Anatomy
of the Austrian Movement
by
Peter G. Klein
Recently
by Peter G. Klein: There
Is Life After Default
I met my first
Austrians, and first libertarians, at Stanford University in the
summer of 1988, at the Mises Institute's Advanced Instructional
Program in Austrian Economics, which evolved into the annual Mises
University. There were about 40 students, mostly PhD students in
economics, with four instructors: Murray Rothbard, Hans Hoppe, Roger
Garrison, and David Gordon. Lew Rockwell, Pat Barnett, and Jeff
Tucker were there too.
What a week!
I had never experienced anything like it. I had read some Mises
and Rothbard as an undergraduate economics major, presumably comprehending
very little, and had spoken by phone to Murray Rothbard, Israel
Kirzner, and Mario Rizzo while considering graduate programs. But
I had never really talked to anyone about Austrian economics, about
free markets, about liberty and justice. Now here I was, surrounded
by experts and fellow learners, listening, discussing, laughing,
and arguing late into the night. The participants were smart, passionate
about ideas, and eager to soak up more even the speakers,
whom I assumed knew everything already. (I remember sitting behind
Rothbard at one of the other speakers' lectures and watching in
amazement as he took page after page of notes in his distinctively
unreadable scrawl.)
Until that
conference, Austrian ideas had existed for me only in the university
library (remember, there was no Internet in those days, when dinosaurs
roamed the earth). Thanks to the Mises Institute, the Austrian School
became to me a living, breathing entity a social movement
rather than a footnote in modern intellectual history. I felt a
bit like Luke Skywalker, experiencing the Force for the first time
during his light-saber training on the Millennium Falcon, when told
by Obi-Wan Kenobi, "That's good. You have taken your first step
into a larger world."
I went on to
earn a PhD in economics and have been a university professor for
the past 15 years. I enjoy university life, though I don't smoke
a pipe and own but a single tweed jacket. (Of course, I still have
the lifetime supply of elbow patches I received upon earning tenure.)
I have published many articles in academic journals, participate
in the usual professional meetings and societies, and have even
won a few research awards. I have taught hundreds of undergraduate
students and have had the pleasure of supervising several PhD dissertations.
I am privileged to preside over a small Mises Kreis at
the University of Missouri, with our own PhD seminar, an informal
reading group, and more. But the highlight of every year since 1988,
for me, is a Mises event, sometimes several. I've attended the summer
conference now rechristened Mises University every
year since 1988, along with dozens of other special conferences,
seminars, and events, including the Rothbard Graduate Seminar the
last several summers, occasional Mises Circle events, special conferences
on Marx, Keynes, central banking, egalitarianism, secession, and
more, and the annual Supporters' Summits in the fall. Two years
ago the fall conference was in Salamanca, Spain, the birthplace
of economic theory. To meet this year in Vienna, home of the Austrian
School from its birth in 1871 until the 1930s, is particularly special.
The Mises Institute
has been important for me personally, as well as professionally:
I met my future wife at a Mises Institute conference, a 1992 meeting
in Jekyll Island, Georgia, on the origins of the Federal Reserve
System. Ron Paul was a featured speaker at that conference, and
initially she showed more interest in Ron Paul than in me. Eventually,
my strong anti-Fed views must have won her over.
By the time
I entered the movement, the "Austrian revival" that started in 1974
with the South Royalton Conference and Hayek's Nobel Prize was some
two decades underway, and the Austrian School was in the middle
of a remarkable rebirth.[1]
From its modest beginnings, in a German-speaking world dominated
by the antitheory, antimarket German Historical School, the Austrian
School had grown into a major intellectual force, becoming until
the late 19th and early 20th centuries one of the leading economic
schools of thought in Europe and the United States, only to fall
into decline in the 1930s and 1940s. This story has been told expertly
by others, most recently by Guido Hulsmann in his brilliant
intellectual biography of Mises, and there is no need to repeat
it here.[2] The
point is that while the school continued to grow, intellectually,
and to produce some of its greatest accomplishments later in the
20th century Ludwig von Mises's Human
Action and Rothbard's Man,
Economy, and State, of course, along with other great works
by Ludwig von Mises, Murray N. Rothbard, F.A. Hayek, Ludwig Lachmann,
and Israel Kirzner there wasn't an Austrian movement
during this time.
The 1970s and
1980s brought an Austrian revival, however, led by Rothbard and
Kirzner and coalescing into the modern Austrian movement. Central
to the revival was not just ideas, but institutions
funding, organization, events, outreach, and other activities central
to movement building. Lew Rockwell's establishment of the Mises
Institute in 1982 was critical in this regard. First, and perhaps
most important, the Mises Institute gave Rothbard an institutional
home an outlet for his writings, a platform for his lectures,
a center for the intellectual camaraderie that is essential to this
kind of movement, a camaraderie that I experienced firsthand at
that Stanford conference in 1988, and have continued to experience
in the years since. During my graduate-student days in the late
1980s and early 1990s, the Mises Institute's administrative offices
were in Burlingame, California, a short drive from my home in Berkeley,
and I spent one day per week in the office as a student intern,
as well as being a Mises fellow, generously supported by the institute.
