When the Architecture of Power Becomes Digital, the Question of Liberty Becomes Structural
The Youth Liberty Prize 2026 invites leading young minds globally to tackle to problem of digital interventionism through the lens of the Austrian School of Economics
Where The Global Youth Engage With The Future Of Economic Order
The 2026 Prize calls for original essays on “The Dynamics and Consequences of Digital Interventionism” - a structural shift in the mechanisms of state intervention as governance increasingly embeds itself within code, infrastructure, and digital systems.
Open to scholars worldwide under the age of 25, the Prize awards €170,000, including a first prize of €100,000 for outstanding scholarly work and original insights.
The three highest-ranked essays will be presented at the Madrid Annual Conference on Austrian Economics and published on the Liberty Prize website. Submissions are evaluated by a world renowned jury of experts according to originality, analytical depth, and clarity of argument.
Established by the Fundación Jesús Huerta de Soto Ballester
The Youth Liberty Prize 2026 stands within and is funded by the Fundación Jesús Huerta de Soto Ballester, a foundation devoted to the study of liberty and freedom under the framework of the Austrian School of Economics.
For decades, the Austrian tradition has advanced a distinctive approach to political economy: an emphasis on spontaneous order, dispersed knowledge, institutional evolution, and the limits of centralised design. The Foundation arises from this same spirit: a space dedicated to projecting academic work, supporting young researchers, and fostering initiatives that bring society closer to the values of a solid, humanistic economic culture, always oriented toward liberty.
Extending a Scholarly Tradition to a New Generation
The Youth Liberty Prize extends that work into a next generation. It recognises original scholarship that applies the analytical framework of the Austrian School to contemporary institutional questions. In doing so, it affirms that serious economic inquiry requires intellectual independence, methodological clarity, and sustained engagement with the structural conditions under which liberty endures.
The Competition
Serious Questions About Liberty Requires a Strong Foundation
Freedom and liberty are often tossed around in debates as political rallying cries, as personal ideals, or casual opinions. But without a firm grasp of the underlying principles that make a free society function, these conversations stay surface-level and open to distortion. This competition is built on the belief that defending liberty demands more: a deep dive into its theoretical backbone, institutional pillars, and logical coherence. It's about understanding why free societies consistently outperform centrally planned ones, drawing on historical lessons to avoid repeating cycles of coercion that exact real human tolls: economic stagnation, eroded rights, and widespread suffering.
A Prize for Young Scholars Committed to Institutional Clarity
If you're under 25 and drawn to these ideas, this is your arena to explore why liberty isn't mere absence of control but a sophisticated order of institutions that emerge organically: private property, voluntary exchange, prices as signals, sound money, and the rule of law. These aren't abstract inventions; they arise from human action in a world of incomplete knowledge, uncertainty, and diverse goals. To speak responsibly about liberty, therefore, requires engaging with the theory that explains why these institutions work, how they come into being, and what happens when they are undermined.
The Austrian School of economics has made foundational contributions to this understanding, rooted in individual choices and values. It highlights private property's role in enabling economic calculations, the limits of centralised planning, and how interventions, however well-intentioned, generate unintended consequences, from distorted markets to reduced freedom and to stifled innovation and entrepreneurship. Think of it as a toolkit for analysing real-world issues without relying on oversimplified models or top-down illusions.
An Invitation to Rigorous Independent Thought
This annual prize isn't for superficial takes or advocacy; it's an invitation for young scholars like you to rigorously apply these principles to contemporary challenges, such as the 2026 theme on digital interventionism. We value intellectual independence, analytical sharpness, and a commitment to reasoned arguments.
The Theme
The Dynamics and Consequences of Digital Interventionism
The 2026 Challenge
A new form of state intervention is emerging, one that operates not through prohibitions or prescriptions, but through systems designed to shape choices before they are made. Central bank digital currencies that can be programmed to restrict spending. Digital identity frameworks that gate access to services. Algorithmic content moderation that removes speech without a hearing. Social credit systems that condition participation in economic life on compliance scores. Unlike traditional regulation, which punishes and deters, digital interventionism embeds control into infrastructure itself, often invisibly, automatically, and at scale.
