Bullish on Bush
by Stephen Moore

In a spirited and compelling fashion, Bullish on Bush sets the record straight on the stunning success of President Bush's tax cut policies. It also provides the first comprehensive analysis of George W. Bush's bold second term economic agenda to create a broad-based Ownership Society in America and explains how Bush's tax relief policies have helped the economy grow, reversed the collapse in the stock market, and put America back to work. This book will make you Bullish on Bush,and Bullish on America!

It's Getting Better All the Time
by Stephen Moore and Julian Simon

How has the United States changed over the past century? Is life truly better now than it was in the past? Using statistical reports and other historical materials, Moore (fiscal policy studies, Cato Inst.) and the late Simon (business administration, Univ. of Maryland) argue that for the most part people entering the new millennium are much better off than their parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents. The areas covered include health, economics, race relations, safety, environmental issues, and women's rights. Read more.

Dollars & Nonsense
edited by Stephen Moore and Richard Noyes

American Abundance
by Larry Kudlow

Pay to the Order of Puerto Rico
by Alexander Odishelidze & Arthur Laffer

Breach of Trust: How Washington Turns Outsiders into Insiders
by Tom Coburn

Tom A. Coburn, a congressional maverick who kept his promise to serve three terms and then leave Washington, offers a candid look at the inner workings of Congress—why the system changes politicians instead of vice versa. Breach of Trust shows readers, through shocking behind-the-scenes stories, why Washington resists the reform our country desperately needs and how they can make wise, informed decisions about current and future political issues and candidates. Read more.

The Ultimate Resource 2
by Julian Simon

Julian L. Simon is the world's greatest contrarian. The Ultimate Resource 2 --an update, not a sequel, despite the title--skewers the sacred cows of environmentalism, population control, and Paul Ehrlich. In the contest between resource scarcity and human ingenuity, Simon bets the farm on the ability of intelligent people to overcome their problems. Thankfully, he is not a theorist. This book lays out convincing empirical evidence for Simon's prediction of a prosperous future. Read more.

The Way the World Works
by Jude Wanniski

The first book to explain in detail the principles of supply-side economics and explore world history from that perspective. Read more.


The Greatest Communicator
by Dick Wirthlin and Wynton C. Hall

This is an admiring personal reminiscence of Ronald Reagan from the strategic genius behind his presidential campaigns. But Dick Wirthlin’s relationship with Reagan was more than strategy and polls. They were friends who shared values, love of people and respect and admiration to forge a friendship that weathered 36 years of political ups and downs. From their private moments and shared experience, Wirthlin will share a story others cannot tell.


Economics for Real People
by Gene Callahan

At last, a fun and fascinating guide to the main ideas of the Austrian School of economics, written in sparkling prose especially for the non-economist. Gene Callahan shows that good economics isn't about government planning or statistical models. It's about human beings and the choices they make in the real world. Read more.

Free to Choose
by Milton Friedman

The Road to Serfdom
by F.A. Hayek

Hayek's warning against the dangers of state control over the means of production was not heeded when it was first published in 1944. He discusses individualism and collectivism, economic control and totalitarianism, and the socialist roots of Naziism. This 50th anniversary edition includes an introduction commenting on the rise of socialism after WWII and the transitions from communism to capitalism in Eastern Europe, plus three prefaces from previous editions. Read more.

Basic Economics
by Thomas Sowell

Basic Economics has been written with the thought that learning economics should be not only a relaxed experience, but also an enjoyable one. Read more.

Wealth of Nations
by Adam Smith

Written over a ten year period, this work was first published in 1776 and is a classic statement of economic liberalism. Read more.

Economics in One Lesson
by Henry Hazlitt

A simple, straightforward analysis of economic fallacies that are so prevalent they have almost become a new orthodoxy. Read more.

Human Action
by Ludwig von Mises

The Mainspring of Human Progress
by Henry Grady Weaver