The Economics Book

(Barry) #1

175


The totalitarian state of North Korea
suffers regular shortages and famine.
Economists of the Austrian School
claim that this is the inevitable result
of central planning that ignores markets.


communism. Since all planning
necessarily acts against the
“spontaneous order” of the market,
it can only occur with a degree of
force, or coercion. The more that
a government draws up plans and
imposes them, the more coercion
is needed. As governments are
poorly informed about the detailed
workings of the market, planning
is bound to steadily fail in its aims,
while becoming increasingly
coercive to compensate for those
failings. At that point a society
would lurch toward a totalitarian
state, in which all freedom was
extinguished, however moderate
the planners’ initial goals.
Economists of the Left had
argued that a centrally planned
economy was not only possible, but
more efficient than a free market.
Their first significant opponent, in
1920, was another member of the
Austrian School, Ludwig von Mises
(p.147). He argued that socialism—
here defined as central planning—
is not economically viable. It offers
no rational means of pricing
commodities since it relies on the
diktat (unquestionable command)
of one central planner or committee
to perform the allocation decisions
that in a free market are undertaken
by many hundreds of thousands of
individuals. The amount of
information needed to assess the
scarcities and surpluses of a market
and set prices correctly is so huge
that the attempt is doomed to
failure. Socialism, wrote von Mises,
is the “abolition of the rational


economy.” Only a free market
with private property can
provide the basis for the
decentralized pricing decisions
a complex economy requires.

Socialism defended
Polish economist Oskar Lange,
however, disagreed with von
Mises. He famously responded
to von Mises’ claims in a 1936
article, On the Economic Theory
of Socialism, using a development
of general equilibrium theory. This
theory, which was not perfected
until after World War II, is a
mathematical representation of
a market economy stripped to its
bare essentials. All imperfections
in markets have been removed, and
all participants in the market are
fully informed and concerned only
with their self-interest. On this basis,
Lange said, a central planning board
could fix the initial set of prices for
the economy, and then allow all
those in society to trade freely,
adjusting their demand and supply

around the prices given. The
planning board could then adjust
prices according to demand and
supply. The outcome, he argued,
would be efficient. A planner could
also reduce income inequalities and
constrain the market’s tendency to
short-term thinking.
Lange had taken the usual
assumptions of microeconomics
(that supply and demand ❯❯

See also: Property rights 20–21 ■ Economic man 52–53 ■ Economic equilibrium 118–23 ■ Central planning 142–47 ■
The Keynesian multiplier 164–65 ■ Shortages in planned economies 232–33


WAR AND DEPRESSIONS


The more the state
‘plans’, the more difficult
planning becomes for
the individual.
Friedrich Hayek
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