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Austrian School - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Austrian School economists advocate the strict enforcement of voluntary ... Austrian economists developed a sense of themselves as a school distinct from ...
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THE AUSTRIAN SCHOOL
The Austrian School ... The Austrian School maintained its base in Vienna until the 1930s, when most of ... The early Austrian School was to influence ...
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What is Austrian Economics
What is Austrian Economics? - an overview of the Austrian School ... Rothbard's approach to the Austrian School followed directly in the line of Late ...
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Austrian School of Economics: The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics ...
The Austrian school of economics was founded in 1871 with the publication of ... In the 1930s and 1940s, the Austrian school moved to Britain and the United ...
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The Austrian School, also known as the “Vienna School” or the “Psychological School”, is a Heterodox economics school of history of economic thought that advocates adherence to strict methodological individualism. As a result Austrians hold that the only valid economic theory is logically derived from basic principles of human action. Alongside the formal approach to theory, often called praxeology, the school has traditionally advocated an interpretive approach to history. The praxeological method allows for the discovery of economic laws valid for all human action, while the interpretive approach addresses specific historical events.

This Aristotelian/rationalist approach differs both from the currently dominant Platonic idealism/logical positivism approach of contemporary neo-classical economics and the once dominant Historicism of the German historical school of economics and the American institutional economics. Regardless, Austrian economics has made significant contributions to modern mainstream neo-classical economics. Additionally, the Austrian school is quite heterogeneous, with various branches of the school at various times throughout its history taking a range of positions from presenting a radical alternative to mainstream economics to contributing directly to mainstream neoclassical economics, though even in that case often through techniques that remained distinctly Austrian.Boettke, Peter J. 1998. The Elgar Companion to Austrian Economics. Edgard Elgar Publishing. p. 1

While the praxeological method differs from the current method advocated by the majority of contemporary economists, the Austrian method derives from a long line of deductive economic thought stretching from the 15th century to the modern era and including such major economists as Richard Cantillon, David Hume, Anne Robert Jacques Turgot, Baron de Laune, Adam Smith, Jean-Baptiste Say, David Ricardo, Nassau Senior, John Elliott Cairnes, and Claude Frédéric Bastiat.

The most famous Austrian adherents are Carl Menger, Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk, Friedrich von Wieser, Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, Gottfried von Haberler, Murray Rothbard, Israel Kirzner, George Reisman, Henry Hazlitt, and Hans-Hermann Hoppe. While often controversial, and standing to some extent outside of the mainstream of neoclassical theory—as well as being staunchly opposed to much of John Maynard Keynes' Keynesian economics and its results—the Austrian School has been widely influential because of its emphasis on the creative phase (i.e. the time element) of economic productivity and its questioning of the basis of the behavioral theory underlying neoclassical economics.

Because many of the policy recommendations of Austrian theorists call for minarchism, strict protection of private property, and support for individualism in general, they are often cited by conservatives, laissez-faire liberal, libertarian, and Objectivism (Ayn Rand) groups for support, although Austrian School economists, like Ludwig von Mises, insist that praxeology must be positive economics. They do not answer the question "should this policy be implemented?", but rather "if this policy is implemented, will it have Law of unintended consequences?".

History Classical economics focused on the exchange theory of value. In the late 19th century, however, attention was focused on the concepts of “marginal” cost and value (see Marginalism). Carl Menger's 1871 book, Principles of Economics, is considered one of the crucial works that began the period known as neoclassical economics. While marginalism was generally influential, there was also a more specific school that grew up around Menger, which came to be known as the “Psychological School,” “Vienna School,” or “Austrian School,”Israel M. Kirzner (1987). "Austrian School of Economics," The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics, v. 1, pp. 145-51.

Austrian economics is currently closely associated with the advocacy of laissez-faire views. Earlier Austrian economists were more skeptical compared to later economists such as Ludwig von Mises and Karel Engliš, with Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk saying that he feared unbridled competition would lead to “anarchism in production and consumption”. However, the Austrian School, especially through the works of Friedrich Hayek, would be influential in the revival of laissez-faire thought in the 1980s.

