Mises: Scholar, Creator, Hero, by Murray N. Rothbard
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Ludwig von Mises:
Scholar, Creator, Hero
? Copyright 1988 by the Ludwig von Mises Institute, online edition 2002.
[Download original edition in PDF format]
Table of Contents
Ludwig von Mises: Scholar, Creator, Hero
1. The Young Scholar
2. The Theory of Money and Credit
3. The Reception of Mises and of Money and Credit
4. Mises in the 1920s: Economic Adviser to the Government
5. Mises in the 1920s: Scholar and Creator
6. Mises in the 1920s: Teacher and Mentor
7. Exile and the New World
8. Coda: Mises the Man
The purpose of
this essay is to discuss and celebrate the life and work of one of the great
creative minds of our century. Ludwig von Mises was born on September 29, 1881,
in the city of Lemberg (now Lvov), in Galicia, in the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
His father, Arthur Edler von Mises, a Viennese construction engineer working for
the Austrian railroads, was stationed in Lemberg at the time. Ludwig?s mother,
Adele Landau, also came a prominent family in Vienna: her uncle, Dr. Joachim
Landau, was a deputy from the Liberal Party in the Austrian
Parliament.
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The Young Scholar
Though the pre-eminent theorist of our time, Mises?s
interest, as a teenager, centered in history, particularly economic and
administrative history. But even while still in high school, he reacted against
the relativism and historicism rampant in the German-speaking countries,
dominated by the Historical School. In his early historical work, he was
frustrated to find historical studies virtually consisting of paraphrases from
official government reports. Instead, he yearned to write genuine economic
history He early disliked the State orientation of historical studies. Thus, in
his memoirs, Mises writes:
It was my intense interest in historical knowledge that enabled me to
perceive readily the inadequacy of German historicism. It did not deal with
scientific problems, but with the glorification and justification of Prussian
policies and Prussian authoritarian government. The German universities
were state institutions and the instructors were civil servants. The
professors were
aware of this civil-service status, that is, they saw themselves as servants of
the Prussian king.[1]
Ludwig von Mises
entered the University of Vienna
at the turn of the twentieth century and his major professor was the economic
historian Karl Gr?nberg, a
member of the German Historical School and a statist who was interested in labor
history, agricultural history, and Marxism. Gr?nberg was a follower of the
German economic historian Georg Friedrich Knapp, the author of the major work claiming that money
was in its origin and its essence a pure creature of the State. At his
center for economic history at the University of Strasbourg, Knapp was
having his students work on the
liberation of the peasantry from serfdom in the various German provinces.
Hoping to create a similar center at Vienna, Professor Gr?nberg set his students
to do research on the elimination of serfdom in the various parts of
Austria. Young Ludwig Mises was
assigned the task of studying
the disappearance of serfdom in his native Galicia. Mises later lamented that
his book on this subject, published in 1902, was, because of the
Knapp-Gr?nberg methodology ?more a history of government measures than
economic history.? [2] The same
problems beset his second
historical work published three years later, a study of early child labor laws
in Austria, which proved to be ?not much better.?[3]
Despite his chafing at the statism and Prussianism of the Historical
School, Mises had not yet discovered economic theory, the Austrian School, and
the economic liberalism of the free market. In his early years at the
university, he was a left-liberal and interventionist, although he quickly
rejected Marxism. He joined the university-affiliated Association for Education
in the Social Sciences, and plunged into applied economic reform. In his third
year at the university Mises did research on housing conditions under Professor
Eugen von Philippovich, and the following semester, for a
seminar on Criminal Law, did research on changes in the law on domestic
servants. From his detailed studies, Mises began to realize that reform laws
only succeeded in being counterproductive, and that all improvements in the
condition of the workers had come about through the operations of
capitalism.
Around Christmas 1903 Mises discovered the Austrian school of economics
by reading Carl Menger?s great Principles of Economics, and thus began to see that
there was a world of positive economic theory and free-market liberalism that
complemented his empirical discoveries on the weaknesses of interventionist
reform.
On the publication of his two books in economic history and on the
receipt of his doctorate in 1906, Mises ran into a problem that would plague him
the rest of his life: the refusal of academia to grant him a full-time, paid
position. It boggles the mind what this extraordinarily productive and creative
man was able to accomplish in economic theory and philosophy when down to his
mid-50s, his full-time energies were devoted to applied political-economic work.
Until middle-age, in short, he could only pursue economic theory and write his
extraordinary and influential books and articles, as an overtime leisure
activity. What could he have done, and what would the world have gained, if he
had enjoyed the leisure that most academics fritter away? As it is, Mises writes
that his plans for extensive research in economic and social history were
thwarted for lack of available time. He states wistfully that ?I never found
opportunity to do this work. After completing my university education, I never
again had the time for work in archives and libraries.? [4]
Mises?s doctorate was in the Faculty of Laws at the University and so for
several years after 1906 he clerked at a series of civil, commercial, and
criminal courts, and became an associate at a law form. In addition, preparing
himself for a teaching career, Mises began to teach economics,
constitutional law, and administration to the senior class of the Vienna
Commercial Academy for Women, a position which he held until the completion of
his first great book in 1912. [5] For the most part, however, he plunged into
applied economic work. One job, beginning in 1909, was as an economist at the
Central Association for Housing Reform. Mises became the Association?s expert on
real estate taxation, discovering that the abysmal housing conditions in Austria
were brought about by high tax rates on corporations and capital gains. Mises
advocated lowering these taxes, particularly the high taxes on real estate,
which, he pointed out, would not so much reduce rents as it would raise the
market value of real estate and thereby stimulate housing investment. Mises was
successful in pushing through a substantial reduction in housing taxes. He
continued at this post until 1914, when the war brought housing construction to
an end.
Mises?s major post, from 1909 until he left Austria twenty-five years
later, was a full-time job as economist at the Vienna Chamber of
Commerce. [6] In Austria the Chambers of Commerce were akin
to ?economic parliaments,? created by the government, with delegates elected by
businessmen and financed by taxation. The Chambers were formed to give economic
advice to the government, and the center of power was its General Assembly,
consisting of delegates from the various local and provincial Chambers, and with
the committees of that Assembly. The experts advising the Chambers and the
General Assembly were gathered in the offices of the secretaries to the various
Chambers. By the turn of the twentieth century, economists working in the
secretary?s office of the Vienna Chamber (the preeminent of the various
Chambers) had become important economic advisers to the government. By the end
of World War I, Mises, operating from
his quasi-independent position at the Chamber, became the principal
economic adviser to the government, and, as we shall see below, won a number of
battles on behalf of free markets and sound money.
2
The Theory of Money and Credit
In 1903, the influential monetary economist Karl Helfferich, in his work
on Money, laid down a challenge to the Austrian School. He pointed out
correctly that the great Austrians, Menger, Böhm-Bawerk, and their followers,
despite their prowess in analyzing the market and the value of goods and
services (what we would now call ?micro-economics?), had not managed to solve
the problem of money. Marginal utility theory had not been extended to the value
of money, which had continued, as under the English classical economists, to be
kept in a ?macro? box strictly separate from utility, value, and relative
prices. Even the best monetary analysis, as in Ricardo, the Currency School, and
Irving Fisher in the United States, had been developed in terms of ?price
levels,? ?velocities,? and other aggregates completely ungrounded in any micro
analysis of the actions of individuals.
In particular, the extension of Austrian analysis to money faced a
seemingly insuperable obstacle, the ?problem of the Austrian circle.? The
problem was this: for directly consumable goods the utility and therefore the
demand for a product can be arrived at
clearly. The consumer sees the product, evaluates it, and ranks it on his value
scale. These utilities to consumers interact to form a market demand. Market
supply is determined by the expected demand, and the two interact to determine
market price. But a particular problem is posed by the utility of, and the
demand for, money. For money is demanded on the market, and held in one?s cash
balance, not for its own sake but solely for present or future purchases
of other goods. The distinctive nature of money is that it is not consumed, but
only used as a medium of exchange to facilitate exchanges on the market. Money,
therefore, is only demanded on the market because it has a pre-existing
purchasing-power, or value or price on the market. For all consumer goods and
services, therefore, value and demand logically precede and determine
price. But the value of money, while determined by demand, also precedes it; in
fact, a demand for money presupposes that money already has a value and price. A
causal explanation of the value of money seems to founder in unavoidable
circular reasoning.
In 1906, his doctorate out of the way, Mises determined to take up
the Helfferich challenge, apply marginal utility theory to money, and solve the
problem of the Austrian circle. He devoted a great deal of effort to both
empirical and theoretical studies of monetary problems. The first fruits of this
study were three scholarly articles, two in German journals and one in the
English Economic Journal in 1908-09, on foreign exchange controls and the
gold standard in Austria-Hungary. In the course of writing these articles,
Mises became convinced that, contrary to prevailing opinion, monetary inflation
was the cause of balance of payments deficits instead of the other way round, and that
bank credit should not be ?elastic? to fulfill the alleged needs of
trade.
Mises?s article on the gold standard proved highly controversial. He
called for a de jure return
in Austria-Hungary to
gold redemption as a logical conclusion of the existing defacto policy of
redeemability. In addition to running up against advocates of inflation, lower
interest rates, and lower exchange rates, Mises was surprised to face ferocious
opposition by the central bank, the Austro-Hungarian Bank. In fact, the
Bank?s Vice-President hinted at a bribe to soften Mises?s position. A few years
later, Mises was informed by Böhm-Bawerk, then Minister of Finance, of the
reason for the vehemence of the Bank?s opposition to his proposal for a legal
gold standard. Legal redemption in gold would probably deprive the Bank of the
right to invest funds in foreign currencies. But the Bank had long used proceeds
from these investments to amass a secret and illegal slush fund, from which to
pay subventions to its own officials, as well as to influential journalists and
politicians. The Bank was keen on retaining the slush fund, and so it was
fitting that Mises?s most militant opponent was the publisher of an economic
periodical who was himself a recipient of Bank subsidies.
