My popular writing
Posted by John Humphreys on June 17, 2009
I thought I should pull together a list of my popular (meaning non-refereed… not necessarily meaning that it’s popular) writing, especially my recent op-eds, so that I wouldn’t loose track of what I’ve done. This doesn’t include the economic reports I wrote for CIE, my booklets for CIS or proper refereed articles written for the Policy Journal.
In short, I have been published in The Australian, The Age, Canberra Times, Australian Financial Review, Business Spectator, Online Opinion, Open Forum, Korea Herald, IPA Review, Quadrant, Policy Magazine and Economic Analysis & Policy.
The full list is below…
For 2009:
June 03 — Australia’s recession in perspective (Open Forum)
May 28 — The rise of neo-socialism (Canberra Times)
May 11 — Making things worse (Business Spectator)
April 07 — A war on charity (Open Forum)
Feb 25 — In civil society, it should always pay to be generous (Canberra Times)
Feb 18 — We need to start an emissions debate (The Australian)
Jan 31 — The best way to help a warming planet is to tax carbon and let the market decide (The Age)
Jan 30 — Taxation rhetoric and reality (Business Spectator)
Jan 26 — Accepting the recession (Canberra Times)
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Earlier non-refereed writing…
2008 July 17 — Let people be free to choose indepenence from the State (Financial Review)
2008 March — The case for free immigration agreements (IPA Review)
2007 March — Everything you always wanted to know about Austrian economics (IPA Review)
2007 Sept — Anti-competitive Politics (Policy Magazine)
2007 ?? — EU-ANZ FTA: new ideas in world trade (Quadrant)
2006 Nov 1 — Korea as a financial hub (Korea Herald)
2005 Nov 30 — Simpler tax is easy, but where’s the political courage (Financial Review)
2005 Aug 24 — Values, government and liberalism: not so strange bedfellows (Online Opinion)
2004 ?? — Book Review: Growth Fetish by Clive Hamilton (Economic Analysis & Policy)
2003 Jan 17 — Smokers rights in Canberra (Canberra Times)
2003 Jan 05 — Howard and Costello share the blame, not credit (The Australian)



