The
Personal Is the Economic
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Recently
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.: Thank
You!
This talk
was originally prepared for delivery at the New Orleans Mises Circle,
November 5, 2011.
Feminist Carol
Hanisch is famous for opposing the Miss America contest in the 1960s.
She is also the person who in 1968 coined the phrase "the personal
is the political." Her essay on the topic denounced the idea
that women’s liberation can come about through individual action.
The issue, she wrote, is not about having women make better choices
with their lives. Instead, it is about revolutionizing politics.
As she said, "There is only collective action for a collective
solution."
Now, this extreme
statement is only different from conventional left-wing academic
opinion in one sense: it is in plain English. As the decades wore
on, the opinions of the post-Marxist crowd didn’t change. They only
began to wrap them in ever more turgid, gobbledygook. But the conclusion
is always the same: we need collective action, which is a euphemism
for the state. The goal is to strengthen the state, that is, make
it more totalitarian.
In this view
of the social order, individual action cannot be permitted to shape
reality. Choice and freedom leads to conflict, abuse, exploitation,
inequality, injustice, and every other evil you can name. Capitalists
exploit workers, men dominate women, whites abuse blacks, the able-bodied
erect barriers to the disabled, religious people marginalize non-believers,
the rich kick the poor, and so on. This is their view of a world
of freedom. The only way to keep this nightmare at bay is total
control.
For this reason,
reform cannot come through individual choices; society must be radically
politicized in every respect, all the way down to relations between
individuals. Every slight or unwelcome glance cries out for a gargantuan
statist response. Every sign of marginalization is a signal for
why we need a mammoth state to constantly rearrange and monitor
social and economic relationships. And note that in this view, there
is really no chance of finally eliminating the conflicts inherent
in the structure of the world, so there is really no time at which
this crowd believes that the state is big and intrusive enough.
It must grow and grow forever.
This view is
utterly impervious to facts. That women make less on average than
men in the marketplace might be due to individual choice, as our
Schlarbaum laureate Walter Block has shown. But if you discount
individual choice and regard the structures of a wage economy as
inherently exploitative, such facts do not matter.
By the way,
we all need to congratulate Walter Block for being one of the few
academics to withstand and emerge victorious from a wicked assault,
which he endured a few years ago. He pointed out some basic facts
on the economics of discrimination to a college audience, and was
promptly blasted for failing to abide by the speech codes that govern
academic life. Even his job seemed to hang in the balance. Instead
of crawling and begging forgiveness, he fought back point for point.
The bad guys aren’t used to resistance, nor facts calmly and brilliantly
presented. Nor is a college used to its alumni rising up to defend
a visiting speaker, and cutting off their donations. Eventually,
reason prevailed over the smearmongers. Congratulations, Walter!
The proto-Marxist,
academic mainstream view of society is the polar opposite of the
old liberal view. Bastiat summed up the correct perspective on how
society works as "social harmony." If we let people be
free to act, own, choose, associate, build, risk, experiment, and
go about their business, so long as they are not physically invading
another’s person or property, a harmony tends to characterize the
development of society.
The personal
really is just the personal. It is the state that creates conflict
where none need exist.
It is not surprising
that history’s main thinkers who have held this truth had a thorough
familiarity with economic logic and economic science. Here is where
we discover the essence of human decision-making and choice. Here
is where we discover the magic of mutually beneficial exchange.
And it was
Ludwig von Mises who took the theory as it applied in economics
and expanded it into a general theory of human choice, of which
economics became a subset. Mises turned economics from speaking
about the supposed "economic man," as if we all made our
decisions in life based only on the expectation of the highest possible
pecuniary return.
Only a bit
of thought shows that man is in fact not a narrow profit maximizer
in this sense. Essential institutions in society like the arts,
religion, charity, family, as well as social mores and norms, exist
outside the commercial nexus.
But they do
not exist outside the realm of human choice. Mises put together
a science of human choice not only to explain commercial activities,
but the whole of social development. And therefore, after Mises,
it was no longer necessary to talk about the harmony of interests
only in commercial relations. The harmony is extended to the whole
of human society.
What this amounts
to is a complete reversal of the neo-Marxist slogan "the personal
is the political." I would propose, instead: "the personal
is the economic."
What this means
is that there is nothing we do in this world that economics cannot
shed some light on. That does not mean, as some Chicago School economists
would have it, that all human behavior can be reduced to and explained
by narrow economic interests. That line of thinking has produced
shelves of fallacy.
It means instead
that economics as the logic of human choice has some degree of universal
explanatory power. It sheds new light on old problems. It can cut
through our biases and help us see the truth about human cooperation
in unexpected places. It was on this basis that Mises said that
economics is the very pith of life. His point is that we can discover
economic logic in all things, and, through the study of economics,
we can gain new insight into every manner of human behavior and
man-made institution.