Mises came to a decision, which he pursued for the rest of his career in
Austria, not to reveal such corruption on the part of his enemies, and to
confine himself to rebutting fallacious doctrine without revealing their
sources. But in taking this noble and self-abnegating position, by acting as if
his opponents were all worthy men and objective scholars, it might be argued
that Mises was legitimating them and granting them far higher stature in the
public debate than they deserved. Perhaps, if the public had been informed of
the corruption that almost always accompanies government intervention, the
activities of the statists and inflationists might have been desanctified, and
Mises?s heroic and lifelong struggle against statism might have been more
successful. In short, perhaps a one-two punch was needed: refuting the economic
fallacies of Mises?s statist enemies, and also showing the public their
self-interested stake in government privilege.[7]
His preliminary research out of the way, Mises embarked, in 1909, on his
first monumental work, published in 1912 as Theorie des Geldes and der
Umlaufsmittel [The Theory of Money and Credit]. It was a remarkable
achievement, because for the first time, the micro/macro split that had
begun in English classical economics with Ricardo was now healed. At long last,
economics was whole, an integral science based on a logical, step-by-step
analysis of individual human action. Money was fully integrated into an analysis
of individual action and of the market economy.
By basing his analysis on individual action, Mises was able to show the
deep fallacies of the orthodox mechanistic Anglo-American quantity theory and of
Irving Fisher?s ?equation of exchange.? An increase in the quantity of
money does not mechanically yield a proportional increase in a non-existent
?price level,? without affecting relative utilities or prices. Instead, an
increase lowers the purchasing power of the money unit, but does so by
inevitably changing relative incomes and prices. Micro and macro are
inextricably commingled. Hence, by focusing on individual action, on choice and
demand for money, Mises not only was able to integrate the theory of money with
the Austrian theory of value and price; he transformed monetary theory from an
unrealistic and distorted concentration on mechanistic relations between
aggregates, to one consistent with the theory of individual choice.[8]
Moreover, Mises revived the critical monetary insight of Ricardo and the
British Currency School of the first half of the nineteenth century: that while
money is a commodity subject to the supply-and-demand determination of value of
any other commodity, it differs in one crucial aspect. Other things being equal,
an increase in the supply of consumer goods confers a social benefit by raising
living standards. But money, in contrast, has only one function: to exchange,
now or at some time in the future, for capital or consumer goods. Money is not
eaten or used as are consumer goods, nor used up in production as are capital
goods. An increase in the quantity of money only serves to dilute the exchange
effectiveness of each franc or dollar; it confers no social benefit whatever. In
fact, the reason why the government and its controlled banking system tend to
keep inflating the money supply, is precisely because the increase is not
granted to everyone equally. Instead, the nodal point of initial increase is the
government itself and its central bank; other early receivers of the new money
are favored new borrowers from the banks, contractors to the government, and
government bureaucrats themselves. These early receivers of the new money, Mises
pointed out, benefit at the expense of those down the line of the chain, or
ripple effect, who get the new money last, or of people on fixed incomes who
never receive the new influx of money. In a profound sense, then, monetary
inflation is a hidden form of taxation or redistribution of wealth, to
the government and its favored groups and from the rest of the
population. Mises?s conclusion, then, is that, once there is enough of a supply
of a commodity to be established on the market as money, there is no need
ever to increase the supply of money. This means that any supply of money
whatever is ?optimal?; and every change in the supply of money stimulated by
government can only be pernicious. [9]
In the course of refuting the Fisherine notion of money
as some sort of ?measure of value,? Mises made an important contribution to
utility theory in general, a contribution that corrected an important flaw in
the Austrian utility analysis of Menger and Böhm-Bawerk. Although the older
Austrians did not stress this flaw as much as Jevons or Walras, there were
indications that they believed utility to be measurable, and that there is sense
in talking of a ?total utility? of the supply of a good that would be an
integral of its ?marginal utilities.?
Mises built on an important insight of the Czech economic Franz Čuhel, a
student at Böhm-Bawerk?s graduate seminar, that since marginal utility was
strictly subjective to each individual, it was purely an ordinal ranking, and
could in no sense be added, subtracted, or measured, and a fortiori could
not be compared between persons. Mises developed this theme to demonstrate that
therefore the very concept of ?total utility? makes no sense at all,
particularly as an integral of marginal utilities. Instead, the utility of a
larger batch of a good is simply another marginal utility
of a larger unit. Thus, if we take the utility to the consumer of a carton of a
dozen eggs, it is impermissible to make this utility some sort of a ?total
utility?, in some mathematical relation to the ?marginal utility of one egg.?
Instead, we are merely dealing with marginal utilities of different-sized units. In one case a dozen-egg package, in the other case of one egg. The
only thing we can say about the two marginal utilities is that the marginal
utility of a dozen eggs is worth more than one egg. Period. Mises?s correction
of his mentors was consistent with the fundamental Austrian methodology of
focusing always on the real actions of individuals, and allowing no drift into
relying on mechanistic aggregates.[10]
If the Čuhel-Mises insight had been absorbed into the mainstream of
utility theory, economics would have been spared, on the one hand, the tossing
out of marginal utility altogether in the late 1930s as hopelessly cardinal, in
favor of indifference curves and marginal rates of substitution; and, on the
other, the current absurd micro-textbook discussions of ?utils,? nonexistent
entities subject to measurement and mathematical manipulation.
What of the famous problem of the Austrian circle? Mises solved that in
one of his most important, and yet most neglected, contributions to economics:
the Regression Theorem. Mises built on Menger?s logical-historical account
of the origin of
money out of barter, and demonstrated logically that money can only originate in that way. In doing so, he solved the problem of the circular
explanation of the utility of money. Specifically, the problem of the circle is
that, at any given time, say DayN, the value
[purchasing-power] of money on that Day is determined by two entities: the Supply of
MoneyN and the Demand for MoneyN, which
itself depends on a pre-existing Purchasing Power on
DayN-1. Mises broke out of this circle
precisely by understanding and grasping the time dimension of the
problem. For the circle on any given day is broken by the fact that the Demand
for Money on that day is dependent on a previous day?s purchasing power,
and hence on a previous days demand for money. But haven?t we broken out of the
circle only to land ourselves in an infinite regress backwards in time, with each day?s purchasing power
resting on today?s demand for money, in turn dependent on the previous day?s
purchasing power, in turn determined by the previous day?s demand, etc.? It is
no help to escape circular reasoning only to land in a regress of causes that
can never be closed.
But the brilliance of Mises?s
solution is that the logical regress backward in time is not infinite: it
closes precisely at the point in time when money is a useful non-monetary
commodity in a system of barter. In short, say that Day1 is the first moment that a commodity is used as a medium of indirect
exchange [to simplify: as a ?money?], while the previous Day0
is the last day that commodity, say gold, was used only as a direct good in a
system of barter. In that case, the causal chain of any day?s value of money,
say DayN, goes back logically in time, to
Day1, and then goes back to Day0. In short,
the demand for gold on Day1 depends on the
purchasing power of gold on Day0. But then the regress
backward stops, since the Demand for Gold on Day0 consists only of its direct value in consumption, and hence does not
include a historical component, i.e. the existence of prices for gold on the
previous day, Day-1.
In addition to closing the determinants of the value or purchasing power
of money and thereby solving the Austrian circle, Mises?s demonstration showed
that, unlike other goods, the determinants of the value of money include an
important historical dimension. The Regression Theorem also shows that money, in
any society, can only become established by a market process emerging from
barter. Money cannot be established by a social contract, by government
imposition, or by artificial schemes proposed by economists. Money can only
emerge, ?organically? so to speak, out of the market. [11]
Comprehension of Mises?s Regression Theorem would spare us numerous
impossible schemes, some proffered by Austrians or quasi-Austrians, to create
new moneys or currency units out of thin air: such as F. A. Hayek?s proposed
?ducat,? or plans to separate units of account from media of
exchange.
In addition to his feat in integrating the theory of money
with general economics and placing it on the micro-foundations of individual
action, Mises, in Money and Credit, transformed the existing analysis of
banking. Returning to the Ricardian-Currency School tradition, he demonstrated
that they were correct in wishing to abolish inflationary fractional-reserve
credit. Mises distinguished two separate kinds of functions undertaken by banks:
channeling savings into productive credit [?commodity credit?], and acting as a
money-warehouse in holding cash for safekeeping. Both are legitimate and
non-inflationary functions; the trouble comes when the money-warehouses issue
and lend out phony warehouse receipts [notes or demand deposits] to cash that
does not exist in the bank?s vaults [?fiduciary credit?]. These ?uncovered?
demand liabilities issued by the banks expand the money supply and generate the
problems of inflation. Mises therefore favored the Currency School approach of
100% specie reserves to demand liabilities. He pointed out that Peel?s Act of
1844, established in England on Currency School principles, failed and
discredited its authors by applying 100% reserves only to bank notes, and not
realizing that demand deposits were also surrogates for cash and therefore
functioned as part of the money supply. Mises wrote his book at a time when much
of the economics profession was still not sure that demand deposits constituted
part of the money supply.
Not wishing to trust government to enforce 100% reserves, however, Mises
advocated totally free banking as a means of approaching that ideal. Money
and Credit demonstrated that the major force coordinating and promoting
bank credit inflation was each nation?s central bank, which centralized
reserves, bailed out banks in trouble, and made sure that all banks inflated
together. Eight years before C.A. Phillips?s famous demonstration, Money and
Credit showed that an individual bank enjoyed very little room to expand
credit.
But this is not all. For Mises began, on the foundations of his theory of
money and banking, to develop what was to become his famous theory of the
business cycle?the only such theory integrated with
general micro-economics and built on the foundations of the analysis of
individual action. These rudiments were further developed in the second edition
of Money and Credit in 1924.
