Friedrich Hayek: Difference between revisions
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'''Friedrich August von Hayek''' (b. 1899, d. 1992), was an [[Austrian School]] economist and political philosopher who argued for free-market capitalism. He and [[Gunnar Myrdal]] won the 1974 [[Nobel Prize in Economics]]]. He is often seen as one of the architects of [[neoliberalism]]. Hayek organised the [[Mont Pelerin Society]] and founded the [[Institute for Economic Affairs]]. The work for which he is most well-known is [[The Road to Serfdom]] (1944), a book in which he argued a society that employs economic planning inevitably becomes authoritarian. His other writings include [[The Constitution of Liberty]] (1960) and [[Law, Legislation and Liberty]] (1973-1979). | '''Friedrich August von Hayek''' (b. 1899, d. 1992), was an [[Austrian School]] economist and political philosopher who argued for free-market capitalism. He and [[Gunnar Myrdal]] won the 1974 [[Nobel Prize in Economics]]]. He is often seen as one of the architects of [[neoliberalism]]. Hayek organised the [[Mont Pelerin Society]] and founded the [[Institute for Economic Affairs]]. The work for which he is most well-known is [[The Road to Serfdom]] (1944), a book in which he argued a society that employs economic planning inevitably becomes authoritarian. His other writings include [[The Constitution of Liberty]] (1960) and [[Law, Legislation and Liberty]] (1973-1979).[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]] |
Latest revision as of 06:01, 19 August 2024
Friedrich August von Hayek (b. 1899, d. 1992), was an Austrian School economist and political philosopher who argued for free-market capitalism. He and Gunnar Myrdal won the 1974 Nobel Prize in Economics]. He is often seen as one of the architects of neoliberalism. Hayek organised the Mont Pelerin Society and founded the Institute for Economic Affairs. The work for which he is most well-known is The Road to Serfdom (1944), a book in which he argued a society that employs economic planning inevitably becomes authoritarian. His other writings include The Constitution of Liberty (1960) and Law, Legislation and Liberty (1973-1979).