A Structural Transformation in the Nature of Intervention
This marks a structural shift. When the government prints money recklessly, some distortions will eventually become visible, for example, in rising prices. When it censors a newspaper, the act is identifiable. But when compliance is coded into the architecture of payments, communication, and identity, intervention becomes the default and freedom becomes the exception that must be explicitly granted. In such cases, infrastructure designed to enable social interaction becomes a means of political control.
The dynamics are self-reinforcing. Digital interventionism tends to generate interventionist spirals. Initial regulations alter incentives and behaviour, producing new distortions that are then used to justify further controls. AI governance frameworks, ostensibly designed to ensure safety, risk centralising decisions that obstruct the entrepreneurial process of creating, discovering, and applying new knowledge.
The Austrian Analytical Framework
The Austrian School of Economics offers a uniquely powerful lens for this analysis. Its emphasis on dispersed knowledge, subjective value, and the impossibility of rational central planning illuminates precisely what digital interventionism threatens: the capacity of individuals to coordinate through voluntary exchange, price signals, and private property. Where designed systems presume that regulators can acquire the knowledge needed to coordinate and optimise outcomes, the Austrian tradition shows why this is impossible—and why attempts to do so generate consequences far beyond intention or foresight.
The Youth Liberty Prize 2026 invites sustained analysis of these developments through the analytical framework of the Austrian School of Economics. Its emphasis on dispersed knowledge, spontaneous order, and the limits of centralised design provides a rigorous basis for examining the economic and institutional consequences of digital governance.
This year's prize invites entrants to bring these principles to bear on any dimension of digital interventionism: freedom of expression and its suppression, programmable money and financial autonomy, digital identity and anonymity, AI regulation and the control of knowledge, or the broader institutional consequences of embedding political authority into code.
Submissions may address, among other areas:
Central Bank Digital Currencies and Monetary Discretion
Digital identity systems and access to economic participation
Regulation of artificial intelligence
Content moderation and freedom of expression
The institutional implications of embedding political authority within code
The topic is inherently multidisciplinary, intersecting economics, law, political philosophy, computer science, and history. We encourage entrants to draw on these fields while grounding their analysis in the economic and institutional logic of liberty.
Awards & Recognition
2026 Prize Fund: €170,000
The Youth Liberty Prize 2026 recognises exceptional scholarship in political economy with an award of €170,000. The scale of the Prize reflects the seriousness of its purpose: to honour work that demonstrates intellectual originality, analytical depth, and sustained engagement with the institutional foundations of liberty.
Awards are granted outright and unconditionally. They do not constitute prior or subsequent funding of the awarded work, nor do they impose future obligations. The three highest-ranked authors are invited to present their essays at the Madrid Annual Conference on Austrian Economics at Rey Juan Carlos University on October 21st-23rd 2026. Travel expenses to Madrid are reimbursed upon submission of supporting documentation. The top ten essays are also published on the Liberty Prize website.
1st
€100,000
Presentation at the Madrid Annual Conference; publication on the Liberty Prize website; travel reimbursement
2nd
€25,000
Presentation at the Madrid Annual Conference; publication on the Liberty Prize website; travel reimbursement
3rd
€10,000
Presentation at the Madrid Annual Conference; publication on the Liberty Prize website; travel reimbursement
4-10
€5,000 (€35,000 total)
Formal recognition and essay published on the Liberty Prize website
11-50
Website Mention
Special mention on the Liberty Prize website
The Jury
Assessment by an International Panel of Scholars and Experts
The Youth Liberty Prize 2026 is evaluated by a panel of renowned international scholars and experts. The jury brings together academic experience in economic theory, institutional analysis, and the study of spontaneous order. Their role is not to reward opinion, but to assess disciplined argument.
Each submission is examined according to defined scholarly criteria: originality, depth of Austrian analysis, clarity of reasoning, and relevance to the annual theme. Evaluation reflects the standards of serious academic inquiry. The jury’s decisions are final.
