From Econlib <[email protected]>
Subject From Adam Smith to Cuba: New Perspectives on Markets and Freedom
Date February 2, 2026 6:01 PM
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MONTH OF FEBRUARY 2026
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Last Call: One Week Left to Shop Our No Date Sale Holiday Sale! ([link removed])

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FEATURED READING

The Deportation Labor Shock ([link removed])

By Tarnell Brown

Mass deportation is a massive market intervention. When examined through the lens of labor markets, production complementarities, and historical evidence, mass deportation emerges not as a wage‑enhancing reform but as a broad negative shock.
Read Now ([link removed])
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ECONLOG

The Warmth of Cooperation ([link removed])

By Chris Freiman

Capitalism doesn’t rely on “the frigidity of rugged individualism,” but rather on finding ways to encourage cooperative behavior through markets. This insight can be traced back 250 years, to Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations.
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ECONLOG

The Fast Fashion Dilemma ([link removed])

By Joy Buchanan

Concerns about “fast fashion” have been used to argue for trade restrictions. A better approach is to explore the tradeoffs—economic, cultural, environmental—and consider how unacceptable costs can be addressed directly.
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ECONLOG

Cuba After Communism ([link removed])

By Carlos Martinez

On January 1, 1959, Fidel Castro and his bearded revolutionaries marched into Havana. Today, far fewer Cubans support the principles that the Castros’ dictatorship claims to stand for. Carlos Martinez argues that 67 years later, the conditions are right for meaningful liberalization.
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ARTICLE

How Productivity Advances ([link removed])

By Arnold Kling

Productivity growth is often treated as a byproduct of “technological progress.” Arnold Kling argues it is better understood as a deliberate process of improving efficiency—through experimentation, better methods, and refinement in production.

FEATURED VIRTUAL READING GROUP

Wealth of Nations: A Six-Part Series ([link removed])

Celebrate the 250th anniversary of Adam Smith’s An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations by joining our six-part monthly virtual reading group.

Each session features a 90-minute guided discussion led by Sarah Skwire and Janet Bufton, focusing on a different book from Smith’s landmark text. Register for a single session or take part in the entire series.
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THIS PAST MONTH ON…
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Zionism, the Melting Pot, and the Galveston Project with Rachel Cockerell ([link removed])
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The Mattering Instinct with Rebecca Newberger Goldstein ([link removed])
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Nature, Nurture, and Identical Twins with David Bessis ([link removed])
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Conversation, Interintellect, and Arcadia with Anna Gát ([link removed])
Vote for Your Favorite EconTalk Episode ([link removed])

View the full EconTalk Podcast archive here ([link removed]) . You can also tune into the podcast series on Apple Podcast ([link removed]) , Spotify ([link removed]) , or YouTube ([link removed]) .
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