Henry Hazlitt

E1035431

Henry Hazlitt was an American journalist, literary critic, and economist best known for his popular writings defending free-market economics, especially his book "Economics in One Lesson."

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Henry Hazlitt canonical 1

Statements (50)

Predicate Object
instanceOf author
economist
human
journalist
literary critic
countryOfCitizenship United States of America
dateOfBirth 1894-11-28
dateOfDeath 1993-07-09
employer Newsweek NERFINISHED
The New York Times
The Wall Street Journal NERFINISHED
familyName Hazlitt NERFINISHED
fieldOfWork economic journalism
economics
literary criticism
fullName Henry Stuart Hazlitt NERFINISHED
gender male
genre economic literature
moral philosophy
non-fiction
political philosophy
givenName Henry NERFINISHED
ideology free-market economics
influenced Murray Rothbard NERFINISHED
many libertarian economists
influencedBy Friedrich A. Hayek NERFINISHED
Ludwig von Mises NERFINISHED
classical economists
language English
movement Austrian School of economics NERFINISHED
classical liberalism
notableIdea critique of Keynesian economics
popularization of opportunity cost in public policy
notableWork Economics in One Lesson NERFINISHED
The Failure of the "New Economics" NERFINISHED
The Foundations of Morality NERFINISHED
Time Will Run Back NERFINISHED
occupation columnist
economist
editor
journalist
literary critic
placeOfBirth Philadelphia
surface form: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
placeOfDeath New York City
surface form: New York City, New York, United States
positionHeld columnist at Newsweek
financial editor at The New York Times
wroteAbout inflation
international monetary systems
minimum wage laws
price controls

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Sidgwick influenced Henry Hazlitt
subject surface form: Henry Sidgwick