Economics: Macroeconomics 
Essential
The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics (CEE)
This encyclopedia contains articles by leading economists on basic concepts, economic systems, schools of economic thought, macroeconomics, economic policy, taxes, money and banking, economic regulation, environmental regulation, discrimination, labor issues, international economics, corporations, financial markets, the marketplace, the economics of special markets, economies outside the U.S., and biographies of famous economists.
Selected Essays on Political Economy
By Frédéric Bastiat: "Bastiat directed his arguments against certain ever recurring fallacies as they were employed in his time. Few people would employ them today quite as naively as it was still possible to do then. But let the reader not deceive himself that these same fallacies no longer play an important role in contemporary economic discussion: they are today expressed merely in a more sophisticated form and are therefore more difficult to detect."- F.A. Hayek
Economic Sophisms
By Frédéric Bastiat: "Bastiat was not primarily an original economic theorist. What he was, beyond all other men, was an economic pamphleteer, the greatest exposer of economic fallacies, the most powerful champion of free trade on the European Continent."- Henry Hazlitt
Opening the Door to the Economic Way of Thinking
By Russell Roberts: "Here are ten fundamental ideas to help you explore and understand the world around us using the economic way of thinking. "
Economics in One Lesson
By Henry Hazlitt: "This primer on economic principles brilliantly analyzes the seen and unseen consequences of political and economic actions. In the words of F.A. Hayek, there is "no other modern book from which the intelligent layman can learn so much about the basic truths of economics in so short a time."
Economic Freedom and Peace
"Since before the time of Thucydides, states have used wealth to acquire more territory and to dominate the affairs of their neighbors. Understanding the reasons that the powerful countries of today are less prone to dispute than their predecessors is critical to maintaining the peace and to extending its benefits more broadly."
Project on Social Security Choice
The Cato Institute's experts examine the problems facing the current social security system, the methods that can be used to move towards a system of personal retirement accounts, and the effects that a new system would have on workers.
Recommended
Is the Gold Standard Still the Gold Standard among Monetary Systems?
By Lawrence H. White: "Critics have raised a number of theoretical and historical objections to the gold standard. Some have called the gold standard a "crazy" idea. The gold standard is not a flawless monetary system. Neither is the fiat money alternative. In light of historical evidence about the comparative magnitude of these flaws, however, the gold standard is a policy option that deserves serious consideration."
The Dollar Is Falling, and That’s Good News
By Tyler Cowen: "But when it comes to currencies, a higher value neither brings national success nor predicts future prosperity. The measure of a nation’s wealth is the goods and services it produces, not the relative standing of its currency."
Fed Up
By Alvaro Vargas Llosa: "All in all, financial instability has been far greater since the creation of the Federal Reserve. What did the Great Depression teach us? Essentially that even with the best of intentions, it is impossible for the authorities to manage the supply of money in accordance with the exact needs of the economy."
Why We Trade
By Russell Roberts: "We’re used to shrugging off all sorts of rhetorical gobbledygook from our politicians. But when you hear U.S. presidential candidates start to mouth off about free trade, watch your wallet: A discredited 14th-century theory of economics is enjoying a dangerous renaissance in the 2008 campaign. "
Something Besides Money Growth Causes Inflation? It Just Ain't So!
By Howard Baetjer, Jr.: "In the words of the great Milton Friedman, whose masterwork with Anna Schwartz, A Monetary History of the United States, did a lot to settle the matter, 'Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon.' Unfortunately, many educated commentators have not learned this important truth."
The Grand Old Spending Party: How Republicans Became Big Spenders
By Stephen Slivinski: "Republicans could reform the budget rules that stack the deck in favor of more spending. Unfortunately, senior House Republicans are fighting the changes. The GOP establishment in Washington today has become a defender of big government."
Sports, Jobs, & Taxes: Are new stadiums worth the cost?
"Advocates argue that new stadiums spur so much economic growth that they are self-financing: subsidies are offset by revenues from ticket taxes, sales taxes on concessions and other spending outside the stadium, and property tax increases arising from the stadium's economic impact. Unfortunately, these arguments contain bad economic reasoning that leads to overstatement of the benefits of stadiums."
The Fundamentals of Rent Seeking
By Gordon Tullock: "Once the concept of rent seeking was discovered - and defined as the outlay of resources by individuals and organizations in the pursuit of rents created by government - there followed a flourishing of research as relevant ideas began to disseminate throughout economics. It is now rare to find an issue of an economics journal that does not refer at least implicitly to the concept of rent seeking."