The Economics Book

(Barry) #1

174


for private property, and deep
pessimism about the ability of
governments to shape society.

Creating dictatorships
The argument for which Hayek is
best remembered appeared in 1944
in The Road to Serfdom. At the
time there was a growing
enthusiasm for government
intervention and central planning.
Hayek argued that all attempts to
impose a collective order on society
are doomed to failure. He said they
would lead, inexorably, to the
totalitarianism of fascism or Stalinist

ECONOMIC LIBERALISM


Prices move in response to these
individual actions, and so reflect total
market information.

This produces a free market that
governments should protect, because
we wish to preserve a free society.

Firms do not know everything
about the entire economy.

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Society and the economy

KEY THINKER
Friedrich Hayek (1899–1992)

BEFORE
1908 Italian economist Enrico
Barone shows how a central
government planner can
replace the free market if it
can calculate prices.

1920 Ludwig von Mises
refutes Barone’s argument.

1936–37 Oskar Lange argues
against von Mises’s position.

AFTER
1970s Hayek’s arguments for
free markets gain ground.

1991 US historian Francis
Fukuyama says free market
capitalism has defeated all
possible alternatives.

Late 2000s Criticisms of
government bank bailouts
prompt a revival of interest
in Hayek’s ideas.

M


ainstream economics has
always had its critics. Its
focus on mathematical
formulas and its sometimes
sweeping assumptions have led
economists to challenge both its
methods and its lack of empirical
evidence. Many of these critics have
been from the political Left, who see
the mainstream as providing a glossy
support for an unjust free market.
One minority tradition, the
Austrian School, has argued quite
differently. Vociferous defenders of
the free market, but critical of the
mainstream, they have carved out


a unique place within the discipline.
Most prominent of these radicals
was an Austrian-British economist,
Friedrich Hayek. Hayek vies with
John Maynard Keynes (p.161) for
the title of the 20th century’s most
influential economist, and he made
a range of contributions to political
and economic thought. These
covered economics, law, political
theory, and neuroscience. His
writings maintained a closely
argued, consistent set of principles,
which he saw as being in the
tradition of classical liberalism:
support for free markets, support

Firms make decisions based on
these facts and act on them, for example
by changing output.

But each firm has information about
production and the market’s demands
that are relevant to itself.
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