With this background,
perhaps we can understand something about how the Austrian School
of economics has been such an incredibly fruitful research paradigm.
It doesn’t try to shove the entire world into its apparatus. It
uses a robust theory to understand the world, and to formulate radical
ideas for reform to make the world a more peaceful and productive
place.
Before getting
to Walter Block’s own efforts, let’s look at the history.
Mises launched
his career in Vienna with a book on money. It made him famous. Writing
about money is what economists are supposed to do. Whenever they
step outside this area, they step on landmines. This is why all
the truly great economists have been so thoroughly denounced by
not only the academic elites but the politicians too. Bastiat faced
this criticism, as did Mises, Rothbard, and, of course, Walter Block.
The cry is always the same: stick to economics and stop talking
about other things! But as we’ve seen, there is no such thing as
other things that cannot be elucidated by economic theory.
After Mises
wrote his large book on money, seven years later, following the
so-called Great War, he came out with another book. Here he tipped
his hand. It was Nation, State, and Economy. The book explained
that democracy of the sort being talked about in the world absolutely
required the right of secession for language groups no matter how
small they might be. He further pointed out that self-determination
and socialism are utterly incompatible. The only system compatible
with freedom and true democracy, Mises wrote, was capitalism.
Though Mises
had already been denied a paid position at the University of Vienna,
this is when the storm clouds began to gather around his career,
as Guido Hülsmann documents in his biography of Mises. The clouds
burst after 1920, when Mises wrote his proof that socialism was
not an economic system at all, but a recipe for the total destruction
of economics and civilization itself. His logic was impeccable and
the argument incredibly effective. He had refuted an obsession of
intellectuals that dated back to the ancient world.
This was unforgivable.
The cries that he stop talking about these things and stick to economics
grew louder. But Mises didn’t back down. Two years later, his full
book on socialism came out. Then he tackled economic method. Then
eventually his full treatise on human society came out. It was called
Human Action. This book is the one that established him as one of
the great thinkers in history. It was also the book that finally
killed his career.
So why did
he do it? There were three reasons. First, scholarly integrity demanded
that he follow all the implications of the theory. Second, telling
what is true is the moral thing to do, and it is heroic to do it,
especially when you realize that doing so will harm you personally.
Third, no one else was saying what Mises had to say, so therefore
it was up to him to do so.
It was the
same, of course, with Murray Rothbard. He told the story to an interviewer,
granting that he had never been careful in grooming his career to
the establishment’s liking. He told Bob Kephart in a letter that
he was warned early on to never attack individuals but only ideas.
He rejected that advice because he thought it was important to alert
the people to the existence of a ruling class that used the state
to loot us. You can’t draw attention to the existence of such a
thing without naming names.
It was the
same with his views concerning anarchism. He was told that pushing
this idea would ruin his scholarly career. Then he was told to stop
distinguishing the Austrian from the Chicago School, since that
broke up the image of one big free-market school. Then he was told
to stop talking about war and peace, since that would wreck his
image among conservatives.
To be sure,
he knew this was good career advice. So why did he reject it? Why
did he consistently take the wrong course?
Murray explains:
I like to
think that the main reason is one that moved me a great deal when
I read about it in Garlund’s life of the great Swedish ‘Austrian’
economist, Knut Wicksell. Wicksell was asked: ‘Here you are, a
great economist, and yet you’re getting yourself always into trouble,
and ruining your scholarly image, because of all the crazy radical
things you’re doing.’ ... [Why?] And Wicksell answered simply:
‘Because nobody else was doing it.’
For me that
summed it up. If there had been lots of libertarians who were
anarchists, lots who were antiwar, lots who named names of the
ruling elite, lots attacking...Friedman, etc., I might not have
made all these choices, figuring that these important tasks were
being well taken care of anyway, so I may as well concentrate
on my own ‘positioning.’ But at each step I looked around and
saw indeed that nobody else was doing it. So therefore it was
up to me.
Of course,
Rothbard’s sacrifice cleared the way for future generations to advance
these ideas with relative safety. Today, there are many Austrians,
anarchists, and pro-peace libertarians in academia, journalism,
and other mainstream fields. Many are outspoken, and these ideas
are being circulated.
But do they
know that Rothbard is their benefactor in this respect, too? Most
likely not. But it takes such people to pave the way, with their
own lives, so that the world of ideas can be safe for others in
the future.
This is the
only reason that someone like Mises or even Rothbard seems less
radical to us than they did in their day. What they said was shocking
and alarming, completely unsettling to a whole generation. And they
paid a huge personal price. Today we look at this and wonder how
it could be that Mises suffered so much and so personally for having
opposed socialism, or Rothbard for having opposed the state. But
the reason it seems surprising to us is precisely because their
actions and words blazed new trails that we now safely follow.