Prof. Jesús Huerta de Soto
World-leading figure of the Austrian School of Economics, known for his defence of the ideas of liberty and anarcho-capitalism
Prof. Jesús Huerta de Soto
<p>Jesús Huerta de Soto Ballester is one of the world's foremost contemporary representatives of the Austrian School of Economics and anarcho-capitalist thought. He is Professor of Political Economy at Rey Juan Carlos University in Madrid, where his teaching and research center on dynamic efficiency, entrepreneurship, capital and monetary theory, business cycles, and the impossibility of socialist calculation under statism.</p> <p>His major works include:</p> <ul> <li>Money, Bank Credit, and Economic Cycles (4th ed., Ludwig von Mises Institute, 2020)</li> <li>Socialism, Economic Calculation and Entrepreneurship (Edward Elgar, 2010)</li> <li>The Theory of Dynamic Efficiency (Routledge, 2009)</li> <li>The Austrian School: Market Order and Entrepreneurial Creativity (Edward Elgar, 2008)</li> <li>Statism and the Economy: The Deadliest Virus (Routledge, 2024)</li> <li>Lectures on Austrian Economics, Vols. I & II (Palgrave Macmillan, 2024)</li> </ul> <p>His books and articles have been translated into 21 languages. He has played a pivotal role in advancing Austrian economics globally, founding the journal Procesos de Mercado, establishing the only full EU-valid Master's and Doctoral programs in Austrian Economics, and creating the Fundación Jesús Huerta de Soto Ballester to support international research in Austrian theory and anarcho-capitalism. Among his many intellectual disciples is Argentine President Javier Milei. </p> <p>Awards and honors include the Rey Juan Carlos International Prize in Economics (1983, presented by H.M. the King of Spain), the Orden de Mayo al Mérito (Argentina, 2025), Adam Smith Award (Brussels, 2005), Franz Cuhel Memorial Prize (Prague, 2006), Gary G. Schlarbaum Prize for Liberty (2009), multiple honorary doctorates (including Universidad Francisco Marroquín 2009, Alexandru Ioan Cuza 2010, Financial University Moscow 2011, ESEADE Buenos Aires 2025, Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos Lima 2026), Hayek-Medaille (2013), Juan de Mariana Award (2016), Escuela de Salamanca Award (2018), and Faro de la Libertad Award (2025). </p> <p>As jury chair, Huerta de Soto brings unparalleled authority on monetary intervention, spontaneous order, and the institutional dangers of statism, perfectly aligned with analyzing digital interventionism's consequences.</p>
Prof. Philipp Bagus
Leading Austrian economist, Milei biographer and co-founder of the Milei Institute
Prof. Philipp Bagus
<p>Philipp Bagus is Professor of Economics at the Universidad Rey Juan Carlos in Madrid. His research focuses primarily on monetary theory and Austrian Business Cycle Theory, as well as the political economy of money, financial crises, and state intervention. He has published in leading international journals including the Journal of Business Ethics, The Independent Review, the American Journal of Economics and Sociology, and the Business Ethics, the Environment & Responsibility.</p> <p>His scholarly work has been recognized with numerous awards, among them the O.P. Alford III Prize in Libertarian Scholarship, the Sir John M. Templeton Fellowship, the IREF Essay Prize, and the Ludwig-Erhard-Förderpreis für Wirtschaftspublizistik. He also received the Ron Paul Liberty in Media Award. Bagus is the author of several widely translated books. His work The Tragedy of the Euro has appeared in fourteen languages and has become a standard reference in debates on European monetary integration. Together with David Howden, he co-authored Deep Freeze: Iceland’s Economic Collapse, an analysis of the Icelandic financial crisis. In collaboration with Andreas Marquart, he published Warum andere auf ihre Kosten immer reicher werden … und welche Rolle der Staat und unser Papiergeld dabei spielen and Wir schaffen das – alleine. In September 2024, his book Die Ära Milei was released, examining the ideas of Argentina’s president Javier Milei.</p> <p>Beyond monetary economics, Bagus has engaged extensively with questions of culture, public discourse, and state influence on opinion formation. His research includes work on cancel culture and institutional pressures on free expression. He has served as an expert witness to the German Bundestag on the digital euro, contributing to the debate on central bank digital currencies and monetary sovereignty.</p> <p>Bagus is a member of the Mont Pelerin Society, the Hayek-Gesellschaft, and the Property and Freedom Society. He serves on the Scientific Advisory Board of the Ludwig von Mises Institut Deutschland and the Liberales Institut (Switzerland), is Senior Fellow of the Ludwig von Mises Institute (USA), and is an academic member of the Instituto de Estudios Históricos Bances y Valdés. He joins the jury with deep expertise in monetary economics, the theory of economic coordination under decentralized decision-making, and the institutional foundations of free societies.</p>
Joana Cotar
German politician, co-founder of the Milei Institute Germany and the "Bitcoin in the Bundestag" initiative
Joana Cotar
