Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The Best Econ Books for Your Summer Reading
The Best Econ Books for Your Summer Reading
Dec 17, 2025 1:29 AM

We’ve prepared a short list of beach and vacay reading so you don’t have to.

Read More…

The best way to start summer is to stock up on the newest book releases and to revisit the classics. Whether you’re concerned about growing populism among the right and left, how to think through humanitarian aid within your church, or the more significant questions of human flourishing, there is something for everyone. And if you’re one of the 900 attendees at Acton University this week, I encourage you to visit the book shop, where you will find the best selection of books and videos for those lazy summer days. If you couldn’t make it to Acton University in person, don’t despair: all these titles are available online.

The Next American Economy: Nation, State, and Markets in an Uncertain World is the latest release by Samuel Gregg. If you’re worried about the growth of government in general or the rise of American political populism in particular, this book is for you. Gregg wades into the populist debates that seem to agree on only one thing—more government is the remedy for what ails us. National conservatives embrace government as the solution to what they view as modern problems of globalization and markets run amok, including the alienation of the working class, the outsourcing of American manufacturing, and the rise of China. Gregg takes these challenges from the New Right seriously rather than dismissing them. He provides a rich historical framework for America’s long affection for tariffs, subsidies, and protectionism, and exposes them as the sources of even more cronyism and the misallocation of resources. America’s economic future depends on freeing market economies, which Gregg argues makes everyone more prosperous. Most importantly, he provides a positive and hopeful view of the future by encouraging us to embrace mercial republic. You can watch Sam Gregg discuss his book here.Poverty, Inc. is a documentary produced by the Acton Institute’s Michael Matheson Miller, available on DVD, Netflix, VUDU, and Amazon Prime. I find a way to work this video into any class I teach, whether on international trade, microeconomics, or public policy. It’s a powerful story that helps us understand that good intentions are insufficient. Our Christian call to help the poor is a matter of both heart and We must not unintentionally undermine our well-intended efforts to do good. The video leads us through gut-wrenching stories of the damning unintended consequences of many domestic and international humanitarian actions. Moreover, we’re guided through the vast web of paternalism and cronyism that plagues the development industry. The film has won over 60 awards and received accolades from intellectuals across the ideological spectrum. You can listen to EconTalk host Russ Roberts interview Miller on the documentary here.The Struggle for a Better World by Peter J. Boettke is a collection of lectures and essays that powerfully articulates pelling vision for a prosperous posed of free people afforded equal dignity and open access to the market economy. My favorite quote in the book, “Economic growth is a moral imperative,” is contentious, yet Boettke persuasively demonstrates that the classical liberal project emancipates people from historical patterns of discrimination and exclusion. As the circles of exchange are widened, the market offers agency where it had previously been denied, generating trust, a cosmopolitan order, and human flourishing. As a collection of essays and lectures, you can read this from front to back, which I mend, or pick and choose chapters of interest. Listen to Professor Boettke discuss his book on the Human Progress Podcast here.There’s No Free Lunch: 250 Economic Truths by David L. Bahnsen is hot off the press and just what we need. This book is a treasury of examples of the economic way of thinking and helpful to both econ specialists and curious generalists. His goal is to define and defend free enterprise, and he argues that one must first understand basic economic truths to grasp the importance of free enterprise. Economics is the study of human action; thus, we must start with a proper understanding of the human person before we can advance human freedom and flourishing. There’s No Free Lunch is now a video series produced by National Review and available on YouTube, where you can watch Bahnsen converse with Father Robert Sirico.Economics in One Lesson by Henry Hazlitt, first published in 1946, is always worth revisiting. Short chapters and pithy writing make this timeless classic accessible to everyone. Hazlitt begins with the broken window fallacy, so prominent in people’s thinking today about the efficacy of public policy. It’s a short story about a boy who breaks a shop owner’s window, which requires the owner to invest resources to repair it. We must not celebrate the breaking of a window because it encourages production. Instead, we should lament that the store owner must redirect his resources to fix what was broken, because those resources were destined for other ends. We can’t build up economies through destruction. Production isn’t good for its own sake; it’s only beneficial if it creates real value for people in society. In this he distinguishes between good and bad economists: bad economists look only at the direct or seen consequences of a policy, whereas good economists inquire about the unseen consequences and their effects on all groups. This book makes it into my syllabi each year, and I learn something new every time I read it. You can listen to Hazlitt discuss the fallacies that plague contemporary public policy here.