In the first place, Mises was brilliantly able to identify the process as
essentially the same: (a) one bank?s expanding credit, soon leading to a
contraction and demand for redemption; and (b) all banks in the nation, guided
by a central bank, expanding money and credit together and thereby gaining more
time for a Hume-Ricardo specie-flow price mechanism to
develop. Thus credit and the money supply expand, incomes and prices rise, gold
flows out of the country [i.e. a balance of payments deficit], and a resulting
collapse of credit and the banks, force a contraction of money and prices, and a
reverse specie flow into the county. Not only did Mises see that these two
processes were basically the same; he was also the first to see that here was a
rudimentary model of a boom-bust cycle, created and driven by monetary factors,
specifically expansion and later contraction of ?created? bank
credit.
During the 1920s, Mises formulated his business cycle theory out of three
pre-existing elements: the Currency School boom-bust model of the business
cycle; the Swedish ?Austrian? Knut Wicksell?s differentiation between the
?natural? and the bank interest rates; and Böhm-Bawerkian capital and interest
theory. Mises?s remarkable integration of these previously totally separate
analyses showed that inflationary or created bank credit, by pumping in more
money into the economy and by lowering interest rates on business loans below
the free market, time preference level, inevitably caused an excess of
malinvestments in capital goods industries remote from the consumer. The longer
the boom of inflationary bank credit continues, the greater the scope of
malinvestments in capital goods, and the greater the need for liquidation of
these unsound investments. When the credit expansion stops, reverses, or even
significantly slows down, the malinvestments are revealed. Mises demonstrated
that the recession, far from being a strange, unexplainable aberration to be
combated, is really a necessary process by which the market economy liquidates
the unsound investments of the boom, and returns to the right
consumption/investment proportions to satisfy consumers in the most efficient
way.
Thus, in contrast to interventionists and statists who believe that the
government must intervene to combat the recession process caused by the inner
workings of free-market capitalism, Mises demonstrated precisely the opposite:
that the government must keep its hands off the recession, so that the recession
process can quickly eliminate the distortions imposed by the government-created
inflationary boom.
Despite these dazzling contributions of The Theory of Money and
Credit, Mises felt
frustrated. He
had carved out a theory of money and credit, and, for the first time, integrated
it into general economic theory. He saw, also, that the general theory itself
needed revising, and he originally intended to set forth a revised theory of
direct exchange and relative price, along with his new theory of money. He also
wished to present a thorough-going critique of the newly fashionable
mathematical method in economics. But he had to shelve his grand plan for
an integrated positive theory and a critique of mathematical economics, because
he rightly believed that a world war would soon break out. As Mises wrote, in
the midst of the next tragic world war,
If I could have worked quietly
and taken my time, I would have begun with a theory of direct
exchange in the
first volume; and then I could proceed to the theory of indirect exchange. But I
actually began with indirect exchange, because I believed that I did not have
much time; I knew that we were
on the eve
of a great war and I wanted to complete my book before the war?s
outbreak.[12]
It was only in the 1940s, with National?konomie (1940), and its greatly expanded English edition, his masterwork, Human Action
(1949), that Ludwig von Mises was able to complete his grand reconstruction
and culmination of economic theory.
3
The Reception of Mises and of Money and Credit
The Theory of Money and Credit did not attain anything like the
reception it deserved. The Schmollerite Historical School-dominated German
economics profession gave the book, as to be expected, very short shrift. Even
the Austrians turned a deaf ear to Mises?s brilliant innovations. By this time,
Mises had been for years a devoted member of Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk?s famous
seminar at the University of Vienna. After the publication of Money and
Credit, the Böhm-Bawerk seminar spent two full semesters discussing Mises?s
work. The consensus rejected Mises?s contributions totally. Böhm-Bawerk admitted
that Mises?s logic, and his step-by-step process analysis, was correct. B?hm
therefore did not deny that a change in the money supply would not simply
increase all prices equi-proportionally. On the contrary, money could never be
?neutral? to the price system, and any change of the supply of money is bound to
alter relative prices and incomes. B?hm conceded these points, but then betrayed
the essence of Austrian methodology by claiming that all this could be blithely
ignored as ?friction.? As Mises put it,
According to him
[B?hm], the old doctrine was correct ?in principle? and maintains its
full significance for an analysis aimed at ?purely economic action.? In real
life there is resistance and friction which cause the result to deviate from
that arrived at theoretically. I tried in vain to convince Böhm-Bawerk of the
inadmissability of the use of metaphors borrowed from mechanics. [13]
With Böhm-Bawerk and his fellow Austrians uncomprehendingly
rejecting Mises?s ?praxeological? as opposed to positivist approach [that is,
his realization that every step of deductive theory has to be true in order to
avoid injecting ineradicable error and falsehood into the theory], and spurning
his integrating of monetary into general theory, disdained by Schmollerites and
positivists alike, Ludwig von Mises set out uncomplainingly on the lonely path
of carving out a new ?neo-Austrian? school of economic thought.
Agree with him or not, Ludwig von Mises was clearly a major innovative
economist, surely worthy of an academic post at the University of Vienna. True,
that as a result of Money and Credit, Mises was appointed in 1913 to a
post as professor at the University. But it was only to the unpaid, if
prestigious, post of privatdozent. While Mises gave lectures and a highly
successful weekly seminar at the University for the next two decades, he
never achieved a paid university post, and therefore had to continue full-time
as economist for the Chamber of Commerce, and as the major economic adviser to
the country. He still did not have the leisure to pursue unimpeded his
brilliantly creative work in economic theory.
Mises?s career, along with many others, was interrupted for the four
years of World War I. After three years at the front as an artillery officer,
Mises spent the last year of the war in the economics division of the War
Department, where he was able to write journal articles on foreign trade, and in
opposition to inflation, and to
publish Nation, Staat und Wirtschaft [Nation, State, and Economy] (1919)
on behalf of ethnic and cultural freedom for all minorities.
The question of academic posts was then faced fully after the end of the
war. The University of Vienna conferred three paid professorships in economics:
before the war, they were filled by Böhm-Bawerk, his brother-in-law Friedrich
von Wieser, and Eugen von Philippovich. B?hm died tragically shortly after the
outbreak of the war, Philippovich retired before the war, and Wieser followed
soon after the war was over. The first vacancy went to Mises?s old teacher Carl
Gr?nberg, but Gr?nberg went off to a chair at Frankfort in the early 1920s. This
left three vacancies at Vienna, and it was generally assumed that Mises would
get one of them. Certainly by any academic standards, he richly deserved
it.
Gr?nberg?s chair went to another historian, Count Ferdinand
Degenfeld-Sch?nburg, a ?complete nonentity? [Fritz Machlup], whose only
qualifications for the position were his title of nobility and his ?disfiguring
war injuries.? [14] But what of the other two posts, both slated for
theorists, succeeding Wieser and Böhm-Bawerk? Despite his innovations not being
accepted by orthodox Austrians, Mises was clearly the outstanding bearer of the
great Austrian tradition. Known as an excellent teacher, his seminal journal
article in 1920 on the impossibility of economic calculation under socialism was
the most important theoretical critique ever leveled at socialism. Not only
that: it was so recognized by socialists all over the Continent, who
labored?unsuccessfully?for nearly two decades to try to refute Mises?s
challenging criticism.
But Mises was never chosen for a paid academic post; indeed he was passed
over four times. Instead, the two theoretical chairs went (a) to Othmar Spann, a
German-trained Austrian organicist sociologist, barely cognizant of
economics, who was to become one of
Austria?s most prominent fascist theoreticians, and (b) to Hans Mayer, Wieser?s
handpicked successor, who, despite his contributions to Austrian utility theory,
was scarcely in the same league as Mises. Mayer, furthermore, strongly
disapproved of Mises?s laissez-faire liberal conclusions. The University of
Vienna professoriate, before the war the envy of Europe, began to take on the
dimensions of a zoo, as Spann and Mayer intrigued against each other, and
against Mises, who as a privatdozent, was low man on the academic totem
pole. Mayer would openly humiliate Spann to students, and systematically slam
the door in Spann?s face if they were both entering a room. Spann, for his part,
increasingly anti-Semitic in a developing anti-Semitic milieu, denounced
appointments of Jewish academics in secret faculty meetings, and also castigated
Mayer for backing such appointments. Mayer, on the other hand, managed to
adapt easily to the Nazi assumption of power in Austria in 1938, leading the
faculty in ostentatious devotion to the Nazi cause. Mayer, in fact, informed the
Nazis that Spann was insufficiently pro-Nazi, and Spann was arrested and
tortured by the Nazis in consequence.[15]
In this fetid atmosphere, it is no wonder that Mises reports that Spann
and Mayer discriminated against his students, who were forced to audit Mises?s
seminar without registering, and ?also made it very difficult for those doctoral
candidates in the social sciences who wanted to write their theses with me; and
those who sought to qualify for a university lectureship had to be careful not
to be known as my students.? Students who registered for Mises?s seminar without
registering for the seminar of one of his rivals, were not allowed to use the
economics department library; but Mises triumphantly notes that his own library
at the Chamber of Commerce was ?incomparably better? than that of the economics
department, so this restriction, at least, caused his students no
hardship. [16]
After interviewing Mises?s friends and former students, Earlene Craver
indicates that Mises was not appointed to a professorial chair because he had
three strikes against him: (1) he was an unreconstructed laissez-faire liberal
in a world of opinion that was rapidly being captured by socialism of either the
Marxian left or of the corporatist-fascist right; (2) he was Jewish, in a
country that was becoming increasingly anti-Semitic; [17] (3) he was personally intransigent and
unwilling ever to compromise his principles. Mises?s former students F.A. Hayek
and Fritz Machlup concluded that ?Mises?s accomplishments were such that two of
these defects might have been overlooked?but never three.? [18]
But there is, I believe, another important reason for this shameful
treatment that Craver does not mention and that Mises hints at in his memoir,
although perhaps without seeing the significance. Unlike their successful
enemies, such as Schmoller and Lujo Brentano, and even Wieser, neither Menger
nor Böhm-Bawerk saw the academic arena as a political battlefield to be
conquered. Hence, in contrast to their opponents, they refused to promote their
own disciples or followers, or to block the appointment of their enemies. In
fact, Böhm-Bawerk leaned even further backward to urge the appointments of sworn
enemies of himself and of the Austrian School. This curious form of
self-abnegation helped to torpedo Mises?s or any similar academic appointment.
