The Odyssey of Sound Economics
by Daniel J. Sanchez
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by Daniel J. Sanchez: Vote
for Liberty by Not Voting
Imagine a world
in which the works and ideas of Ludwig von Mises had been neglected
and ultimately forgotten. The socialist-calculation argument, the
Austrian theory of the business cycle, praxeology: each nothing
more than a footnote in the history of economic thought.
Imagine a world
in which the only Austrian economists were a handful of diffuse
and eclectic thinkers puttering around harmlessly and fruitlessly
in academia.
Imagine how
bleak and hopeless the future would look in such a world in which
there was no radical, hardcore approach to liberty, underpinned
by systematic, sound economic theory, available to the public: only
the waffling of woolly moderates and the tentative propositions
of positivist and eclectic economists.
That is what
the world would be like today if not for the Ludwig von Mises Institute.
In two groundbreaking academic articles, Joseph T. Salerno masterfully
and convincingly tells the story of how LvMI rescued sound economics
after a century of vicissitudes and near-death experiences for the
Austrian School.[1]
This essay aims to condense that story for the lay person.
Truth can be
a fragile thing: a flickering flame that can be easily extinguished
if not tended to sedulously. This is particularly the case for sound
economics.
But even a
partial truth, if it sets the intellectual world ablaze, can do
a tremendous amount of good. Such was the case of the Classical
School of economics, which, in spite of its grave flaws, helped
to engender the age of liberalism and the Industrial Revolution.
A more complete
truth was discovered in the "Marginalist Revolution" of economics
in the 1870s. In this revolution, the objective theories of value
of the Classical School were supplanted by subjective theories.
Value was no longer attributed to whole classes of goods, nor was
it considered a quality imparted to a good by the costs or labor
expended in producing it. Value, according to what Ludwig von Mises
called "modern economics," was a personal and subjective evaluation
of a unit of the good in question.
The new, subjectivist
economics had the potential to revolutionize society, as Classical
economics did before it, especially as it was formulated by Carl
Menger, the founder of the Austrian School, and one of the originators
of subjective marginalist theory. As Israel Kirzner wrote,
For Menger,
incomes in a capitalist system express the relative urgency of
the consumer needs that those income earners can satisfy. The
theory of income distribution becomes for Menger simply an extension
of the theory of value. In capitalism, the importance of particular
consumer needs is transmitted through the structure of production.
As this ripple proceeds, both the prices of higher order goods
and the incomes of the various producers are determined. [Menger's]
scientific results contained ... ideological dynamite. They suggested
the view of the market economy to which its defenders could triumphantly
appeal.[2]
The economic
theory of the new Austrian School was importantly different from
that of the Classical School, and not just in its value theory.
The Classical theory of the economy, especially as formulated by
David Ricardo, was profoundly unrealistic. Ricardo introduced many
arbitrary assumptions from which he deduced his conclusions. He
assumed conditions that are nowhere to be found in the actual market
phenomena he attempted to describe, and that did little to nothing
to elucidate those phenomena.
Menger, however,
in order to explain the formation of real prices as they actually
are seen in the market, was careful to introduce into his theory
conditions that are actually found in the reality he was trying
to explain. Menger's theory, unlike Ricardo's, was realistic.
However, Menger
was not the only figure in the Marginalist Revolution. Two other
economists independently formulated marginal theories of value in
the same time period. One was the Englishman William Stanley Jevons,
and the other the Frenchman Léon Walras.
Unfortunately
Walras did not undertake a realist approach like Menger's. His system
was perhaps even more unrealistic than Ricardo's. Walras based his
theory on the notion of "general equilibrium," an imaginary world
of endlessly repetitive economic activity in which there is no variation,
and therefore no uncertainty. This concept, known as the evenly
rotating economy to modern Austrians, is an important construct
to contrast with reality, especially so as to help the mind
conceptually distinguish between profit and interest: two phenomena
that are very much present, but intermingled, in the real world.
But Walras
did not use it this way. Instead, he analyzed various hypothetical
states of general equilibrium. However internally consistent these
analyses may have been, they did not shed any light on the operations
of real-world markets. Mises referred to this kind of analysis as
a scientifically vain sort of play. Walras also explored a hypothetical
process by which a market in disequilibrium might "grope" its way
toward equilibrium. But the assumptions made in formulating this
process were also completely unrealistic, and thereby completely
useless.
