| It really doesn't take much at all to see that the Austrian School is right and others are wrong. For starters, if you understand that value is subjective, you'll also understand that there's no way to put a number on how much you want something, or precisely how much you'd be willing to pay for it, etc. You'll also understand that you can't base calculations on something you can't actually quantify, and have no way of accurately measuring.. So yeah, you'll understand that most of what you've been taught is just garbage-in-garbage-out. As for monetary policy, it's essentially just "a plan for forcefully intervening in an economy", and it doesn't actually happen for the greater good - it's done to benefit the government and their buddies. As a prime example, who gets access to newly printed thin-air-money at zero interest? Do you want him to buy real assets with "free money", and have you suffer the consequences (of the resulting decrease in your currency's purchasing power)? |
Counter-example: I do it all the time. Ever heard of "revealed preference"? Sure there are weird human things like preferring A to B, B to C, and C to A, but I'm OK with a map not being the territory.
> a plan for forcefully intervening in an economy
All government choices are forceful interventions, whether a choice to act or not act.