The school originated in Vienna. However, later adherents of the school like Murray Rothbard and others have derived the roots of the thought of the Austrian School from the Spanish Scholastics teaching at the University of Salamanca of the 15th century and the France Physiocrats of the 18th century. What is Austrian economics? It owes its name to members of the Germany Historical School of economics, who argued against the Austrians during the Methodenstreit, in which the Austrians defended the reliance that classical economics placed upon deductive logic. Their Prussian opponents derisively named them the “Austrian School” to emphasize a departure from mainstream German thought and to suggest a provincial, Aristotelian approach. (The name “Psychological School” derived from the effort to found marginalism upon prior considerations, largely psychological.)

Menger was closely followed by Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk and Friedrich von Wieser. Austrian economists developed a sense of themselves as a school distinct from neoclassical economics during the economic calculation debate, with Ludwig von Mises and Friedrich von Hayek representing the Austrian position, where they contended that without monetary prices and private property, meaningful economic calculation is impossible.

The Austrian economists were the first liberal economists to systematically challenge the Marxist school. This was partly a reaction to the Methodenstreit when they attacked the Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel doctrines of the Historical School. Though many Marxist authors have attempted to portray the Austrian school as a bourgeois reaction to Marx, such an interpretation is implausible: Menger wrote his Principles of Economics at almost the same time as Karl Marx was working upon Das Kapital, whose second and third volumes were published more than ten and twenty years, respectively, after Principles. (However, this does not refute the weaker claim that marginalism received the attention it did in the 1880s, and not earlier, in part because it was seen as an answer to Marx.) The Austrian economists were, nonetheless, amongst the first to clash directly with Marxism, since both dealt with such subjects as money, capital (economics), business cycles, and economic processes. Böhm-Bawerk wrote extensive critiques of Marx in the 1880s and 1890s, and several prominent Marxists — including Rudolf Hilferding — attended his seminar in 1905–6. In contrast, the classical economists had shown little interest in such topics, and many of them did not even gain familiarity with Marx's ideas until well into the twentieth century.

The school was no longer centered in Austria after Hitler came to power. Austrian economics was ill-thought of by most economists after World War II because it rejected observational methods. Its reputation has lately risen with work by students of Israel Kirzner and Ludwig Lachmann, as well as a renewed interest in Hayek after he won the Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel. However, it remains a distinctly minority position, even in such areas as capital value.

Austrian economics can be broken into two general trends. One, exemplified by Hayek, while distrusting most neoclassical concepts (like the entire corpus of macroeconomics), generally accepts a large part of the neoclassical methodology; the other, exemplified by the Ludwig von Mises Institute, seeks a different formalism for economics. The main area of contention between the mainstream and the Austrian school is on their view of the market system as a process, not only to be studied using equilibrium models, but to be viewed as an incessant process that only tends toward a constantly changing equilibrium, this difference is the root of the Austrian business cycles theory, the economic calculation debate and their different views of monopoly and competition. The second primary area of contention between neoclassical theory and the Austrian school is over the possibility of consumer indifference — neoclassical theory says it is possible, whereas Mises rejected it as being “impossible to observe in practice”. The third major dispute arose when Mises and his students argued that utility functions are ordinal scale, and not cardinal number; that is, the Austrians contend that one can only rank preferences and cannot measure their intensity, in direct opposition to the neoclassical view at the time. Finally there are a host of questions about uncertainty raised by Mises and other Austrians, who argue for a different means of risk assessment.

The influence that Austrian school ideas have had on Keynesian macroeconomics is often overlooked. Keynes himself acknowledged being exposed to the Misesian notion that “nominal” values could have “real” effects. A further source of this influence is the period of time when the London School of Economics brought in Hayek and other “continental” economists. While their students, though initially receptive, ultimately were drawn to the new Keynesian doctrines, many of the Hayekian concepts, particularly those relating time to the value of capital and its importance, would find their way into the work of Keynesians, especially by way of John Hicks (who, while distancing himself from Keynesianism, nonetheless made the most influential attempt to formalize it).