Whether you choose to steal quiet morning hours with a hot cup of coffee or prefer to read with a cold glass of lemonade poolside, I encourage everyone to expand on this starter list, even if you can’t get to every book by summer’s end. Summer may have to end, but enlightenment should be a yearlong adventure.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
So, Why Exactly Doesn’t Healthcare.gov Work?
The Obama Administration has stated that 106,000 people have managed to sign up for health care on the Healthcare.gov site, a site 3-1/2 years in the making. Both HHS Director Kathleen Sebelius and Deputy Chief Information Officer for the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Henry Cho, have been grilled by mittees as to the incredibly poor performance of the website. What exactly went wrong? NPR’s All Tech Considered breaks it down. There are two popular methods of software development....
Don’t Fret About the Premium Increases, You Can Just Pay More in Taxes to Subsidize Yourself
Yesterday I was reading an article about Obamacare in the Washington Post. . . Whether they know about that financial help is a different question, as many have had trouble using HealthCare.gov to figure out how much insurance would cost under the Affordable Care Act. And the study does not include information on whether those subsides would lead to lower premiums for shoppers buying in the health law’s new exchanges. “There’s no question that when people get better coverage it...
Imagination And Virtue
Anne got her best friend, Diana, drunk. Sick-drunk. Neither was old enough to drink, and Anne didn’t really mean to, but…there it was. Diana’s mother was horrified, and forbade the friendship to go on. Anne was crushed. She really had made a mistake: what she thought was a cordial was wine. It was a hard lesson. If you ever read Anne of Green Gables, you know this story. Things get set aright – partly by the adults, and partly by...
‘Get Your Hands Dirty’: The Importance of a Rightly Ordered Life
At the Values & Capitalism blog, Jacqueline Otto Isaacs reviews Jordan Ballor’s Get Your Hands Dirty. Isaacs explains how Ballor articulates a vision for the proper orientation for our lives: In his recent release, “Get Your Hands Dirty,” Jordan Ballor of the Acton Institute lays out a clear case for why Christians ought to have rightly ordered lives and what that might look like. While the book took shape around a collection of essays, this message was as hard to...
Evangelicalism, Large Cities, and the ‘Other’ Christians
One of the profound realities of theology and ecclesiastical enclaves in which American Christians live is each tribal subculture views the world as if Christianity begins and ends with their tribe. Evangelicals are a great example of this trend. Some evangelicals write as if they are the only Christians doing God’s work in the world. For example, Joy Allmond recently wrote a perplexing article about New York City asking “Is New York City on the Brink of a Great Awakening?”...
‘They’re Always Coming To You Offering You More Programs’
An exceedingly honest woman called into an Austin, Texas, radio talk show, KLBJ, to discuss why she chooses not to work. She, her husband and three children rely on tax dollars for shelter, utilities and food. She admits that her parents did not work either, and that free money and programs were offered all the time. And what’s wrong with that? [product sku=1177] ...
Key Injunction Won In HHS Case
The Catholic Dioceses of Pittsburgh and Erie, along with several nonprofit groups, have won a preliminary injunction against implementing the HHS mandate. U.S. District Judge Arthur J. Schwab granted an injunction in favor of these organizations. The injunction allows them to continue to offer insurance that doesn’t include contraception, sterilization and abortion-inducing drugs while litigation continues. Without the injunction, the insurance administrators for the organizations — though not the dioceses themselves — would have had to start providing the coverage...
Israel Really Wants A King (Part I)
I recently posted some thoughts at The Power Blog on “God’s Problem With Centralized Power”, which took a macro view of what I believe to be God’s clear disdain for mankind pursuing their own ends instead of His articulated purposes when es to how we organize munally. This time I want to highlight a specific, micro-level example of that same general idea. The story of Israel’s demand for a king inI Samuel 8contains so many relevant, interesting nuggets of insight...
‘Tea Party Catholic’ Now Available as an eBook
Samuel Gregg’s latest, Tea Party Catholic, is now available for the Kindle. You can buy this version through Amazon, or if you prefer the paper version, visit Robert P George, professor of jurisprudence at Princeton University says, “The book is as carefully and, indeed, rigorously argued as it is provocatively titled. It is a great resource for anyone—Catholic or not—who wants to know what the Church really teaches about the moral requirements of the socio-economic and political orders.” If you...
‘Good Morning, I’m A Rapist; Can You Help Me Out Here?’
How easy is it for a 33 year old man to buy Plan B for his 15 year old “girlfriend?” Not too hard at all. In fact, the folks in this video from Students for Life don’t bat an eye – even when he makes it clear how old he is and how young his “girlfriend” is. Keep in mind that there is no state in the U.S. where it is legal for a 33 year old to have sexual...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved