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An Austrian School View on Eucken’s Ordoliberalism. Analyzing the Roots and Concept of German Ordoliberalism from the Perspective of Austrian School Economics

Authors

  • Patrick Reimers Universidad Rey Juan Carlos

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52195/pm.v17i1.4

Keywords:

democracy, Private Property Order, Hoppe, Hayek, Wilhelm Röpke, Walter Eucken, Franz Böhm, Müller-Armack, Ludwig Erhard, Ordoliberalism, Ordo, Mont Pèlerin Society, human rights, liberalism, libertarianism, Austrian school of economics, anarcho-capitalism

Abstract

This paper explains the origins and the theoretical concept of Ordo-liberalism, focusing in particular on one of its founders, Walter Eucken. We will focus on the political and economic concepts of Ordoliberalism in regards to interventionism, competition, monopolies, democracy and property rights. For a better understanding, we will compare its main positions and rationale with both, the concept of a social market economy, as well as with the theoretical background of the Austrian School of economics. We pretend to define how much State is necessary to assure a long-term maximization of human rights and individual liberty, while also evaluating at what stage a State becomes too big, potentially turning into a totalitarian autocracy.

Author Biography

  • Patrick Reimers, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos

    Patrick Reimers, MBA and Master in Austrian School Economics. Patrick is also holding an M.A. in Philosophy (Maestría en Filosofía) from Universidad Francisco Marroquín (UFM) and is currently a Ph.D. student at Universidad Rey Juan Carlos (Doctorado en Ciencias Sociales y Jurídicas).

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2020-02-22 — Updated on 2020-02-22

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An Austrian School View on Eucken’s Ordoliberalism. Analyzing the Roots and Concept of German Ordoliberalism from the Perspective of Austrian School Economics. (2020). REVISTA PROCESOS DE MERCADO, 17(1), 13-53. https://doi.org/10.52195/pm.v17i1.4