A Rothbardian Reconstruction of Libertarian Political Theory

[This article is one of the winners of the annual Kenneth Garschina Undergraduate Student Essay Contest. In March 2026, in celebration of Murray Rothbard’s 100th birthday, students submitted essays on his iconic Austro-libertarian text, For a New Liberty: A Libertarian Manifesto. The top three contestants presented their essays at the Austrian Economics Research Conference.]

Rothbardian Property Rights in a Dangerous Digital World

[This article is one of the winners of the annual Kenneth Garschina Undergraduate Student Essay Contest. In March 2026, in celebration of Murray Rothbard’s 100th birthday, students submitted essays on his iconic Austro-libertarian text, For a New Liberty: A Libertarian Manifesto. The top three contestants presented their essays at the Austrian Economics Research Conference.]

Ex Nihilo No More

For centuries, Austrian economists diagnosed the root cause of business cycles with remarkable precision: credit expansion untethered from real savings. Mises demonstrated it, Hayek formalized it, and history confirmed it repeatedly. Yet, despite that theoretical clarity, one question remained unanswered in practice: Is a credit system structurally incapable of artificial expansion even possible? The emergence of collateralized lending protocols in decentralized finance suggests, for the first time, that the answer might be yes.