While Walras's
theory was like Ricardo's in its unrealism, it was actually worse
than Ricardo's in an important way. While Ricardo abjured reality
to some extent, at least he embraced the notion of cause and effect.
Walras abjured both realism and cause and effect. In Walrasian general
equilibrium, prices mutually determined one another. There was no
direction in which causation flowed.
Menger on the
other hand sought out causal laws with which to explain the
price phenomena of the real world. Menger's emphasis on causal
laws also contrasted with the approach of the historicism
that was prevalent in German-language scholarship at the time, which
denied the existence of any economic laws, causal or otherwise.
It is because
of this dual emphasis on causal laws and realism that Salerno calls
the Mengerian tradition "causal-realist." As causal-realist economics
is the only kind of economics that is both true and useful, it may
also be simply called "sound economics."
This rift at
the outset of the Marginalist Revolution between Mengerian causal
realism and Walrasian "acausal anti-realism" was to prove momentous.
The Walrasian strain would ultimately become a major part of "mainstream
economics" in the 20th century, and would even come to infect the
Austrian School itself.
Menger had
two chief protégés: Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk and
the latter's brother-in-law Friedrich von Wieser. Böhm-Bawerk
extended and elaborated Menger's value theory and causal-realist
price theory. Wieser on the other hand adopted the former, but largely
ignored the latter, instead formulating his own form of general-equilibrium
theory.
Menger and
Böhm-Bawerk helped to inspire an Anglo-American causal-realist
tradition, led by John Bates Clark, Philip Wicksteed, Frank Fetter,
and Herbert Davenport.
Ludwig von
Mises studied under Böhm-Bawerk, and was greatly influenced
by Menger, saying that Menger's Principles
of Economics "made an economist" out of him. Mises adopted
and extended the causal-realist approach, using it to make huge
strides in the theories of money, the business cycle, economic calculation,
and much more.
Another Austrian,
Joseph Schumpeter, was chiefly influenced by his teacher Wieser
and by reading the works of Walras. He too adopted a Walrasian general-equilibrium
approach to price theory.
In the decade
leading up to World War I, Schumpeter was far more influential than
Mises, partly because Mises had not yet woven all of his advances
together into a systematic treatise. So Schumpeter was free to,
as Salerno states, "recast the price-theoretic core of Austrian
economics along the lines of (verbal) Walrasian general-equilibrium
analysis."
Due to this,
the fourth generation of the Austrian School, including F.A. Hayek,
under the prevailing influence of the writings of Wieser and Schumpeter,
was captivated by the Walrasian approach. Hayek, in his early works,
"viewed general-equilibrium theory as the core of economic theory."[3]
However, Hayek was also influenced by Mises to a significant degree
(especially in his early "macroeconomics") and made enormous contributions
to causal-realist production and business-cycle theory.
Hayek carried
the "Walrasian contagion" with him to the London School
of Economics (LSE), and there introduced it to the English-speaking
world. As Salerno writes, "It was under Hayek's influence that economists
at LSE, especially John Hicks, began to introduce Walrasian general-equilibrium
theory ... to Anglo-American economists."[4]
Hayek and Hicks swayed Lionel Robbins, the head of LSE, away from
Mengerian causal-realism and toward Walrasian general-equilibrium
theory. This had the effect of moving LSE itself in that same direction.
The Hayek-Hicks
reconstruction of general-equilibrium theory combined with the partial-equilibrium
approach of Alfred Marshall to take over Anglo-American microeconomics,
almost completely supplanting the causal-realist tradition of Wicksteed,
Fetter, Clark, and Davenport. So complete was the conquest that
George Stigler, in 1946, would sniff at Böhm-Bawerk for having
spurned mutual determination and for clinging stubbornly to "the
older concept of cause and effect."[5]
The causal-realist
tradition dwindled in influence throughout the interwar period.
Then, virtually on the eve of the Second World War, Mises saved
it from oblivion when he finally published his systematic treatise,
the German-language Nationalökonomie.
In this book, Mises reformulated and refined the advances of his
predecessors, connecting those advances with his own trailblazing
theories into an integrated whole. The book was the scientific apogee
of causal-realist economics.
