The Austrians Were Right
by Harry Veryser
Editor's
Note: Professor Harry C. Veryser has written a much-needed look
at the Austrian School of economics and why its lessons must be
heeded at last. Ron Paul calls the book “an excellent introduction
to the Austrian School of economics and an excellent account of
the economic history of the 20th century,” while Thomas E. Woods
Jr. writes, “I am blown away by how much ground Harry Veryser
covers in this important book, and how skillfully he covers it.”
What follows is the first excerpt from Veryser’s brand-new book,
It Didn’t Have to Be This Way: Why Boom and Bust Is Unnecessary
and How the Austrian School of Economics Breaks the Cycle.
The global
economic meltdown that began in 2007 has brought suffering to countless
millions. We have all witnessed and in many cases experienced
the devastation.
But it didn’t
have to be this way. This kind of financial devastation has been
predicted again and again decade after decade by proponents
of the Austrian School of economics. Ludwig von Mises, one of the
most prominent Austrian economists, summed up the perennial crisis
in the title of one of his many books, Planned
Chaos (1947). Mises, especially in The
Theory of Money and Credit (1912) and Human
Action (1949), maintained that the boom-and-bust cycle
that has afflicted modern economies is both unnatural and unnecessary.
It worsens living conditions for just about everyone. Since the
publication of his books, abundant scholarly studies have validated
the Austrian view. Yet few people even among those teaching
economics in colleges and universities worldwide know or
understand the Austrian School.
I wrote the
new book It
Didn’t Have to Be This Way to help solve that problem.
If there is
a bright spot in the most recent economic crisis, it is this: people
everywhere are giving much more serious thought to foundational
questions about the economy. What caused our woes, and more important,
how can we prevent future calamities?
To answer
those questions, we need to understand the Austrian School of economics.
I have had the unique opportunity both to see how economics operates
in the real world (as a businessman who co-owned an automotive supply
company for many years) and to study its theory and practice from
the ivory tower (as a professor of economics at Walsh College and
the University of Detroit Mercy). Over the course of my career,
it became clear that much of the economics establishment badly misunderstands
the forces that cause economic crisis.
The crisis
that began in 2007 should be seen, not as an isolated incident,
but as part of a continuing drama that has its origins in US government
manipulation of markets and currency. It is merely part of the cycle
that has been the scourge of the West since 1913 which gets
us to the story of our modern condition.
The two major
and intertwining plots in the story are (1) the development of economic
theory and (2) the events that shaped global history, especially
in the early twentieth century. Economic theory has always had a
tremendous influence on government action and policy. Before World
War I, governments based public policy on so-called classical economic
theories about money and trade. Almost all economic theory was committed
to free markets and private property. Governments did not exert
much energy in regulating commerce. The US Constitution, for instance,
includes provisions establishing free markets and specie-based money
systems. Needless to say, things changed following World War I,
as monarchies and traditions were smashed and new theories came
into play. The troubles of the 1920s and 1930s encouraged economists
to rework the classical theory to explain why things happened as
they did and what should be done as a result. These new theories
however well-meaning have had profound and often devastating
consequences around the world.
Economics
is not or does not have to be a mysterious
science. Quite simply, it is the study of reconciling the unlimited
wants of man with limited resources. Distilled further, it is the
study of human action. In It Didn’t Have to Be This Way,
I aim to demonstrate that economics involves certain immutable laws
of human behavior. Further, I hope to show that the Austrian School
has most clearly and effectively discovered those laws. The world
has needlessly suffered unspeakable misery as a result of theories
and policies that ignore these principles.
It didn’t have
to be this way not in the recent economic crisis, or in the
crushing stagflation of the 1970s and early 1980s, or in the Depression
of the 1930s. More important, it doesn’t have to be this way in
the future. The world’s economies can get back on track
and return to prosperity.
To be more
precise, the Austrians were right all along. In the early 1930s,
two professors in England looked at the worldwide economic catastrophe
and came up with very different solutions. John Maynard Keynes at
the University of Cambridge created the notion of spending one’s
way out of recession, while Friedrich A. Hayek of the London School
of Economics took the classical stance, calling for sound money
and the traditional virtues of saving, prudent investing, and balanced
budgets. Keynesianism became the byword of the developed world and
has profoundly influenced the response of governments in the most
recent crisis. Meanwhile, governments largely ignored Hayek, one
of the great Austrian economists. We have all paid the price since.
One of the
greatest failings of mainstream economic thinking, seen clearly
in the lead-up to the 2007–8 financial crisis, has been to view
economics as a science on the order of physics, one that can be
reduced to numbers, quantities, and mathematical formulas. The Austrian
School, understanding economics as a science of individual human
action, makes a crucial contribution with its distrust of mathematical
modeling or “financial engineering” of the type that helped cause
the subprime mortgage collapse. It is a warning that must be heeded
today.
Of the many
contributions the Austrian School has made to economic thought,
the other most relevant to our situation today is the explanation
of the insidious effects of expanding the money supply. The modern
Federal Reserve, which seems intent on pumping new money into the
system, clearly violates this Austrian tenet.
In recent
times a number of internationally acclaimed experts in economics
who are not part of the Austrian School have validated
Austrian tenets. Two causes of the economic crisis, many scholars
and practitioners now recognize, were the Fed’s artificial lowering
of interest rates and the use of mathematical equations in a futile
attempt to lessen risk. These people are coming to conclusions that
the Austrians reached decades ago.
For years
now, we have endured a barrage of bad news: businesses going belly-up,
people losing their jobs and homes, government debt soaring. It
didn’t have to be this way. The Austrian School presents the
most coherent explication of the economic relations among men and
more so than any other system today lays out economic
guidelines that offer real prospects for prosperity worldwide.
February
8, 2013
Harry
C. Veryser, an associate scholar of the Ludwig von Mises Institute,
has served as director of the graduate program in economics at
the University of Detroit Mercy and chairman of Walsh College’s
Department of Economics and Finance. This article is adapted from
his new book, It
Didn’t Have to Be This Way: Why Boom and Bust Is Unnecessary – and
How the Austrian School of Economics Breaks the Cycle, with
permission from the publisher, ISI Books.
Copyright
© 2013 Harry C. Veryser
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