Alan Greenspan, speaking of the originators of the School, said in 2000, “the Austrian school have reached far into the future from when most of them practiced and have had a profound and, in my judgment, probably an irreversible effect on how most mainstream economists think in this country.” The long-time U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman said he attended a seminar hosted by Ludwig von Mises. The Greenspan-Paul Congressional Exchanges

Analytical framework Austrian economists reject statistical methods and artificially constructed experiments as tools applicable to economics, saying that while it is appropriate in the natural sciences where factors can be isolated in laboratory conditions, acting human beings are too complex for this treatment. Instead one should isolate the logical processes of human action - a discipline named "praxeology" by Alfred Espinas.

Austrians view entrepreneurship as the driving force in economic development, see private property as essential to the efficient use of resources, and usually (if not always) see government interference in market processes as counterproductive.

As with neoclassical economists, Austrians reject classical economics cost of production theories, most famously the labor theory of value. Instead they Subjective theory of value. This psychological aspect to Menger's economics has been attributed to the school's birth in turn of the century Vienna. Supply and demand are explained by aggregating over the decisions of individuals, following the precepts of methodological individualism, which asserts that only individuals and not collectives make decisions, and marginalist arguments, which compare the costs and benefits for incremental changes.

Contemporary neo-Austrian economists claim to adopt economic subjectivism more consistently than any other school of economics and reject many neoclassical formalisms. For example, while neoclassical economics formalizes the economy as an economic equilibrium system with supply and demand in balance, Austrian economists emphasize its dynamic, perpetually dis-equilibrated nature.

The core of the Austrian framework can be summarized as taking a subjectivist approach to marginal economics, and a focus on the idea that logical consistency of a theory is more important than any interpretation of empirical observations. Austrians focus completely on the opportunity cost of goods, as opposed to balancing downside or disutility costs. It is an Austrian assertion that everyone is better off in a mutually voluntary exchange, or they would not have carried it out. The Opportunity Cost Doctrine.

This focus on opportunity cost alone means that their interpretation of the time value of a good has a strict relationship: since goods will be as restricted by scarcity at a later point in time as they are now, the strict relationship between investment and time must also hold. A factory making goods next year is worth as much less as the goods it is making next year are worth. This means that the business cycle is driven by miscoordination between sectors of the same economy, caused by money not carrying incentive information correct about present choices, rather than within a single economy where money causes people to make bad decisions about how to spend their time.

Contributions Some contributions of Austrian economists:

Criticism One criticism of the Austrian school is its rejection of the scientific method and empirical testing in favor of supposedly self-evident axioms and logical reasoning.Joe D., Why We Can't Associate Too Closely with the Austrians Bryan Caplan has criticized the school for rejecting on principle the use of mathematics or econometrics which is "more than anything else, what prevents Austrian economists from getting more publications in mainstream journals"Bryan Caplan, Why I Am Not an Austrian Economist There are also criticisms of more specific theories.For example, see Critics of Austrian Economics, Austrian Economics, part of the "Critiques of Libertarianism" site

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Note that the economists aligned with the Austrian School are sometimes colloquially called "the Austrians" even though not all held Austrian citizenship, and not all economists from Austria subscribe to the ideas of the Austrian School.

Other related economists

Critics

Seminal works

References

See also

External links Critical



Austrian School - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Austrian School, also known as the “ Vienna School ” or the “ Psychological School ”, is a school of economics that advocates adherence to strict methodological ...

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THE AUSTRIAN SCHOOL
Survey article in the History of Economic Thought website.

Ludwig von Mises Institute - Homepage
Articles, journals, e-books, study guides, working papers and internships from the Austrian school of economics.

Category:Austrian School - Wikimedia Commons
Media in category "Austrian School" The following 10 files are in this category, out of 10 total.

Austrian Economics, by Deborah L. Walker: The Concise Encyclopedia of ...
Austrian Economics, by Deborah L. Walker: The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics ... History The Austrian school of economics dates from the 1871 publication of Carl Menger's ...

the Austrian School And the Theory Of Value
The Austrian School and the Theory of Value. by Friedrich Wieser. The Economic Journal, volume 1 . I. The historical school of political economists in Germany, and the

Austrian School
Austrian School

Edward Elgar - The Austrian School
Academic independent international publisher specialising in economics, law, business and management and public policy.





 
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