Menger and B?hm apparently insisted on the naive view that truth will always win
out, unaided, not realizing that this is hardly the way truth ever wins out in
the academic or any other arena. Truth must be promoted, organized, and fought
for as against error. Even if we can hold the faith that truth, unaided by
strategy or tactics, will win out in the long run, it is unfortunately an
excruciatingly long run in which all too many of us?certainly including
Mises?will be dead. Yet, Menger adopted the ruinous strategic view that ?there
is only one sure method for the final victory of a scientific idea, by letting
every contrary proposition run a free and full course.? >[19]
While Mises?s ideas and
reputation, if not his academic post, as well as his writings, enjoyed a growing
influence in Austria and the rest of Europe in the 1920s, his influence
in the English-speaking world was greatly limited by the fact that Money and
Credit was not translated until 1934. The American economist Benjamin M.
Anderson, Jr., in his The Value of Money (1917) was the first English-speaking writer
to appreciate Mises?s work, and the remainder of his Anglo-American
influence had to wait for the early 1930s. Money and Credit could have been far more influential had it
not received a belittling and totally uncomprehending review from the
brilliant young economist John Maynard Keynes, then an editor of the leading
British scholarly economic periodical, the Economic Journal. Keynes wrote that the book
had ?considerable merit,? that it was ?enlightened in the highest degree
possible? [whatever that may mean], that the author was ?widely read,? but that
in the end Keynes was disappointed because it was not ?constructive? or
?original.? Now whatever may be thought about The Theory of Money and
Credit, it was highly constructive
and systematic, and almost blazingly original, and so Keynes?s reaction is
puzzling indeed. The puzzle was cleared up, however, a decade and a half later,
when, in his Treatise on Money, Keynes wrote that ?In German, I can only
clearly understand what I already know? so that new ideas are apt to be
veiled from me by the difficulties of the language.? The breath-taking
arrogance, the sheer gall of reviewing a book in a language in which he could
not grasp new ideas, and then denouncing the book for containing nothing new was
all too characteristic of Keynes.[20]
4
Mises in the 1920s: Economic Adviser to the Government
As soon as he returned from war
service, Mises resumed his unpaid teaching duties at the university, adding
an economics
seminar in 1918. Mises writes that he only continued working at the Chamber
because a paid university post was closed to him. Despite the fact that ?I [did
not] aspire to a position in government service,? his teaching duties and the
leisure hours he devoted to creative scholarship, Mises performed his numerous
tasks as economics official with great thoroughness, energy and
dispatch. [21] After the war, in addition to his Chamber of
Commerce post, Mises was employed as the head of a temporary postwar government
office dealing with the prewar debt. Young F. A. Hayek, though he had been in
Mises?s class at the university first got to know him as Mises?s subordinate in
the debt office. Hayek writes that ?there I came to know him mainly as a
tremendously efficient executive, the kind of man who, as was said of John
Stuart Mill, because he does a normal day?s work in two hours always has a clear
desk and time to talk about anything. I came to know him as one of the best
educated and informed men I had ever known?.? [22]
Many years later, Mises related to me, with typical charm and gentle wit,
a story of the time when he was appointed by the Austrian government as its
representative for trade talks with the short-lived postwar Bolshevik Bela Kun
government of Hungary. Karl Polanyi, later to be a well-known leftwing economic
historian in the United States was the Kun government representative. ?Polanyi
and I both knew that the Kun government would fall shortly,? Mises told me with
a twinkle, ?and so we both made sure to drag out the ?negotiations? so that
Polanyi could remain comfortably in Vienna. We had many delightful walks in
Vienna until the Kun government met its inevitable end.?[23]
Hungary was not the only government to go Bolshevik temporarily in the
tragic and chaotic aftermath of World War I. Amidst the turmoil of defeat, many
countries of central and eastern Europe were inspired and tempted to follow the
example of the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia. Parts of Germany went Bolshevik
for a time, and Germany only escaped this fate because of the turn to the Right
of the Social Democratic Party, previously committed to a Marxist
revolution. It was similarly touch and go in the new, truncated little
country of Austria, still suffering from the Allied food blockade during the
tragic winter of 1918?19. The Marxist Social Democratic party, led by the
brilliant ?Austro-Marxist? theoretician Otto Bauer, headed the Austrian
government. In a profound sense, the fate of Austria rested with Otto
Bauer.
Bauer, son of a wealthy North Bohemian manufacturer, was converted to
Marxism by his high school teacher, and dedicated his life to never flagging in
zeal for the radical Marxist cause. He was determined never to abandon that
cause to any form of revisionism or opportunism as so many Marxists had done in
the past (and would continue to do in the future). Bauer enlisted in
Böhm-Bawerk?s great seminar determined to use the knowledge he would gain to
write the definitive Marxian refutation
of B?hm?s famous demolition of
the Marxian labor theory of value. In the course of the
seminar, Bauer and Mises became close friends. Bauer eventually abandoned the
attempt, virtually admitting to Mises that the labor theory of value was indeed
untenable.
Now, with Bauer planning to take Austria into the Bolshevik camp, Mises,
as economic adviser to the government, and above all as a citizen of his
county and as a champion of freedom, talked night after night, and at great
length with Bauer and his equally devoted Marxian wife Helene Gumplowicz. Mises
pointed out that with Austria drastically short of food, a Bolshevik regime in
Vienna would inevitably find its food supply cut off by the Allies, and in the
ensuing starvation such a regime could not last more than a couple of weeks.
Finally, the Bauers were reluctantly persuaded of this incontrovertible
fact, and did what they had sworn never to do: turn rightward and betray the
Bolshevik cause.
Reviled as traitors by radical Marxists from then on, the Bauers turned
in fury against the man they held responsible for their action: Ludwig von
Mises. Bauer tried to get Mises removed from his university post, and from then
on they never spoke to each other again. Interestingly, Mises claims credit for
preventing the Bolshevik takeover singlehandedly; he had no help in his
dedicated opposition from conservative parties, the Catholic Church, or from
business or managerial groups. Mises recalls bitterly that:
Everyone was so convinced of the inevitability of the coming of
Bolshevism that they were intent merely on securing for themselves a favorable
position in the new order. The Catholic Church and its followers, the Christian
Social Party, were ready to welcome Bolshevism with the same ardor that
archbishops and bishops twenty years later welcomed Nazism. Bank directors and
big industrialists hoped to earn a good living as ?managers? under
Bolshevism.[24]
If Mises succeeded in stopping Bolshevism in Austria, his second great
task as government economic adviser was only partially successful: combating the
post-war bank credit inflation. Armed with his great insight and expertise into
money and banking, Mises was unusually well-equipped for going against the tide
of history and stopping the modern rage for inflation and cheap money, an urge
given full rein by the abandonment of the gold standard by all the warring
European countries during World War I.
In the thankless task of opposing cheap money and inflation, and calling
for a balanced budget and a cessation of all increases of bank notes, Mises was
aided by his friend Wilhelm Rosenberg, a former student of Carl Menger and a
noted attorney and financial expert. It was because of Mises and Rosenberg that
Austria did not go the whole way of the disastrous runaway inflation that would
ravage Germany in 1923. Yet Mises and Rosenberg only succeeded in slowing down
and delaying the effects of inflation rather than eliminating it. Due to their
heroic efforts, the Austrian crown was stabilized in 1922 at the enormously
depreciated?but not yet runaway?rate of 14,400 paper crowns to one gold crown.
Yet, Mises writes, their ?victory came too late,? The destructive
consequences of inflation continued, capital was consumed by inflation and
welfare state programs, and the banking collapse finally arrived in 1931,
postponed by Mises?s efforts for ten years.
In order to pursue their unwavering battle against inflation, Mises and
Rosenberg sought political allies, and managed to secure the reluctant support
of the Christian-Social Party, in particular of its leader Father Ignaz Seipel.
Before Seipel agreed to stabilize the crown in 1922, Mises and Rosenberg warned
him that every stoppage of inflation results in a ?stabilization recession,? and
that he must be prepared to undergo the gripes of the public when the inevitable
recession occurred. Unfortunately, the party put its financial affairs into the
hands of the attorney Gottfried Kunwald, a corruptionist who secured friendly
politicians and businessmen privileged government contracts. Whereas Kunwald in
private saw that Mises was right, and that a continuation of the inflationary
policies after stabilization was leading to catastrophe, he insisted that Mises
as government economist keep quiet about the realities of the situation so as
not to scare the public or foreign markets about the situation of the banks.
And, in particular, so that Kunwald would not lose his influence in procuring
licenses and government contracts for his clients. Mises was indeed in the midst
of an oppressive situation. In 1926, Mises had founded the Austrian Institute
for Business Cycle Research. Four years later, Mises became a member of the
prestigious governmental Economic Commission to inquire into the economic
difficulties of Austria. When Mises had the Institute prepare a report for the
Commission, it became clear that the banks were on the point of collapse and
that Austria was disastrously consuming capital. The banks, of course, objected
to the Commission or the Institute publishing the report and thereby endangering
their own precarious positions. Mises was torn between his devotion to
scientific truth and his commitment to trying to bolster the existing system as
long as possible; and so, in a compromise, he agreed that neither the Commission
nor Institute would publish, but instead the damaging report would appear under
the personal name of the Institute?s director, Oskar Morgenstern.