But there was
no audience for such a work in a German-speaking world already overrun
by the Nazis, and the book fell dead from the presses. Soon after,
the Nazi advance drove Mises from Europe, and he had to find refuge
in America.
But Mises was
faithful to his motto as always: tu ne cede malis, "yield
not to ills."[6]
He was determined to set the world right, and he believed the only
way to do so was through sound economics. And so, nine years later
he wrote his systematic treatise again, this time in English,
titling it Human
Action.
Yet even in
America the audience for such a book was limited, so widely had
anti-liberal, and anti-causal-realist doctrines spread. Human
Action did inspire some followers who adopted Mises's approach,
notably Henry Hazlitt and Hans Sennholz. But the book was unable
to, by itself, reestablish a causal-realist school in America.
This was chiefly
for two reasons. One reason was a lack of dedicated institutional
support. The institutions that supported Mises were interested in
marshalling arguments for economic liberty, but were not specifically
dedicated to Mises's scientific project.
Secondly, while
in Human Action Mises elaborated on his own extensive original
contributions and refinements, he assumed the reader was already
familiar with other core aspects of sound economics. But this was
an assumption that could not be made given the parlous state of
economics in the English-speaking world. There was a need to bridge
the gaps in Mises's magisterial system.
That need was
filled by Murray N. Rothbard, a genius who throughout the 1950s
was able to do for Misesian economics what Euclid did for geometry:
fill in the lacunae of the system and make explicit the step-by-step
deductions by which the theoretical edifice was built. The result
was Man,
Economy, and State, published in 1962.
Man, Economy,
and State made sound economics so clear to apprehend that it
was a career-defining influence for a number of isolated scholars.
By 1974, there were enough Rothbardians for an Austrian-economics
conference, funded by the Institute for Humane Studies, to be organized
in the small Vermont village of South Royalton.
The conference
itself is often billed as the event that inaugurated the modern
Austrian-economics movement in America. But really it was simply
the first physical congregation of a movement that had been growing
since the publication of Rothbard's treatise. Young Rothbardians
made up the majority of the participants at South Royalton. Had
it not been for that book, there would not have been enough Austrians
to even merit a conference.
Moreover, South
Royalton was at best a mixed blessing, as it led to history repeating
itself. Once again, a school of economic thought was bifurcated
between two strands. In the Marginalist Revolution, the split was
between Menger and Walras. In the second generation of the Austrian
School, it was between Böhm-Bawerk and Wieser. In the third
generation, it was between Mises and Schumpeter.
A major divide
within the reborn Austrian School in America was between Rothbard
and Ludwig Lachmann, a South African scholar who was lifted to prominence
by South Royalton. Lachmann had made some significant contributions
to Misesian economics. But, after being suddenly converted to the
nihilist methodology of George Shackle, he began to develop a very
anti-Misesian view of the market economy.
For example,
Mises had made the realistic claim that acting man is capable of
grappling with uncertainty concerning the valuations of his fellow
man using the human faculty of understanding. Thanks to this,
historical and anticipated prices were apt tools for meaningful
economic calculation.
Lachmann, on
the other hand, made the unrealistic assumption that acting man
was beset with such "radical uncertainty" that anticipated prices
were meaningless with regard to the rational allocation of resources.
This view was non-causal-realist in its use of unrealistic assumptions,
as well as in its quasi-historicist denial of causal laws providing
rational order in the market. Unfortunately, in spite of Rothbard's
efforts, a number of young Austrians followed Lachmann into the
nihilist wilds.
Sound economics
suffered a tremendous blow when, as Salerno tells it,
the new major
funding source for I.H.S. and the Cato Institute, a newly-established
libertarian "think tank," made a momentous decision in the late
1970s to deliberately downplay the role of Ludwig von Mises in
Austrian economics because his radical intransigence in economic
method, theory, and policy risked alienating moderate, neoclassical
"free-market" economists, graduate students, and economic policymakers
who the new financial-institutional axis was eager to draw into
its ambit.
