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Home Market Research Economy

The Austrian Fix for the Manufactured Iranian Energy Crisis

by TheAdviserMagazine
1 day ago
in Economy
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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The Austrian Fix for the Manufactured Iranian Energy Crisis
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The ongoing destruction of the world’s largest natural-gas reservoir at South Pars and Qatar has produced exactly what Austrian economics predicts: sudden, irreplaceable capital destruction followed by a violent supply shock. Oil has spiked, European gas prices have jumped, and the Strait of Hormuz is now a flashpoint. Everyday Americans already face higher gasoline, heating, trucking, and grocery costs; businesses confront malinvestment cascades; and central planners are salivating over the opportunity to impose rationing, digital IDs, CBDCs, and “energy lockdowns.” This is not mere geopolitics; it is state warfare smashing the capital structure and then using the resulting artificial scarcity to expand control.

From a strict libertarian and Austrian standpoint, two interlocking ideas cut through the chaos and point to the only workable solution today: immediate, total disentanglement from the conflict, and uncompromising reliance on free-market prices, sound money, and voluntary exchange instead of any form of central planning.

No vital American interest is served by remaining the “senior partner” in Israel’s self-destructive war. Iran is not a threat to American soil. Yet US credibility, taxpayer dollars, and naval assets are on their hook for strikes that have turned the Gulf into an economic catastrophe. The correct response, applied today, is surgical and immediate. Cut all military aid and security guarantees to Israel. Withdraw forward bases and carrier groups that serve only as tripwires. Declare neutrality: no blank-check support, no “off-ramps” that keep Washington entangled, no further involvement.

This is not isolationism; it is true America First foreign policy. By removing the moral hazard of US backing, Israel loses the incentive to escalate knowing Washington will not ride to the rescue. Markets and private voluntary alliances (insurance markets, diversified supply contracts, merchant shipping rerouting) can then handle energy security far more efficiently than any Washington bureaucracy. The capital that survives is freed from political risk premiums; entrepreneurs can redirect it toward American drilling, LNG export terminals, and efficiency gains without the overhang of empire. Without disentanglement, every additional day of entanglement deepens the capital destruction and the debt required to finance it. With disentanglement, the US economy decouples from the blast radius overnight.

Austrian praxeology—beginning from Mises’s axiom that “man acts”—reveals the second layer of the trap: the very scarcity created by bombed infrastructure is being deliberately leveraged to shift every actor’s time preference and incentive structure toward central control. Governments and global institutions face overwhelming incentives to impose fuel rationing, work-from-home mandates, 15-minute cities, programmable CBDCs, and consumption caps which are “Covid 2.0 energy lockdowns.” Each new intervention creates worse shortages, justifying yet more planning, the classic interventionist spiral that ends in serfdom. The libertarian and Austrian antidote, implemented today, is the only hope. No price controls, no ration cards, no digital IDs tied to energy use. No emergency spending or Fed monetization of war deficits. Let the price signal scream the truth: energy is suddenly scarcer. That single incentive structure unobstructed by bureaucrats coordinates millions of entrepreneurs and consumers far better than any central plan ever could.

Higher prices do four things simultaneously. They incentivize immediate supply responses—US shale rigs restart, Canadian pipelines expand, nuclear permitting accelerates, private capital flows to efficiency and alternatives. They force demand-side economizing, households and firms cut waste, innovate, and substitute without coercion. They prevent malinvestment cascades by giving accurate knowledge (Hayek’s “knowledge problem”) instead of distorted bureaucratic edicts. They destroy the political pretext for centralized controls. When markets clear the shortage through voluntary action, there is no “emergency” left for elites to exploit. Sound money is the final linchpin. A return to commodity-backed or at least non-inflationary monetary policy prevents the Fed from papering over the supply shock with more fiat, which would only turn a painful but temporary correction into permanent stagflation.

Apply both measures right now and the timeline changes dramatically. Capital destruction cannot be undone overnight, but the remaining capital stock is reallocated by market prices instead of destroyed further by war or paralyzed by controls. American living standards stop falling as fast; trucking and manufacturing avoid mass bankruptcies; the Fed avoids the impossible choice between hyperinflation and deep recession. Most importantly, the trap is broken: ordinary people no longer face artificially-heightened uneasiness that makes them trade liberty for “security.” Without engineered scarcity and without US entanglement fueling it, the incentive structure flips back toward production, innovation, and voluntary exchange.

Rothbard was right: war is the health of the state. The only cure is to starve the state of both the foreign entanglements that create crises and the domestic planning tools that exploit them. Peace through independence, not empire. Sound money and free prices, not fiat and edicts. These are not utopian slogans, they are the necessities that restore economic calculation and human action to their proper domain.

The window is still open. Leave Iran today, let the markets calculate tomorrow, and the crisis that the elites hoped would be delivered becomes instead the proof that liberty and private property are the only forces capable of rebuilding what statists have destroyed.



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