I'm an undergraduate student in accounting, but I love economics (especially monetary economics). I'm a classical-liberal oriented guy, which means that I favor free markets and competition as well as minimal but efficient and rational government interventions; that means: low current expenditure/GDP, low tax rates, pretty high and efficient investment spending to improve productivity and keep the economy growing, free competition in markets on the fiscal/structural side. On the monetary matters, I'm a follower of Bohm Bawerk's and Knut Wicksell "natural rate of interest" theory, meaning that my focus is both on time preference and on capital marginal productivity. In short, I'd define myself as a "neoclassical" guy.