Kraków School of Economics, also known as the Kraków School or KSE was a school of economic thought centred around the Jagiellonian University and most prominent in interwar Poland. The school was critical of economic interventionism and statism prominent during the sanation and instead favoured free markets and free trade.
Some of the school's members, such as Adam Heydel and Roman Rybarski were tied to the national democratic movement.[1] [2]
The school had connections to the Austrian School, with the member Adam Heydel adopting a similar methodology.