Under these crippling pressures, it was no wonder that Wilhelm Rosenberg,
despairing of the situation, was driven to death; Mises, however, fought on
bravely and it must have been almost a relief to him when the Austrian banks met
their inevitable doom in l931.[25]
Mises?s words apply every bit as much to his fight against inflation as
they explicitly do to his long, losing struggle against the eventual Nazi
takeover of Austria:
For sixteen years I fought a battle in the Chamber in which I won nothing
more than a mere delay of the catastrophe. I made heavy personal sacrifices
although I always foresaw that success would be denied me. But I do not regret
that I attempted the impossible. I could not act otherwise. I fought because I
could do no other. [26]
Mises was often accused of being intransigent and uncompromising. In a
moving passage in his memoirs, Mises looked back on his career as government
adviser and reproached himself for the opposite error?of compromising too
much:
Occasionally I was reproached because I made my point too bluntly and
intransigently, and I was told that I could have achieved more if I had shown
more willingness to compromise.... I felt the criticism was unjustified; I could
be effective only if I presented the situation truthfully as I saw it. As I look
back today at my activity with the Chamber I regret only my willingness to
compromise, not my intransigence. I was always ready to yield in unimportant
matters if I could save other more important issues. Occasionally I even made
intellectual compromises by signing reports which included statements that did
not represent my position. This was the only possible way to gain acceptance by
the General Assembly of the Chamber or approval by the public of matters I
considered important.[27]
5
Mises in the 1920s: Scholar and Creator
The Bolshevik Revolution, as well as the growth of corporatist sentiment
during and after World War I, transformed socialism from a utopian vision
and goal into a spreading reality. Before Mises turned his great searchlight of
a mind on the problem, criticisms of socialism had been strictly moral or
political, stressing its use of massive coercion. Or, if economic, they had
focused on the grave disincentive effects of communal or collective ownership
(often expressed in the gibe, ?Under socialism, who will take out the
garbage??). But Mises, addressing the problem in a paper delivered to the
National?konomisch Gesellschaft [Economic Society] in 1919, came up
with the most devastating possible demolition: the impossibility of economic
calculation under socialism. Mises?s
paper was published the following year as ?Die Wirtschaftsrechnung im
sozialistischen Gemeinwesen? (?Economic Calculation in the Socialist
Commonwealth?), in the Archiv f?r Sozialwissenschaft und Sozialpolitik.
It was a veritable shock to thoughtful socialists, for it
demonstrated that, since the socialist planning board would be shorn of a
genuine price system for the means of production, the planners would be unable
to rationally calculate the costs, the profitability, or the productivity of
these resources, and hence would be unable to allocate resources rationally in a
modern complex economy. The stunning impact of Mises?s argument came from its
demolishing socialism on its own terms. A crucial objective of socialism
was for central planners to allocate resources to fulfill the planners? goals.
But Mises showed that, even if we set aside the vexed question of whether the
planners? goals coincide with the public good, socialism would not permit the
planners to achieve their own goals rationally, let alone those of consumers or
of the public interest. For rational planning and allocation of resources
require the ability to engage in economic calculation, and such calculation in
turn requires resource prices to be set in free markets where titles of
ownership are exchanged by owners of private property. But since the very
hallmark of socialism is government or collective ownership [or, at the very
least, control] of all nonhuman means of production?land and capital?this means
that socialism will not be able to calculate or rationally plan a modern
economic system.
Mises?s profound article had a blockbuster impact on European socialists,
particularly in German-speaking countries, over the next two decades, as
one socialist after another tried to solve the Mises problem. By the late 1930s,
the socialists were confident that they had solved it by using mathematical
economics, wildly unrealistic neoclassical perfect competition and general
equilibrium assumptions, and? particularly in the schemes of Oskar Lange and
Abba P. Lerner?by the central planning board?s ordering the various managers of
socialist forms to ?play at? markets and market prices. Mises expanded his
arguments in journal articles and in his comprehensive critique, Die
Gemeinwirtschaft [Socialism] in 1922. His seminal article was
finally translated into English in 1935, and his Socialism a year later,
and F. A. Hayek also weighed in with elaboration and development. Finally, Mises
gave the final rebuttal to the socialists in his monumental Human Action
in 1949.
While the official textbook line by the 1940s?when socialism had
triumphed among intellectuals?decreed that Lange and Lerner had solved the
crucial question posed by Mises, Mises and the free market have had the last
laugh. It is now generally acknowledged, especially in Communist countries,
that Mises and Hayek were right, and that the enormous defects of socialist
planning in practice have conformed their views. In virtually every Communist
country there is a rapid movement toward free markets, and even of the
reconstitution of a stock market, a market in titles to private ownership. In
the meantime, socialist intellectuals in the West, more removed from harsh
socialist reality, slough off the problem by repudiating the very goal of
rational allocation and calculation altogether, and by speaking of instinct and
irrationality being the nub and glory of socialism.
The nub and the essence of the later Misesian arguments are all
foreshadowed and encapsulated in his original 1920 journal article. It is
fashionable in some modern Austrian circles to pinpoint the crucial difference
between Mises and the socialists as entrepreneurial uncertainty vs. perfect
knowledge and general equilibrium on the part of the socialists. But this is not
Mises?s account. Mises writes that he was led to consider the socialist
calculation problem by his work on the Theory of Money and Credit. Here
Mises realized for the first time with keen clarity that the money economy does
not and cannot calculate or measure values directly: that it only calculates
with money prices, the resultants of such individual valuations. Hence, Mises
realized that only a market with money prices based on the evaluations and
exchanges of private owners can rationally allocate resources, since there is no
way by which a government could calculate values directly. Hence, for Mises his
article and book on Socialism was part and parcel of the development of his
expanded integration of micro and macro, of direct and monetary exchange, that
he had begun but not completed in Theory of Money and Credit. Thus, the
later Hayekian stress on decentralized knowledge and innovations were important
glosses and elaborations on the main Misesian point, but they were not the
central issue. The central Misesian point is that, even given resources,
values and technology, even abstracting from their changes, even then,
socialism, deprived of private ownership and free markets, could not
calculate or rationally allocate resources. Of course, a fortiori, it
could surely not do so in the
real world of change. Thus, compare Mises?s following dismissal of the
socialists with the contemporary Austrian exclusive focus on
uncertainty:
They [the socialists] failed to see the very first
challenge: How can economic action that always consists of preferring and
setting aside, that is, of making unequal valuations, be transformed into equal
valuations, by the use of equations? Thus the advocates of socialism came up
with the absurd recommendation of substituting equations of mathematical
catallactics, depicting an image from which human action is eliminated, for the
monetary calculation in the market economy.[28] [29]
Mises?s book Socialism had an enormous influence during the 1920s
and 1930s, not only in raising profound questions of socialists, but also in
converting countless young socialist intellectuals to the cause of freedom and
free markets. Brilliant young socialists Friedrich A. Hayek, Wilhelm R?pke in
Germany, and Lionel Robbins in England, were among the many converted by
Socialism, and who became for many years followers and disciples
of Mises as well.[30]
During
the 1920s, Mises also continued to develop the business cycle theory that
had emerged out of his integration of money into general microeconomics in
Money and Credit. In journal articles and books, Mises expanded his
theory, warned against the inflationary credit policy of that era, and engaged
in a scintillating critique of the proto-monetarist stabilization views of that
favorite economist of the New Era of the 1920s, Irving Fisher. Fisher and his
disciples insisted that all was well during the 1920s because, for example, the
price level in the United States remained constant. To Mises the important point
was masked by level prices caused by increases in productivity: that the
inflationary credit was creating unsound booms in capital investment and in the
markets for titles to capital?stock markets and real estate. Mises?s warnings of
financial collapse and depression were remembered after 1929, although they were
generally scorned at the time.[31]
Mises?s earliest researches had taught him that government
intervention almost invariably proved to be counterproductive; and his
explorations into money and business cycles amply conformed and reinforced this
insight. In a series of articles in the 1920s, Mises investigated various forms
of government intervention, and showed them all to be ineffective and
counterproductive. [The essays were published in book form as Kritik des
Interventionismus in 1929.] In fact, Mises arrived at a general law that,
whenever the government intervened in the economy to solve a problem, it invariably ended, not only in not
solving the original problem, but also creating one or two others, each of which
then seemed to cry out for further government intervention. In this way, he
showed government interventionism, or a ?mixed economy,? to be unstable. Each
intervention only creates new problems, which then face the government with a
choice: either repeal the original intervention, or go on to new ones. In this
way, government intervention is an unstable system, leading logically either
back to laissez-faire or on to full socialism.
But Mises knew from his study into socialism that a socialist system was
?impossible? for the modern world: that is, it was lacking the price system
necessary to economic calculation, and therefore for running a modern industrial
economy. But if interventionism is unstable, and socialism is impossible, then
the only logical economic policy for a modern industrial system was
laissez-faire liberalism. Mises therefore took the rather vague commitment to
the market economy of his Austrian predecessors and hammered it into a logical,
consistent, and uncompromising adherence to laissez-faire. In keeping with this
insight, Mises published his comprehensive work, Liberalismus, on
?classical,? or laissez-faire, liberalism, in 1927.
Thus, while Mises had not yet completed his comprehensive treatise
on economics, he had, by the end of the 1920s, hammered out the complete,
thoroughgoing political-economy part of his developing grand system.
Laissez-faire, interventionism, and socialism were now compared and contrasted
in detail, and a passionate commitment made by Mises to laissez-faire.
Strengthening that commitment was an insight he had already set forth in
Socialism: that the division of labor, and its concomitants,
private property and freedom of exchange, were absolutely basic to civilization
and to society itself. What Mises was consistently advocating, and what his
opponents of other schools of political economy were undermining, were the
very conditions necessary to the maintenance of civilization and of an economy
that sustains modern high levels of population.
