Just a heads up that I will be blogging less frequently these next few days as I will be travelling this weekend to attend the first-ever joint meeting of the European Society for the History of Economic Thought (ESHET) and the History of Economics Society (HES), which will take place next week (May 26-29) on the Campus Saint-Jean d’Angély of the Université Côte d’Azur in Nice, France. For full reference, here is the complete program of this historic conference.
It will be a fun but busy week for me because I have been invited to join three panels during the conference. On Wednesday, May 27, I will be presenting an updated version of my paper on Ronald Coase’s “reciprocal harm” model (“Coase’s fable”, Session D9). Then, on Thursday, May 28, I will be presenting a chapter from my forthcoming book with Salim Rashid (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign), Beyond Das Adam Smith Problem (“Chapter 11: Counterfactual conundrums”, Session E12). And last but not least, on Friday, May 29, I will be presenting a work-in-progress I am writing with Alain Alcouffe (University of Toulouse) about Adam Smith’s visit to Geneva during his grand tour years (“Adam Smith’s Encounters in Geneva: 1765-1766”, Session J7).
Following up on my previous post, I want to share three timeless ideas that I learned from Book 1 of Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations as well as three open questions that I have for my fellow Smith scholars:
Beware government regulation, which often has the effect of erecting barriers to entry, and beware the merchants, who are constantly lobbying the government to erect these stifling barriers. Question: Should the government regulate A.I. companies, and if so, how?
Today (20 de mayo) is Cuban Independence Day (Día de la Independencia), which commemorates the historic date in 1902 when the Republic of Cuba was officially established, marking the end of Spanish colonial rule and the transition out of U.S. military occupation following the Spanish-Cuban-American War of 1898.
To commemorate the 250th anniversary of the publication of Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations, I will feature a different book of Smith’s magnum opus starting every Wednesday for the next few weeks. (The Wealth of Nations consists of five separate substantive sections or “books” in all.) To begin, below is a compilation of my previous blog posts on Book I of Smith’s treatise:
Full disclosure: I have admired the daily “assorted links” feature of polymath Tyler Cowen’s Marginal Revolution blog (see here) since I discovered MR in 2006, so if imitation is indeed the sincerest form of flattery, below are some of my own assorted links:
That is the title of my most recent work-in-progress, available here via SSRN, which is currently “under review” at a refereed journal, Review of the History of Economic Thought and Methodology. By way of background, below is the Introduction to my paper (footnotes omitted):
“One of the most fascinating sessions at the 2025 meeting of the History of Economics Society (HES) was a roundtable discussion on ‘The 50th anniversary of the Buchanan-Samuels Exchange.’ The roundtable panel featured an all-star roster of economic historians, including Marianne Johnson (Wisconsin), M. Ali Khan (Johns Hopkins), David M. Levy (George Mason), Steven Medema (Duke), Gary Mongiovi (St. John’s), Scott Scheall (Austin), and Emily Skarbek (Brown), all of whom illuminated various aspects of the original exchange of letters in the early 1970s between James Buchanan and Warren J. Samuels. As it happens, this intellectual exchange was motivated by an old takings case—Miller v. Schoene, decided in 1928—and takings law is one of my areas of expertise. [See, for example, my 2021 paper ‘Lockdowns as Takings.’] The remainder of my paper reframes the Buchanan-Samuels exchange as a three-act drama and is thus organized as follows: Act I sets the stage of our story by revisiting the dispute in Miller v. Schoene. Next, Act II compares and contrasts Samuels’s framing of this case with alternate Buchanan’s framing. For Samuels, Miller v. Schoene is a textbook case of reciprocal harms, while for Buchanan, this case is about the sanctity of property rights. Lastly, Act III concludes with the climax and Buchanan’s denouement.”
On this day (15 May) in 1536, Anne Boleyn, the second of King Henry VIII‘s six wives, is condemned to death after standing trial in London on charges of adultery, incest with her brother, and treason (plotting to kill the king), and she will be beheaded four days later. Alas, for what it’s worth, most historians dispute these charges and have condemned her show-trial as a sham proceeding with a pre-determined guilty verdict. (See, for example, the sources in footnote #146 of Anne Boleyn’s Wikipedia page, including Chapter 22 of Eric Ives’ 2004 book The Life and Death of Anne Boleyn.) One revisionist historian (George Bernard), however, claims that the queen consort may have been guilty of some of the charges against her. (See, e.g., this provocative article in The Guardian.) More details about Queen Anne’s trial, including the orders for her execution, are available here.
Never, right?! Alas, what has motivated this blog post is this report (Kathryn Palmer, Inside Higher Ed, 11 May 2026) that Instructure (the company that owns Canvas) has paid an undisclosed ransom to a gang of black-hat cybercriminals that hacked the company’s learning management system (twice!) earlier this month. Here is some background:
“ShinyHunters” (a black-hat criminal extortion group active since 2019; Wikipedia)
Now, to the business at hand: when, if ever, should ransomware be paid? Below are links to some of the scholarly literature (ungated or open access*) on the economics and law of ransomware payments, in alphabetical order by author:
“Should we outlaw ransomware payments?” (Debabrata Dey & Atanu Lahiri, Proceedings of the 54th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, 2021)