And so it is
with Walter Block. He was a graduate student studying economics
when he slowly began to work on his side project of Defending
the Undefendable. He saw all these peaceful activities being
attacked daily in the press. The political culture was down on dope
smoking, prostitution, littering, the male chauvinist, gypsy taxi
drivers, profiteers, the middle man, speculators, importers, stripminers,
scabs, money lenders, misers, inheritors, slumlords, and even blackmailers.
In each case, where society saw scandal, sin, and criminality, Walter
saw peaceful economic activity.
So he examined
them one by one, and dispassionately. He brought the cool air of
reason to each topic and did an analysis of each from the point
of view of human choice. In the course of each defense, he illustrated
economic principles by discussing a subject that was inherently
interesting to the reader. So he ended up doing more than just rescuing
these marginal people and activities from demonizing; he actually
advanced sound economic thinking in the process.
But if Mises
and Rothbard variously walked through fields of land mines, stepping
on bombs others told them to avoid, Walter took this a step further.
He got sought out the fields, followed the map of where the mines
where, and hopped and skipped on them, practically dancing with
glee!
No, he didn’t
stick to economics narrowly defined, and he didn’t try to cram the
whole of the human experience into a profit-maximizing framework.
Instead, he used a robust theory of exchange and human action to
explain how many behaviors that are frequently demonized are actually
fine examples of how society manages to get by without the imposition
of government rules and enforcement agents.
Walter really
did show how the personal is the economic. He followed up on this
book with several hundred scholarly articles on various topics,
as well as many books. Two of his latest books published by the
Mises Institute take on the subjects of discrimination and government
road provision. Once again, these are subjects that there is no
reason under the sun for him to talk about, except for the fact
that no one else is writing about them, they need to be written
about, and it is the right thing to do.
Let me tell
you something about Walter Block that few people know. As a graduate
student, he was a successful landlord, already owning two significant
apartment buildings. This young man was going to be a decent Donald
Trump. But then he met Murray Rothbard, and saw two paths before
him. Fight for freedom, or "get a phonecall at 2:00am from
Mrs. Cohen about her broken refrigerator." Walter, society
needs great landlords, but God bless you for taking the path you
did.
This tendency
is always been a feature of the Austrian School. It is not a school
of narrow model builders but a school of broad-minded philosophers
who offer a radical way of looking at the world. That is to say,
they like to get to the root of things and explain the implications
of what they find, no matter the personal consequences.
This is also
one of the reasons for the dramatic growth of the Austrian school
in our times. As a theory of real action, it applies to the real
world in ways that are far more intense than the mainstream. You
can see the difference in a conventional monetary history of the
20th century, which merely chronicles the ups and downs of a few
statistics, and an Austrian version such as that written by Rothbard,
which is a real human drama.
Austrian economics
is not just economics. It is a theory of human action itself. And
this is why the Austrian School continues to grow, despite all the
attempts to smear it, put it down, make it go away, and otherwise
marginalize its thinkers and writers. Consider that this has been
going on for well more than a century, beginning with the phrase
Austrian School itself, which was coined by the German Historical
School with the implication that Austrians were inferior in every
respect to Germans.
The attempt
hasn’t worked over the long run. It does and can work in one lifetime,
however, and individual Austrians have often paid a high price for
refusing to think as they are told. In the case of Mises, it was
not a parlor game. He put his very life on the line in his decision
to speak the truth. But extend the analysis over several generations,
and you see a different picture of trailblazing a new mainstream
of thought.
A few years
ago, an image came out on the web that was supposed to depict a
line of economists. They were all staring at a graph. When the line
went, up the economists would smile a bit. When it went down, they
would frown. That was the whole depiction.
Economics is
very different in the hands of the Austrian tradition. It is something
with powerful explanatory power that deals with the rise and fall
of whole civilizations. It deals with gigantic issues and the smallest
possible personal issues. It provides a window for looking at the
world with intelligence and realism. And though science itself is
value-free, its practitioners never are. They bring the values of
peace, prosperity, and freedom to the mix, and provide us with a
beautiful vision of life itself.
It is for this
reason that Mises ends his masterpiece with these words, which like
Walter Block we must never forget: "Economics must not be
relegated to classrooms and statistical offices and must not be
left to esoteric circles. It is the philosophy of human life and
action and concerns everybody and everything. It is the pith of
civilization and of man's human existence."
February
13, 2012
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail], former editorial assistant to Ludwig von Mises and congressional
chief of staff to Ron Paul, is founder and chairman of the Mises
Institute, executor for the estate of Murray N. Rothbard, and
editor of LewRockwell.com.
See his
books.
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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