<p>Joana Cotar is a former Member of the German Bundestag, entrepreneur and bestselling author whose work sits at the intersection of technology, monetary reform and civil liberties. Over eight years in the federal parliament, she operated at the center of legislative decision-making in Europe’s largest economy, gaining firsthand insight into the mechanics of political power and regulatory expansion. </p> <p>In parliament, Cotar became a leading voice for digital innovation and monetary sovereignty. She founded the initiative “Bitcoin im Bundestag”, bringing the debate on decentralized currencies and open monetary networks directly into the German legislature. At a time when central bank digital currencies and expansive financial regulation were gaining momentum, she argued for technological neutrality, competition in currencies, and financial self-determination. </p> <p>Following her parliamentary career, Cotar co-founded the Milei Institute for Deregulation in Europe, a think tank dedicated to reducing bureaucratic barriers, strengthening property rights, and advancing pro-market reform across the continent. </p> <p>Cotar is the founder and managing director of 21 Atlas GmbH, a strategic advisory firm, and a member of the Hayek Society. </p> <p>As a bestselling author of "Inside Bundestag", she provides a rare insider account of parliamentary life and the erosion of trust in democratic institutions. The book combines personal experience with institutional analysis, examining how centralized power and political incentives shape outcomes often detached from public rhetoric. Cotar is an outspoken advocate for freedom of speech, digital rights, and individual autonomy, she regularly speaks on issues ranging from civil liberties and digital identity systems to monetary competition and the expanding reach of state power. </p> <p>She joins the jury with deep legislative experience, entrepreneurial perspective, and a principled commitment to open systems, decentralized technologies, and the preservation of individual liberty in Europe’s evolving digital landscape.<br><span></span></p> <p><span></span></p>
Sir Prof. Niall Ferguson
World-renowned historian, economist, editor, columnist and best-selling author
Sir Prof. Niall Ferguson
<p>Niall Ferguson is a British historian, author, and senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. He is also a senior faculty member at Harvard University and has previously taught at Oxford and the London School of Economics.</p> <p>Ferguson is widely regarded as one of the leading historians of modern economic and financial history. His influential books include Empire, The Ascent of Money, and Civilization, in which he explores the forces that have shaped global power, finance, and institutions over the past five centuries.</p> <p>His work bridges academia and public discourse, examining the intersection of economics, geopolitics, and civilisational development. Through his scholarship and commentary, he has shaped contemporary debates on globalisation, institutional resilience, and the long-term trajectory of the West.</p> <p>He joins the jury with deep expertise in financial history, global power dynamics, and the institutional foundations that shape prosperity and decline.</p> <p><br><span></span></p> <p><span></span></p>
Prof. Tom Ginsburg
World-leading scholar of constitutional law, and founder of the Chicago Forum for Free Inquiry and Expression
Prof. Tom Ginsburg
<p>Tom Ginsburg is an American legal scholar and the Leo Spitz Distinguished Service Professor of International Law at the University of Chicago Law School. A leading expert in comparative constitutional law, his research examines how constitutions are designed, how they function in practice, and how they evolve.</p> <p>Ginsburg’s work spans constitutional design, judicial independence, authoritarianism, and the global rule of law. He has authored and edited numerous influential books and articles, exploring the resilience and decline of democratic institutions across different political systems.</p> <p>His scholarship is widely cited in academic, legal, and policy circles, and he has advised governments and international organisations on constitutional reform and institutional development.</p> <p>He brings to the jury deep expertise in constitutional governance, democratic stability, and the institutional frameworks that shape political and economic freedom worldwide.</p> <p><span></span></p>
Prof. David Howden
Leading Austrian Economist focused on business cycles, banking reform, and free-market alternatives
Prof. David Howden
<p><span></span><span></span><span>David Howden is a British economist and professor of economics, known for his work in monetary theory, banking, and financial crises. His research focuses on the structure of financial systems, central banking, and the causes and consequences of economic instability.</span></p> <p><span>Howden has written extensively on monetary policy, capital theory, and the institutional drivers of boom-and-bust cycles. His scholarship combines rigorous theoretical analysis with close attention to real-world financial developments, particularly in the aftermath of global banking crises.</span></p> <p><span>In addition to his academic contributions, he is an active public commentator on monetary reform and financial regulation, contributing to international debates on the future of banking and the role of central banks.</span><br><span></span><br><span>He joins the jury with strong expertise in financial systems, monetary economics, and the institutional conditions necessary for long-term economic resilience.</span><br><span></span></p>
