Germany launched the "Javier Milei Institute," an initiative aimed at studying, adapting, and promoting policies of deregulation inspired by the Argentine experience under the Milei Government.
The project was led by German lawyer Carlos Gebauer and aspires to establish, within the continent, an agenda that reduces state intervention in key areas of public life.
Although it bears the name of the Argentine president, the organization will operate as an independent think tank, without party affiliation and with the participation of European experts in law, economics, and public policy. Its focus will be strictly continental: among its main areas of work are economic deregulation, institutional reform, and reduction of bureaucracy.

The institute's leadership brings together prominent figures of European liberalism, which anticipates an academic and political profile with strong international visibility. Among its leading members are Frauke Petry, former leader of the German party Alternative for Germany (AfD); Philipp Bagus, economist and author of a biography on Milei; Joana Cot, former member of the German national-conservative party; Bárbara Kolm, president of the Hayek Institute in Vienna; and Stefan Kooths, head of the Hayek Society and vice president of the Kiel Institute.