In his eloquent discussion of society and the division of labor, and in
his Spencerian contrast of the industrial versus the militarist principle, Mises
also builds on the crucial Austrian insight that both parties, the buyer and the
seller, the employer and the worker, necessarily benefit from every act of
exchange. Mises concludes that the adoption and the development of the
division of labor rests on man?s reason and will, on his recognition of the
mutual benefits of exchange. This emphasis on human reason and will, in the
noblest traditions of rationalism, contrast sharply to the Hayekian or Scottish
Enlightenment emphasis on society or the market as the product of some sort of
tropism or instinct, e.g. Hayek?s emphasis on the tropistic, unwilled emergence
of ?spontaneous order,? or Adam Smith?s conjuring up of a spurious
instinct, or ?propensity to truck and barter,? as an explanation of
exchange.[32]
Indeed, seizing the occasion of writing a foreword to a
reprint of Socialism published years after Mises?s death, F.A. Hayek
significantly altered the unalloyed praise of the book that he had lavished at a
tribute dinner to Mises over twenty years earlier. Now he severely criticized
Mises?s reference in Socialism to ?social cooperation [in particular, the
market-economy] as an emanation of rationally recognized utility,? as an example
of ?extreme rationalism? and as factually incorrect. He went on to the insulting
?explanation? that Mises had not been able to ?escape from? such rationalism ?as
a child of his time?? a curious statement since Mises?s ?time? was one of
pervasive irrationalism. Hayek, in contrast, strongly asserts that ?it certainly
was not rational insight into its general benefits that led to the spreading of
the market economy.? If not that, one wonders then how the market economy got
established in the first place. For each individual exchange, no person would
engage in it unless he knew consciously and ?rationally? that he would benefit.
And as for the market economy as a whole, Hayek who in his earlier writings had
declared formly that ideas make history, fails to explain how the free market
did come about. Moreover, Hayek thereby ignores over two centuries of a
classical liberal movement in Western Europe and the United States
dedicated to freedom and free markets. In neglecting the fundamental point that
all human actions are determined by the individuals? values and ideas, a
?praxeological? insight at the heart of Misesian thought, Hayek can only
believe, without explicitly declaring it, that human beings are not conscious
actors and choosers but only tropistic stimulus-and-response mechanisms.[33]
Remarkably, we have by no means exhausted the extent of Ludwig von
Mises?s profound contributions to scholarship and to economics during the 1920s.
From his earliest days, Mises had confronted, and challenged the Historical
School of economics dominant in Germany. The Historical School was marked by its
insistence that there can be no economic laws transcending mere description of
the circumstances of individual time and place, and that the only legitimate
economics therefore is not theory but a mere examination of history.
Politically, this meant that there were no inconvenient economic laws for
government to violate, and to cause counterproductive consequences of
governmental measures. It is no wonder that the head of the Historical School,
Gustav Schmoller of the University of Berlin, declared that the function of
German academics was to form ?the intellectual bodyguard of the House of
Hohenzollern.? During the 1920s, Institutionalism, an outgrowth of the
Historical School but devoid of the latter?s scholarship or intellectual base,
became dominant in the United States. Mises was certainly correct in referring
to these groups, in his seminars, as ?anti-economists.? But, in addition, Mises
saw the economic methodology that had been habitually employed by Austrians and
by many classical economists such as Say and Senior, attacked on different
grounds by a new group, logical positivists, spawned in his native Vienna.
Indeed, Ludwig?s own younger brother, by two years, Richard von Mises, a
mathematician and aeronautical engineer, became a leading member of this ?Vienna
Circle.? In addition, one of the devoted students in Mises?s seminar, Felix
Kaufmann, was later to write a positivist work on the methodology of the social
sciences. This Vienna Circle, or ?Schlick Circle? after their leader, was small
in number but increasingly dominant in Viennese philosophical circles, and later
gained virtually total dominance over the philosophical scene in the United
States for decades after World War II, after emigrating to top academic posts in
the U.S.[34]
A story Mises related to me about the logical positivists and their impact was
characteristic of his wit and charm. He was walking around Vienna with his good
friend, the German philosopher Max Scheler. ?What is there about the climate of
this city,? Scheler waved around him, ?that breeds so many blankety-blank
logical positivists?? ?Well, Max,? Mises replied, in Vienna there are two
million people, and there are only twelve logical positivists. So it couldn?t be
the climate.?
The
logical positivists presented their own grave challenge to economic theory,
charging that economic law could only be established tentatively and hesitantly,
and then only by ?testing? the consequences of such laws by empirical (in
practice, statistical) fact. Based on their own interpretation of the methods of
the physical sciences, the positivists tried to hack away at methodologies they
saw as ?unscientific.?
The onslaughts
of the institutionalists and especially the positivists on economic theory
forced Mises to think deeply about the methodology of economics, and also on the
basic epistemology of the sciences of human action. Thinking deeply about the
subject, he arrived at the first philosophically self-conscious defense of the
economic method used by the earlier Austrians and some of the classicists.
Furthermore, he was able to demonstrate the truly ?scientific? nature of this
correct method, and to show that the developing positivist methodology of
much neo-classical economics was itself profoundly mistaken and unscientific. In
brief, Mises demonstrated that all knowledge of human action rests on
methodological dualism, on a profound difference between the study of human
beings on the one hand, and of stones, molecules, or atoms, on the other. The
difference is that individual human beings are conscious, that they adopt
values, and make choices?act?on the basis of trying to attain
those values and goals. He pointed out that this axiom of action is
self-evident, that is (a) evident to the self once pointed out,
and (b) cannot be refuted without self-contradiction, that is without using the
axiom in any attempt to refute it. Since the axiom of action is
self-evidently true, any logical deductions or implications from that
action must be absolutely, uncompromisingly, ?apodictically,? true as well. Not
only is this body of economic theory absolutely true, but therefore any talk of
?testing? its truth is absurd
and meaningless, since the axioms are self-evident and no ?testing? could occur
without employing the axiom. Moreover, no ?testing? can take place since
historical events are not, as are natural events in the laboratory, homogeneous,
replicable, and controllable. Instead, all historical events are heterogeneous,
not replicable, and the resultant of complex causes. The role of economic
history, past and contemporary, then, is not to ?test? theory but to illustrate
theory in action and to use it
to explain historical events.
Mises also saw that economic theory was the formal logic
of the inescapable fact of human action, and that such theory was therefore not
concerned with the content of such action, or with psychological explanations of
values and motives. Economic theory was the implication of the formal fact of
action. Hence, Mises, in later years, would name it ?praxeology,? the logic of
action.
In his critique
of logical positivism, Mises saw that a philosophy that treated people as if they
were stones and atoms, whose behavior could be predicted and determined
according to quantitative laws, was particularly likely to lead to the viewpoint
of social engineers, who deal with people as if they were inanimate physical
objects. Indeed, positivist Otto Neurath was one of the leading socialist
theorists in Central Europe. Mises wrote that this allegedly ?scientific?
approach would
study the behavior of human beings according to methods Newtonian physics
resorts to in the study of mass
and motion. On the basis of this allegedly ?positive? approach to the problems
of mankind, they plan to develop ?social engineering,? a new technique that
would enable the ?economic tsar? of the planned society of the future to deal
with living men in the way technology enables the engineer to deal with
inanimate materials.[35]
Mises began publishing his series of epistemological articles in 1928,
and then collected and published them in his seminal philosophical and
methodological work, Grundprobleme der National?konomie [Epistemological
problems of Economics] in
1933.
6
Mises in the 1920s: Teacher and
Mentor
Since Mises was under severe restrictions in his teaching
post at the University of Vienna, as noted above, his influence at university
teaching was severely limited. While such outstanding Misesians of the 1920s as
F. A. Hayek, Gottfried von Haberler, and Oskar Morgenstern studied under Mises
at the university, Fritz Machlup
was his only doctoral student. And Machlup was prevented from acquiring his
habilitation degree, which would have
permitted him to teach as a privatdozent, by anti-Semitism among the economics
professors.[36]
Mises?s enormous
influence, as teacher and mentor, arose instead from the private seminar
that he founded in his office at the
Chamber of Commerce. From 1920 until he left for Geneva in 1934, Mises
held the seminar every other Friday from seven to approximately ten o?clock
[accounts of participants differ slightly], after which they
repaired to the Italian restaurant
Anchora Verde for supper, and then, around midnight, the seminar
stalwarts, invariably including Mises, went on to the Cafe K?nstler, the
Favorite Vienna coffeehouse for
economists, until one in the morning or after. The Mises seminar gave no grades,
and had no official function of
any kind, either at the
University or at the Chamber of Commerce. And yet such were Mises?s remarkable qualities as
scholar and teacher that, very quickly, his Privatseminar became the outstanding seminar and forum in all of Europe for discussion and
research in economics and the
social sciences. An invitation to attend and participate was considered a great
honor, and the seminar soon became an informal but crucially important center
for post-doctoral studies. The list of later-to-be eminent names of Miseskreis participants, from England
and the United States as well as from
Austria, is truly staggering.
Despite Mises?s
reputation as an intransigent fighter for his beliefs, all participants testify
that he conducted his private seminar as a discussion forum, with great
respect for everyone?s views, and without trying to bludgeon the members into his
own position. Thus, Dr. Paul N. Rosenstein-Rodan, a student of Hans Mayer and later to
be an economist at the United Nations, wrote in reminiscence of Mises?s
seminar:
?I was an enthusiastic admirer of Mises? theory of money and very
skeptical of his extreme [laissez-faire] liberalism. It was a proof of how
elastic and tolerant (in spite of a contrary general opinion) Mises was that we
maintained a very good relation in spite of my being ?pink? or rather having a
very Fabian outlook on life, which I did not change.[37]
Mises
himself wrote movingly of the
seminar and the way he conducted it:
My main teaching effort was focused on my
Privatseminar? In these meetings we informally discussed all
important problems of economics, social philosophy, sociology, logic, and the
epistemology of the sciences of human action. In this circle the younger
[post-Böhm-Bawerk] Austrian School of Economics lived on, in this circle the
Viennese culture produced one of its last blossoms. Here I was neither teacher
nor director of seminar, I was merely primus inter pares (first among peers) who himself benefited
more than he gave.
All who belonged to this circle came
voluntarily, guided only by their thirst for knowledge. They came as
pupils, but over the years became my friends....
We formed neither school, congregation, nor sect.