My graduate program at Berkeley was not exactly a hotbed of Austrian
or libertarian sentiment, and the weekly visits to Burlingame did
a lot to preserve my sanity.
Second, Rockwell
and Rothbard poured their energies into outreach, not only to fellow
intellectuals, but also to students, businesspeople, journalists,
and the lay public. (Policy makers were welcome to listen too, but
were not the primary targets of the outreach effort.) The result
is the modern-day Mises Institute, a diverse and multifaceted research,
teaching, and outreach institution that supports academic research
in the Austrian tradition, publishes scholarly and popular books
and articles, hosts conferences for scholars, students, and laypeople,
maintains the world's largest collection of online literature in
Austrian economics and libertarian political economy, and more.
The Mises Institute's
Internet presence is remarkable usually topping various rankings
of economics and policy websites and has a special meaning
for me, as I was the institute's first webmaster, back in 1994.
"Webmaster" is an anachronistic term, in this context; I arranged
some rented space on an Auburn University server and put up a few
simple pages, using the HTML skills I had recently learned (and
which peaked around 1995). Shortly thereafter the domain Mises.org
was purchased, a real programming staff was assembled and, like
Topsy from Uncle
Tom's Cabin, it just growed.
Since the 1940s,
the Austrian School's intellectual home has been in the United States.
"Today's active Austrian school," wrote Hayek in 1978, "almost exclusively
in the United States, is really the followers of Mises, based on
the tradition of Böhm-Bawerk."[3]
Besides the Mises Institute, various other US-based organizations,
societies, think tanks, and individual faculty members and students
have promoted and developed the Austrian tradition. Until recently,
the Austrian School was largely forgotten in Europe, particularly
in Austria itself. After the fall of communism in the 1990s, Austrian
groups emerged in Eastern Europe, particularly in the Czech Republic,
Poland, and Romania. Now Austrian organizations, societies, and
student groups are sprouting around the world; as of this writing,
there are Mises Institutes in Brazil, Canada, Catalonia, China,
the Czech Republic, Ecuador, Finland, Germany, Israel, Japan, Poland,
Portugal, Romania, Russia, Spain, Sweden, and Ukraine; Hayek Institutes
in Austria and Canada; and a Rothbard Institute in Belgium. The
University d'Angers in France, under Guido Hülsmann, and the
Universidad Rey Juan Carlos in Spain, under Jesús Huerta
de Soto, are training a new generation of Austrian scholars in Europe.
Can an Austrian School Olympics be far behind?
Thanks to the
hard work of many scholars, students, academic entrepreneurs, and
private donors, and greatly facilitated by the Internet, the Austrian
movement is once again as in its heyday a global movement.
As such, now is the perfect time to celebrate the Austrian School
at its Viennese birthplace, not only to look back and marvel at
what's been accomplished so far, but to look forward to the Austrian
School's continued growth, development, refinement, and influence.
This article
is based on a speech given at the Mises Institute Supporters Summit
2011 in Vienna, Austria.
Notes
[1]
See Joseph T. Salerno, "The Rebirth of Austrian Economics
In Light of Austrian Economics," Quarterly Journal of Austrian
Economics 5, no. 4 (Winter 2002): 11128, for the case
that the Austrian revival is more properly dated to 196263
with the publication of Murray N. Rothbard's Man,
Economy, and State (Princeton: D. Van Nostrand, 1962),
America's
Great Depression (Princeton: D. Van Nostrand Co., 1963),
and What
Has Government Done to Our Money? (Colorado Springs,
Colo.: Pine Tree Press, 1963).
[2]
Jörg Guido Hülsmann, Mises:
The Last Knight of Liberalism (Auburn, Ala.: Ludwig von
Mises Institute, 2007).
[3]
F.A. Hayek, "Mises's Notes and Recollections," in Peter G. Klein,
ed., The
Fortunes of Liberalism: Essays on Austrian Economics and the Ideal
of Freedom, volume 4 of The Collected Works of F.A.
Hayek (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992), pp. 15359.
Hayek adds here that Böhm-Bawerk's tradition represents "only
one of the branches into which Menger's theories had already been
divided by his students, Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk and Friedrich
Wieser," contrasting Mises's influence with that of Wieser's successor
Hans Mayer, whose work is mostly forgotten. Outsiders often view
the Austrian tradition monolithically, not understanding that
it was a diverse, vibrant, and growing movement from the beginning,
and continues to be so today.
Reprinted
from Mises.org.
November
12, 2011
Peter
G. Klein [send him mail]
is the author of The
Capitalist & the Entrepreneur: Essays on Organizations & Markets.
He is an associate professor and director of the McQuinn
Center for Entrepreneurial Leadership at the University of Missouri
and an adjunct professor at the Norwegian School of Economics and
Business Administration. Klein teaches in the Mises
Academy. He blogs at Organizations
and Markets. See his webpage.

|