As time went
on, Mises's name was mentioned less and less at conferences and
symposia sponsored by these financially allied institutions and
soon became almost anathema. As Mises was being phased out, there
emerged an increasing emphasis on the contributions of Friedrich
Hayek, who had won the Nobel Prize in 1974.[7]
Affairs worsened
in 1980 when
a lavishly
financed Ph.D. program in anti-Misesian, pro-Lachmannian "Market
Process" economics was instituted at George Mason University in
northern Virginia.[8]
This program
would later be led by Don Lavoie, a Lachmannian who inculcated in
several of his students a methodological eclecticism that they champion
to this day.
In the following
year, Rothbard was forced
out of the Cato Institute, which he had cofounded, his shares
in the organization being confiscated. Rothbard had hoped Cato would
be a vehicle for promoting Misesian economics. Yet, even before
his ouster, the organization had already started drifting toward
neoclassical economics, and especially toward the Chicago School.
Now, causal-realist economics was as isolated as ever, having lost
almost all of its institutional support. Sound economics was once
again on the verge of being lost to the world.
But as they
say, it is always darkest before the dawn. And in the very next
year, Lew Rockwell, on a shoestring budget, founded the Ludwig von
Mises Institute for Austrian Economics (LvMI's official name). What
is more, he did so in the face of furious opposition from the same
billionaires who had chosen to downplay Mises, financed the diffuse
GMU program, and forced Rothbard out of Cato.
Sound economics
finally had an institutional home. Through LvMI's journals, always
edited by hardcore Misesians, starting with Rothbard, causal-realist
economics has been developed for 30
years. Through LvMI's conferences, always directed by hardcore
Misesians, starting with Rothbard, causal-realist economics has
been disseminated for 30 years.
LvMI has provided
a venue for scholars who had independently discovered Austrian economics
to come together. One of those scholars is now our academic vice
president, Joseph T. Salerno. LvMI has also been an engine for the
production of new Austrian scholars. One of those LvMI graduates
is now our executive director, Peter G. Klein.
Under the stewardship
of these two champions of causal-realist economics and of Mr. Rockwell,
and with your financial support,
we can rest assured that the flame of sound economics after
being buffeted by fate for over a century, time and again at the
point of being extinguished, only to be saved at the last moment
by an isolated genius will be tended to safely and
sedulously for many years to come.
What is more,
truth, if made accessible, can spread like a prairie fire. Ron Paul
has inspired thousands with his message of liberty. These thousands
are a huge potential seedbed for future growth in the causal-realist
Austrian School. (For all we know, among their ranks may even be
another genius on the level of Mises or Rothbard.) And we can reach
these potential Austrians now more easily than ever through Mises.org.
Mises.org can
also be an enormously powerful tool for the Austrian School scholars
and educators that LvMI has nurtured to reach the general public,
so as to effect an ideological revolution. That mission is what
makes sound economics so important in the first place, for as Mises
wrote,
The flowering
of human society depends on two factors: the intellectual power
of outstanding men to conceive sound social and economic theories,
and the ability of these or other men to make these ideologies
palatable to the majority.[9]
This is why
Mises called sound economics "the pith of civilization."[10]
For the sake of our beleaguered civilization, support the preservation,
development, and dissemination of sound economics. Please
give today.
Notes
[1]
"The
Place of Mises's Human Action in the Development of Modern
Economic Thought" (1999) and "The
Rebirth of Austrian Economics In Light of Austrian Economics"
(2002).
[2]
Transcribed from the audiobook Early
Austrian Economics by Israel Kirzner.
[3]
Salerno (1999)
[4]
Ibid.
[5]
Quoted in Murray N. Rothbard, Man, Economy, and State,
chapter 5.
[6]
Mises's entire motto was Tu ne cede malis sed contra audentior
ito, a Latin line from Virgil's Aeneid, which, according
to H.R. Fairclough's translation of the epic poem, means,
"Yield not to ills, but go forth all the bolder to face them."
[7]
Salerno (2002)
[8]
Ibid.
[9]
Ludwig von Mises, Human Action, chapter
37, emphasis added.
[10]
Mises, Human Action, chapter
38.
October
26, 2012
Daniel J.
Sanchez [send him mail]
is editor of Mises.org and director
of the Mises Academy. He has written many articles for Mises
Daily, especially concerning the ideas of Ludwig von Mises.
Copyright
© 2012 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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