We helped each other more through contradiction than agreement. But we agreed
and were united on one endeavor: to further the sciences of human action. Each
one went his own way, guided by his own law?. We never thought to publish a
journal or a collection of essays. Each one worked by himself, as befits a
thinker. And yet each one of us labored for the circle, seeking no compensation
other than simple recognition, not the applause of his friends. There was
greatness in this unpretentious exchange of ideas; in it we all found happiness
and satisfaction.[38]
The result of
Mises?s method was that many of the seminar members became full Misesians, while
the others were stamped, one way or the other, with at least a touch of
Mises?s greatness. Even those Mises followers who later shifted to Keynesian and
other anti-Misesian doctrines still retained a visible thread of Misesianism.
Hence, for example, the Keynesianism of Machlup or Haberler was never quite as unrestrained as in other, more
unalloyed disciples. Gerhard Tintner, a Mises seminar member, went on to become an
eminent econometrician at Iowa State, but the first chapter of Tintner?s
Econometrics took
Mises-type reservations about econometrics far more seriously than did
his colleagues in the econometric
profession. Mises made a mark on all of his students that proved to be
indelible. A partial list of Mises private seminar members, followed by their
later affiliations and accomplishments, will serve to illustrate both the enormous distinction achieved by his
students, and the Misesian stamp placed upon all of
them:
Friedrich A. Hayek
Fritz
Machlup
Gottfried von
Haberler
Oskar
Morgenstern
Paul N.
Rosenstein-Rodan
Felix Kaufmann (author of The Methodology of the
Social Sciences>
Alfred Sch?tz (sociologist, New School for Social
Research)
Karl Bode (methodologist, Stanford
University)
Alfred Stonier (methodologist, University College, London)
Erich Voegelin (political scientist, historian, Louisiana
State
University)
Karl Schlesinger
Richard von
Strigl
Karl Menger (mathematician, son of founder of
Austrian School, Carl Menger,
University of Chicago)
Walter Fr?hlich (Marquette
University)
Gerhard
Tintner (Iowa State University)
Ewald
Schams
Erich
Schiff
Herbert von F?rth
Rudolf Klein
Members and participants from England and the United States
included:
John V.
Van Sickle (Rockefeller
Foundation, later Wabash College)
Howard S. Ellis
(Berkeley, author of German Monetary
Theory)
Lionel Robbins (London School of
Economics)
Hugh Gaitskell (British Labor Party)
Other participants who, it must
be conceded, showed little influence of Mises in later life were the
Swedish Keynesian Ragnar Nurkse
(Columbia University) and Albert Gailord Hart (Columbia University).[39]
The number of
devoted women members of the Mises seminar was remarkable for that era in
Europe. Helene Lieser, later for many years Secretary of the International
Economic Association in
Paris, was the first woman to attain a doctorate in the social sciences in Austria. Ilse Mintz
was the daughter of economist Richard Sch?ller, a student of Menger?s and
permanent Undersecretary of Trade (later at the New School for Social Research.)
Ilse Mintz later emigrated to America and worked at the National Bureau of
Economic Research, and taught at
Columbia University. Other leading women members were Marianne von Herzfeld and Martha Stephanie Braun (Browne), who later taught at Brooklyn College and New York University. Martha Browne, in reminiscing about Mises?s
seminars, states that ?Professor von Mises never restrained any participant in
the choice of a topic he or she wanted to discuss.? She concluded that ?I have
lived in many cities and belonged to many organizations. I am sure there does
not exist a second circle where
the intensity, the interest and the intellectual standard of the discussions is as high as it
was in the Mises Seminar.?[40] [41]
Not content
with his own seminar, Mises
single-handedly revived the Economic Society a professional society of
economists that he had helped found, along with Karl Pribram, in 1908, and which
had fallen into disuse during the war. The Miseskreis formed the core of the group, which was much larger than the Mises seminar. Mises and
his colleagues maneuvered to get
rid of Othmar Spann, and, in
order to insure Hans Mayer?s participation, Mayer was made President of the
Society, while Mises, the driving force of the group, agreed to become
Vice-President. The Society was dominated by Misesians, with Hayek becoming
Secretary, Machlup Treasurer, with Morgenstern becoming Machlup?s successor as
Treasurer. Richard Sch?ller was a distinguished member of the group, and
Mises seminar member Karl Schlesinger,
president of the National Bankers Association, secured the large conference room
of the Bankers Association for the Society?s meetings. Many of the
Society?s papers were published in Hans Mayer?s scholarly journal, the
Zeitschrift fur National?konomie.
By the
mid-1920s, Mises made a considerable effort to find a job for F.A. Hayek.
He tried to convince the Chamber of Commerce to create a research position in
Mises?s office, which Hayek would have
filled, but his attempt failed. After Hayek spent a year in the United States and returned
singing the praises of
empirical business cycle
research, Mises founded the Institute for Business Cycle Research in
January 1927, and installed
Hayek as director in an office
at the Chamber of Commerce. In 1930, the poorly funded Institute received a large
infusion of funds from the Rockefeller Foundation, at the behest of
former Mises seminar member John
Van Sickle, who had become assistant director of the Foundation?s office in Paris. The increased
funding enabled the Institute to
hire Morgenstern and Haberler to
assist Hayek, and, when Hayek left Austria for England in 1931, Morgenstern succeeded him as Director.[42]
While most Viennese, including
Mises?s friends and students,
basked in the Pollyanna view that Nazism could never happen in Austria,
Mises, in the early 1930s, foresaw disaster and urged his friends to emigrate as
soon as possible. Machlup credits Mises?s advice for saving his life.
With characteristic wit and
insight, Mises pictured a likely scenario for his friends and himself in the New
World: they would all, he prophesied, open a cafe and nightclub somewhere in
Latin America. Mises would be the doorman, the formal and aloof Hayek the head
waiter, the songster Felix Kaufmann would be the crooner, and the suave Machlup
the club gigolo. [43]
The first Misesian to emigrate was F.A. Hayek. Lionel Robbins had been
converted to laissez-faire and to Austrian economics by reading Socialism and then participating in
Mises?s Privatseminar. Ensconced as head of the economics
department at the London School of Economics, Robbins soon became an influential
adviser to the head of the school, Sir William Beveridge. Robbins got Hayek an
invitation to give a series of lectures at the LSE in 1931, and the lectures
took the school by storm. Quickly, Hayek was offered a full professorship
at the LSE. Hayek and Robbins swept all before them at London in the first half
of the 1930s, spreading the influence especially of Austrian capital and
business cycle theory. Hayek converted the top young economists at LSE to the
hard-money and laissez-faire views of Austrian economics; enthusiastic Austrian
converts included such later Keynesian leaders as John R. Hicks, Abba P. Lerner,
Nicholas Kaldor, Kenneth E. Boulding, and G.L.S. Shackle. Economica, the journal of the LSE, was filled with Austrian articles. Only Cambridge,
the stronghold of Keynes, remained hostile, and even here, there were
similarities to Austrianism in D. H. Robertson?s monetary approach. Robbins was a
student of Edwin Cannan at the London School of Economics, himself an
advocate of hard money and
laissez-faire. Frederic Benham, a student of Cannan, adopted the Austrian
view of the Depression, and Robbins
wrote a scintillating Misesian study of The Great Depression in 1934.
Under Robbins?s influence, Beveridge, in his 1931 edition of
Unemployment, a Problem of Industry, attributed the large-scale British
unemployment of the post-war world to excessively high wage rates.
Robbins, furthermore, published some challenging Austrian articles on microeconomics and on
population theory in the early 1930s. In 1932, moreover, he published a
watered-down version of Misesian praxeology, On the Nature and
Significance of Economic Science, which became the bible of methodology for economists until
Milton Friedman?s unfortunate positivist manifesto was published in the
early 1950s.[44] In addition to
these prodigious efforts, Robbins arranged for the translation and
publication of Hayek?s two books on business cycle theory (Monetary Theory
and the Trade Cycle, and Prices
and Production), and finally arranged for the translation
of Mises?s Theory of Money
and Credit and
Socialism.
But, then, just
as it seemed that
Austrian economics would conquer
England (particularly as having predicted and offered an explanation of the Great Depression),
Keynes?s General Theory swept all before it, and by the late 1930s
all of Hayek?s converts had
shifted suddenly to Keynesianism, even though they were by then mature
enough to know better. All the stalwarts, including Robbins, Hicks, Beveridge,
and the rest, had shifted over, and by the end of the 1930s only Hayek
was left untouched by the Keynesian storm. [45] But it must
have been a particularly bitter blow to Ludwig von Mises that such favorite
students of his as Machlup and
Haberler had become Keynesians, albeit relatively moderate
ones.
In addition to
his enormous influence upon
thought in Austria, Mises also exerted considerable influence over economists in Germany. Georg Halm
joined Mises in attacking the
possibility of economic
calculation under socialism. L. Albert Haln, a German banker and economist, had been a
proto-Keynesian inflationist in
the 1920s, but turned around to
be a severe critic of Keynes in the 1930s. Other German economists strongly
affected by Mises were Wilhelm R?pke, Alfred M?ller-Armack, Goetz A.
Briefs, an expert on labor unions,
Walter Sulzbach, a critic of the Marxian concept of class, Alexander R?stow,
economic historian, Mortiz J.
Bonn, and Ludwig Pohle.
Luigi Einaudi of Italy, and monetary specialist Jacques Rueff in
France were also friends of, and influenced by, von
Mises.
7
Exile and the New World
More alert than
any of his colleagues to the ever-encroaching Nazi threat in Austria,
Mises accepted a chair in 1934 as professor of International Economic Relations
at the Graduate Institute of
International Studies at the University of Geneva. Since the initial contract
at Geneva was only for one year, Mises
retained a part-time post at the Chamber of Commerce, on one-third
salary. Mises?s contract was to
be renewed until he left Geneva in 1940. While it saddened him to leave his
beloved Vienna, Mises was happy during
his six years in Geneva. Established at his first (and last!) paid
academic post, he was surrounded by
such friends and likeminded colleagues as jurist and economist
William E. Rappard, president of the Institute; Institute co-director Paul
Mantoux, the eminent French economic
historian; Mises?s boyhood friend, the distinguished jurist Hans Kelsen;
Wilhelm R?pke, who had left Germany because of the Nazis; and French
scholars Louis Rougier and Louis Baudin.