Prof. Miguel Ángel Alonso Neira
Leading influential and well-published Austrian Economist
Prof. Miguel Ángel Alonso Neira
<p>Miguel Ángel Alonso Neira is a Spanish economist and professor of economics at Universidad Rey Juan Carlos in Madrid. His academic work focuses on macroeconomics, monetary theory, economic growth, and the institutional conditions that shape long-term prosperity.</p> <p>A scholar associated with the Austrian School tradition, Neira has contributed to research on business cycles, fiscal policy, and the structural drivers of economic stability. His work combines rigorous economic analysis with a broader interest in the philosophical and institutional foundations of market economies.</p> <p>Beyond his research, he is actively involved in postgraduate teaching and international academic programmes, helping to advance the study of monetary economics and classical liberal thought in Europe and Latin America.</p> <p>He joins the jury with strong expertise in macroeconomic analysis, institutional economics, and the theoretical underpinnings of sustainable growth and financial stability.</p> <p><span></span></p>
Alexander Tamas
International investor and entrepreneur linking libertarian thought with the global technology sector
Alexander Tamas
<p><span></span>Alexander Tamas is a technology investor and philanthropist whose career has focused on high-impact investments in transformative companies that redefine industries and challenge centralised systems. As co-founder of Vy Capital, the firm has led investments in pioneering firms including SpaceX, xAI, Neuralink, Cerebras, Reddit, Zomato, The Boring Company, Neros, and other ventures that embody entrepreneurial discovery and innovation. </p> <p>Prior to Vy, Tamas was a founding partner at DST Global, where he sourced and led landmark investments in global platforms such as Facebook (now Meta), Airbnb, Spotify, Twitter (now X), JD.com, Alibaba, Xiaomi, and Zalando. Earlier, he honed his expertise in technology investment banking at Goldman Sachs in London. </p> <p>Beyond investing, Tamas has co-founded the data science company Synaptic and the longevity firm Biograph, and has spearheaded philanthropic initiatives in academia, the arts, and science. These include the Alexander Tamas Fellowship at Oxford's Future of Humanity Institute, a neuroscience research institute at Imperial College London, "The Institute" in San Francisco, and ongoing support for the Fundación Jesús Huerta de Soto Ballester in Madrid. He has actively shaped high-level discussions on AI development, regulatory frameworks, and global standards, bridging policy, academic, and philanthropic spheres to advocate for innovation that preserves individual freedom. </p> <p>Tamas joins the jury with unparalleled expertise in free speech, drawn from his investments in the world's most influential digital platforms, and a profound grasp of AI's economic and societal impacts.</p>
Eligibility & Requirements
Participation in the Youth Liberty Prize 2026 is subject to the following criteria.
Eligibility
Applicants must be under 25 years of age as of 1 November 2026
This competition is open to applicants of all nationalities
Essays must be written in English
Entrants under 18 years of age must submit a signed Parental or Guardian Consent Form alongside their entry
Essay Requirements
Essays should be between 2,000 and 3,000 words words
Submitted in PDF format
Original, unpublished work
No use of artificial intelligence tools (subject to verification)
Applicants must upload identification, a brief CV (maximum 150 words), and the required declarations at the point of submission.
Full details are set out in the Competition Rules and the Parental or Guardian Consent Form (available for download below).
Timeline
Registration Opens
09.03.26
Submissions Open
31.03.26
Submissions Close
30.06.26
Winners Announced
15.09.26
Awards Ceremony
24.10.26
The deadline for submitting applications will be 8:00 p.m. on June 30, 2026, CET. Essays may be submitted only during the official submission period. Applications received outside this window will not be considered.
Register Your Interest
Register to Participate in the 2026 Competition
Preparing to Submit Your Work
Registration allows prospective applicants to remain informed about the 2026 Prize and the formal submission process. Those who register will receive updates relating to key dates, guidance on eligibility, and reminders as the June submission deadline approaches.
Registration does not constitute submission. Essays must be submitted before 8:00 p.m. CET on the 30 June 2026, through the designated online portal and in accordance with the Competition Rules
Applicants are encouraged to begin developing their work in advance and to review all requirements carefully before the submission window opens.