While Austrian and feminist critiques of neoclassical economics have some similarities, they also differ strongly on important points. Feminist critiques are based upon what Mises called polylogism, while Austrian critiques are based upon praxeology.
Arkadiusz Sieroń
Arkadiusz Sieroń is an assistant professor in the Faculty of Law, Administration, and Economics at the University of Wroclaw and a member of the Supervisory Board of the Ludwig von Mises Institute Poland. He holds a PhD and habilitation in economics. He is a recipient of the Lawrence W. Fertig Prize in Austrian Economics (2018). He is the author of Money, Inflation and Business Cycles: The Cantillon Effect and the Economy, Monetary Policy after the Great Recession: The Role of Interest Rates, and Rationality, Psychology and Capitalism: Defending Economic Theory From Behavioral Imperialism. His research has also appeared in the Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics and various other scholarly journals. His main areas of expertise include monetary economics, the theory of inflation, interest rates, the business cycle, and the role of rationality in economics.