Quote from sjfan:
While I don't necessarily disagree with the Austrian school, especially with some of its more fundamental premises, creating a supposedly "learned" economics forum around it seems ... well... counterproductive.
The biggest problem with the austrian school is that it's more philosophy than economics. One of its basic premise is that no modern methods for analysis apply and therefore nothing need to be tested/verified. It's all talk. As someone who has had formal graduate level training in economics, it's simply not productive to work in the austrian framework. If you want to talk about incentive mechanism failures, etc, there are plenty of mainstream theories that incorporates those elements without resorting to grandoise declarative axioms.