
Home - FEE
Founded in 1946, FEE is the original home of free-market economic thinking in America. FEE’s popular digital content and in-person programs turn complex ideas into practical tools for living …
Antitrust and Tariffs Are on a Collision Course - FEE
Friday, November 28, 2025 Image Credit: Custom image by FEE Justice Government Regulation Mergers
Elon Musk Channels Milton Friedman’s Pencil: The Message of …
Apr 7, 2025 · Diogo Costa is the President of the Foundation for Economic Education (FEE). He holds a bachelor's degree in Law from the Catholic University of Petrópolis and a master's …
The Top 5 Most Misunderstood Economic Concepts - FEE
Oct 9, 2024 · Image Credit: Custom image by FEE, content from Wikimedia Commons Alex Tabarrok sets the record straight in his discussion on public goods: A public good, as we’ve …
The Spirit of a Pioneering Pilot - FEE
Aug 1, 2025 · He previously served as president of FEE from 2008-2019. He chaired FEE’s board of trustees in the 1990s and has been both writing and speaking for FEE since the late 1970s.
Socialism: Science or Cyanide? - FEE
Nov 26, 2024 · The following essay by FEE’s president emeritus, Lawrence W. Reed, appears in it as the Afterword. In this volume, Marianna Davidovich vividly recounts the world’s horrific …
The Chinese FDR - FEE
Jun 6, 2025 · He previously served as president of FEE from 2008-2019. He chaired FEE’s board of trustees in the 1990s and has been both writing and speaking for FEE since the late 1970s.
History - FEE
FEE celebrates 75 years of advancing the ideas and principles of free enterprise, liberty, and limited government: Ranked as a top think tank in the US for the 8th consecutive year.
A License for That? - FEE
Jul 29, 2025 · The impacts of a two-year-old law are finally being felt in Britain—and, as the United States looks to pass its own Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA), it should
Capitalists Against Capitalism - FEE
Apr 22, 2025 · The Trump administration’s tariffs and the damage they could cause to people’s livelihoods globally are a rude reminder that free markets matter. But we live