This paper provides a comprehensive examination of the ten fundamental principles of the Austrian School of Economics, drawing from the theoretical framework established by Carl Menger, Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, and their intellectual successors. The Austrian School represents a distinctive methodological and theoretical approach to understanding economic phenomena, emphasizing individual action, subjective value, market processes, and the impossibility of economic calculation under socialism. This study analyzes each principle in depth, exploring its theoretical foundations, practical implications, and relevance to contemporary economic policy debates. Through rigorous analysis of market economy versus collectivism, scarcity and value theory, entrepreneurship, capital structure, competition, monetary theory, and business cycle theory, this paper demonstrates the enduring significance of Austrian economic thought in understanding how decentralized market processes coordinate human action in complex societies. The analysis reveals that Austrian economics provides not merely a theoretical framework, but a comprehensive understanding of how voluntary exchange, private property, and price signals enable rational economic calculation and efficient resource allocation, while central planning inevitably fails due to the knowledge problem and the absence of genuine market prices.
Zen Revista (Tue,) studied this question.