanese Economic Success: Industrial Policy or Free Market? By Philip H. Trezise The Constitutional Chaos of Industrial Policy By Edwin Vieira, Jr. The Political Economy of National Industrial Policy By Thomas J. DiLorenzo Breaking the Barriers to the U.S. Economic Growth By John M. Albertine Comment on Breaking the Barriers to the U.S. Economic Growth By Richard B. McKenzie Is Industrial Innovation Destroying Jobs By Bruce Bartlett Comment on Is Industrial Innovation Destroying Jobs By Leland B. Yeager The Case Against “Industrial Policy” Latest Issues Fall 2021 Spring/Summer 2021 Winter 2021 Fall 2020
Comments on Industrial Policy in Hungary: Lessons for AmerIca By Paul Craig Roberts and Janos Horvath