What Is Austrian Economics?
An economics rooted in the logic of human action. Understanding the core of the Austrian School.
Why do economists keep getting it wrong? They build elaborate mathematical models, plug in data, and produce forecasts that miss every major crisis. The 2008 financial collapse blindsided most mainstream economists — yet a handful of scholars following the Austrian tradition had been warning about it for years.
The difference? Austrians start from a different place. Instead of treating the economy as a machine you can model with equations, they begin with a simple truth: the economy is people making choices. Real people, with imperfect knowledge, personal priorities, and limited time. Everything else — prices, interest rates, booms and busts — flows from that.
Where it diverges from the mainstream
| Mainstream (Keynesian) | Austrian School | |
|---|---|---|
| Methodology | Mathematical models, statistics | Logical deduction from human action |
| Recessions | Not enough spending | Caused by artificial credit expansion |
| Solution | Government stimulus | Let the market correct itself |
| Money | Must be managed by experts | Should emerge freely from the market |
| Interest rates | Set by central banks | Reflect people’s time preference |
The thinkers who built this tradition
Austrian economics wasn’t invented overnight. It was developed across generations:
- Carl Menger — Founded the school in the 1870s by showing that value is subjective, not embedded in objects.
- Ludwig von Mises — Built a complete system of economics from the logic of human action, and proved that socialist planning cannot work.
- Friedrich Hayek — Won the Nobel Prize for his work on how knowledge is dispersed across millions of minds — too dispersed for any central planner to gather.
- Murray Rothbard — Extended Austrian economics into a full political philosophy of individual liberty.
Ideas that keep coming back
Time preference. People naturally prefer having things now rather than later. The strength of this preference shapes how much a society saves, invests, and builds for the future. Learn more →
Business cycle theory. When central banks push interest rates artificially low, businesses get false signals and invest in projects that can’t pay off. The boom feels great — until the inevitable bust arrives. Learn more →
Economic calculation problem. In 1920, Mises posed a challenge that socialism never answered: without market prices, there is no rational way to allocate resources. Central planners are flying blind. Learn more →
Go Deeper
- What Is Sound Money? — Why the type of money matters for the whole economy
- Time Preference and Civilization — The connection between patience and prosperity
Recommended Reading
- Economics in One Lesson (Henry Hazlitt) — The best starting point, written for anyone
- Human Action (Ludwig von Mises) — The definitive treatise on Austrian economics