Why Mises (and Not Hayek)?
by
Hans-Hermann Hoppe
Recently
by Hans-Hermann Hoppe: 'The
Yield From Money Held' Reconsidered
Let me begin
with a quote from an article that my old friend Ralph Raico wrote
some 15 years ago:
Ludwig von
Mises and F. A. Hayek are widely considered the most eminent classical
liberal thinkers of this century. They are also the two best known
Austrian economists. They were great scholars and great men. I
was lucky to have them both as my teachers.
Yet it is clear
that the world treats them very differently. Mises was denied
the Nobel Prize for economics, which Hayek won the year after
Mises's death. Hayek is occasionally anthologized and read in
college courses, when a spokesman for free enterprise absolutely
cannot be avoided; Mises is virtually unknown in American academia.
Even among organizations that support the free market in a general
way, it is Hayek who is honored and invoked, while Mises is ignored
or pushed into the background.
I want to speculate
and present a thesis why this is so and explain why
I and I take it most of us here take a very different
view. Why I (and presumably you) are Misesians and not Hayekians.
My thesis is
that Hayek's greater prominence has little if anything to do with
his economics. There is little difference in Mises's and Hayek's
economics. Indeed, most economic ideas associated with Hayek were
originated by Mises, and this fact alone would make Mises rank far
above Hayek as an economist. But most of today's professed Hayekians
are not trained economists. Few have actually read the books that
are responsible for Hayek's initial fame as an economist, i.e.,
his Monetary
Theory and the Trade Cycle and his Prices
and Production. And I venture the guess that there exist
no more than 10 people alive today who have studied, from cover
to cover, his Pure
Theory of Capital.
Rather, what
explains Hayek's greater prominence is Hayek's work, mostly in the
second half of his professional life, in the field of political
philosophy and here, in this field, the difference between
Hayek and Mises is striking indeed.
My thesis is
essentially the same one also advanced by my friend Ralph Raico:
Hayek is not a classical liberal at all, or a "Radikalliberaler"
as the NZZ, as usual clueless,
has just recently referred to him. Hayek is actually a moderate
social democrat, and since we live in the age of social democracy,
this makes him a "respectable" and "responsible"
scholar. Hayek, as you may recall, dedicated his Road
to Serfdom to "the socialists in all parties."
And the socialists in all parties now pay him back in using Hayek
to present themselves as "liberals."
Now to the
proof, and I rely for this mostly on the Constitution
of Liberty, and his three volume Law,
Legislation, and Liberty which are generally regarded as
Hayek's most important contributions to the field of political theory.
According to
Hayek, government is "necessary" to fulfill the following
tasks: not merely for "law enforcement" and "defense
against external enemies" but "in an advanced society
government ought to use its power of raising funds by taxation to
provide a number of services which for various reasons cannot be
provided, or cannot be provided adequately, by the market."
(Because at all times an infinite number of goods and services exist
that the market does not provide, Hayek hands government a blank
check.)
Among these
goods and services are
protection
against violence, epidemics, or such natural forces as floods
and avalanches, but also many of the amenities which make life
in modern cities tolerable, most roads
the provision of
standards of measure, and of many kinds of information ranging
from land registers, maps and statistics to the certification
of the quality of some goods or services offered in the market.
Additional
government functions include "the assurance of a certain minimum
income for everyone"; government should "distribute its
expenditure over time in such a manner that it will step in when
private investment flags"; it should finance schools and research
as well as enforce "building regulations, pure food laws, the
certification of certain professions, the restrictions on the sale
of certain dangerous goods (such as arms, explosives, poisons and
drugs), as well as some safety and health regulations for the processes
of production; and the provision of such public institutions as
theaters, sports grounds, etc."; and it should make use of
the power of "eminent domain" to enhance the "public
good."
Moreover, it
generally holds that "there is some reason to believe that
with the increase in general wealth and of the density of population,
the share of all needs that can be satisfied only by collective
action will continue to grow."
Further, government
should implement an extensive system of compulsory insurance ("coercion
intended to forestall greater coercion"), public, subsidized
housing is a possible government task, and likewise "city planning"
and "zoning" are considered appropriate government functions
provided that "the sum of the gains exceed the sum of
the losses." And lastly, "the provision of amenities of
or opportunities for recreation, or the preservation of natural
beauty or of historical sites or scientific interest
Natural
parks, nature-reservations, etc." are legitimate government
tasks.
In addition,
Hayek insists we recognize that it is irrelevant how big government
is or if and how fast it grows. What alone is important is that
government actions fulfill certain formal requirements. "It
is the character rather than the volume of government activity that
is important." Taxes as such and the absolute height of taxation
are not a problem for Hayek. Taxes and likewise compulsory
military service lose their character as coercive measures,
if they
are at least predictable and are enforced irrespective of how
the individual would otherwise employ his energies; this deprives
them largely of the evil nature of coercion. If the known necessity
of paying a certain amount of taxes becomes the basis of all my
plans, if a period of military service is a foreseeable part of
my career, then I can follow a general plan of life of my own
making and am as independent of the will of another person as
men have learned to be in society.
But please,
it must be a proportional tax and general military service!
I could go
on and on, citing Hayek's muddled and contradictory definitions
of freedom and coercion, but that shall suffice to make my point.
I am simply asking: what socialist and what green could have any
difficulties with all this? Following Hayek, they can all proudly
call themselves liberals.
In distinct
contrast, how refreshingly clear and very different
is Mises! For him, the definition of liberalism can be condensed
into a single term: private property. The state, for Mises,
is legalized force, and its only function is to defend life and
property by beating antisocial elements into submission. As for
the rest, government is "the employment of armed men, of policemen,
gendarmes, soldiers, prison guards, and hangmen. The essential feature
of government is the enforcement of its decrees by beating, killing,
and imprisonment. Those who are asking for more government interference
are asking ultimately for more compulsion and less freedom."
Moreover (and
this is for those who have not read much of Mises but invariably
pipe up, "but even Mises is not an anarchist"), certainly
the younger Mises allows for unlimited secession, down to the level
of the individual, if one comes to the conclusion that government
is not doing what it is supposed to do: to protect life and property.
And the older Mises never repudiated this position. Mises, then,
as my own intellectual master, Murray Rothbard, noted, is a laissez-faire
radical: an extremist.
Reprinted
from Mises.org.
October
13, 2011
Hans-Hermann
Hoppe [send him mail] is distinguished
fellow at the Ludwig von Mises Institute
and founder and president of the Property
and Freedom Society. His books include Democracy:
The God That Failed
and The
Myth of National Defense.
Visit his website.

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