Mises?s lectures were in French, but he was fluent in
French, and spoke it with no trace of an accent. Teaching only
one weekly seminar on Saturday
mornings, and divested of his political and administrative duties at the
Chamber, Mises finally enjoyed the leisure to embark upon, and finish, his great
masterpiece integrating micro- and macro-economics, the analysis of the market
and of interventions into that market, all constructed on the praxeological
method that he had set forth in the 1920s and early 1930s. This treatise was
published as National?konomie (Economics) in Geneva, in
1940.
Despite
these favorable conditions, it took great courage for Mises to continue his work
in the face of the tidal wave of Keynesian economics after 1937, and of the
growth of socialist doctrines of left and right, as well as the onrush of Nazism
and the imminence of a second horrible world war. In 1938, Mises was horrified
to see the Nazi conquest of Austria, accompanied by the Nazi destruction of his
personal library and papers, but he was cheered by being able to marry his
fiancee, Margit Sereny, when she was able to flee to Geneva.[46]
The onset of
World War II put an enormous amount of pressure on the Mises?s. In addition to
depriving the Institute
of its non-Swiss students, the war meant that refugees, such as Mises,
were increasingly made to feel unwelcome in Switzerland. Finally, when the
Germans conquered France in the spring of 1940, Ludwig, prodded by his wife,
decided to leave a country now surrounded by the Axis powers and flee to the
Mecca for the victims of tyranny, the United States.
Emigration to the United States was a particularly
harrowing experience for Mises. Here he was, a man of nearly sixty, in contrast
to his fluency in French only book-learned in English, fleeing from a lifetime
in Europe, impoverished, with no prospect of a job in the United States, forced to dodge German troops as he
and Margit made their way across France to Spain and finally Lisbon, where they
embarked for the United States. His
entire world, his hopes and dreams, were shattered, and he was forced to
make a new life in a new
country with an unfamiliar language. And to top it all, as he saw a world succumbing
to war and statism, his great
masterpiece, National?konomie, published during wartime conditions, had sunk
without a trace. World War II was no time to interest anyone in high theory.
Moreover, the book was not
allowed to reach the German-speaking countries which constituted its natural
market, and its Swiss publishing
form failed during the war.
The Mises?s
arrived in New York City in
August 1940. Lacking any
prospect of employment, the couple lived off meager savings, moving repeatedly
in and out of hotel rooms
and furnished apartments. It was
the lowest point of Mises?s life, and shortly after he landed he began
writing a despairing, searing
intellectual memoir which he finished in December, and which was translated and published after his death as
Notes and Recollections (1978).[47] A major theme in this
poignant work is the pessimism and despair that so many classical
liberals, friends and mentors of Mises,
had suffered from the accelerating statism and destructive wars of the twentieth century. Menger,
Böhm-Bawerk, Max Weber,
Archduke Rudolf of
Austria-Hungary, Mises?s friend and colleague Wilhelm Rosenberg?had all been broken in
spirit or driven to death by the intensifying gloom of the
politics of their time. Mises, throughout his life, resolved to meet these grave
setbacks by fighting on, even though the battle might seem hopeless. In
discussing how fellow classical liberals had succumbed to the despair of
World War I, Mises then recounts his own
response:
I thus had arrived at this hopeless
pessimism that for a long time had burdened the best minds of Europe.... This
pessimism had broken the strength of Carl Menger, and it overshadowed the life
of Max Weber?.
It is a matter of temperament how we shape our
lives in the knowledge of an inescapable catastrophe. In high school I had
chosen the verse by Virgil as my motto: Tn ne cede malis sed contra audentior
ito (?Do not yield to the bad, but always oppose it with courage?). In the
darkest hours of the war, I recalled this dictum. Again and again I faced
situations from which rational deliberations could find no escape. But then
something unexpected occurred that brought deliverance. I could not lose courage
even now. I would do everything an economist could do. I would not tire in
professing what I knew to be right.[48]
It was at that point, Mises went on, that he decided to write the book on
socialism which he had contemplated before the outbreak of World War I.
Every other
terrible situation faced by Mises in his life was met by the same magnificent courage: in
the battle against inflation, the struggle against the Nazis, the flight during World War II. In every
case, no matter how desperate
the circumstance, Ludwig von Mises carried the fight forward, and deepened and expanded his great
contributions to economics and to all the disciplines of human
action.
Life began to
improve for Mises when his old
connection with John Van Sickle
and the Rockefeller Foundation led to a small annual grant via the National Bureau of Economic Research,
a grant which began in January 1941 and was renewed though 1944. From these
grants emerged two important works, the first books of Mises written in
English, both published by the Yale University Press in 1944. One was
Omnipotent Government: The Rise of the Total State and Total
War.[49] The
dominant interpretation of Nazism in that era was the Marxist view of Columbia University Professor and
German refugee Franz Neumann: that Nazism was the last desperate gasp of German
big business, anxious to crush the rising power of the proletariat. That
view, now thoroughly discredited, was first challenged by
Omnipotent Government, which pointed out the statism and
totalitarianism that underlay all forms of left-wing and right-wing
collectivism. The other Mises book,
Bureaucracy, was a marvelous little classic, which delineated, as never
before, the necessary differences between profit-seeking enterprise, the
bureaucratic operation of nonprofit organizations, and the far worse bureaucracy of
government.
Yale University
Press published Mises?s first English works in the teeth of an overwhelming
dedication to socialism and statism by the major book publishers of that era. The press was secured
for publishing Mises by his first new friend in the United States, the prominent
economic journalist, Henry Hazlitt, then the lucid editorial writer and
economist for the New York Times. Hazlitt had admired Mises
since he had glowingly reviewed
the English edition of Socialism in the Times in 1938. Hazlitt met Mises shortly after his
arrival in the United States,
and he soon became a close friend and disciple, writing prolifically
and creatively on Austrian economics
and tirelessly advancing the cause of Mises the person as well as the
scholar.[50]
In early 1943,
after Mises had completed the manuscript of Omnipotent
Government, Hazlitt
steered it to the libertarian-minded editor at Yale
University Press, Eugene Davidson, who was enthusiastic about the book.
From then on though the 1950s, the
prestigious Yale Press served as the publisher of all of Mises?s work,
both new and reprint. In fact, it was
Davidson who suggested, in early 1944, that Mises write a short book
on bureaucracy, and Mises completed the
manuscript by June of that year.
Through
Hazlitt?s good offices, Mises
published nine articles for the New York Times, on world economic problems, during
1942 and 1943. This spread Mises?s ideas in the United
States, and in January 1943, led Noel
Sargent, secretary of the National Association of Manufacturers?an
organization then devoted to
laissez-faire?to invite Mises to
join the Economic Principles Commission of the NAM. Mises served on the NAM
Commission from 1943 to 1954,
and was hence able to meet many of the leading industrialists devoted
to a free market economy.[51]
But it remains an ineradicable blot on the
record of American academia that Mises was never able to find a paid, full-time post in any American university. It is truly shameful that at a time when every third-rate Marxoid refugee was
able to find a prestigious berth in academia, that one of the great
minds of the twentieth century
could not find an academic post.
Mises?s widow Margit, in her
moving memoir about life with Lu, records their happiness and her gratitude that the New York University
Graduate School of Business Administration, in 1945, appointed Mises as Visiting Professor
teaching one course a term. Mises was delighted to be back at university
teaching; but the present writer cannot be nearly as enthusiastic about a part-time
post paying the pittance of
$2,000 a year. Mises?s course
was, at first, on ?Statism and the Profit Motive,? and it later changed to one on ?Socialism.? This
part-time teaching post was
renewed until 1949.
Harold
Luhnow, of the William
Volker Fund, took up the crusade of
finding Mises a suitable
full-time academic post. Since
obtaining a paid position seemed out of the question, the Volker Fund was
prepared to pay Mises?s entire salary. Even under these subsidized conditions,
however, the task was difficult,
and finally New York University Graduate School of Business agreed to accept
Mises as a permanent ?Visiting Professor,? teaching, once again, his beloved
graduate seminar on economic
theory.[52] [53] Mises began teaching his
seminar every Thursday night in
1949, and continued to teach the seminar until he retired, still spry
and active twenty years later, at the
age of 87, the oldest active professor in
America.
Even under these favorable financial conditions, NYU?s support for Mises
was grudging, and only
came about because advertising
executive and NYU alumnus Lawrence Fertig, an economic journalist and close
friend of Mises and Hazlitt, exerted considerable influence at the
university. Fertig, in fact, became a member of the NYU Board of Trustees in 1952. Even so,
and even though Mises was allowed to
supervise doctoral dissertations, he still carried the stigma of
?Visiting Professor.? More
important, after Dean G. Rowland Collins, an admirer of Mises, retired, succeeding Deans
did their best to undercut
student registration in Mises?s courses, claiming that he was a
reactionary and Neanderthal, and that his economics was merely a
?religion.?
It must have
been galling to Mises that, in contrast to his shabby treatment at the hands of
American academia, favorite
former students who had abandoned Misesian doctrines for Keynesianism, but
whose only real contributions to economics had come as Misesians,
received high and prestigious
academic posts. Thus Gottfried Haberler was ensconced as full professor
at Harvard, and Fritz Machlup went to
John Hopkins and later to Princeton. Oskar Morgenstern, too, landed at
Princeton. All of these high academic positions were, of course, paid for by the
university. [54]
Mises never
expressed any bitterness at his fate or at the apostasy of his former followers,
nor indeed did he communicate sourness
of any kind to his inspired and
admiring seminar students. Only once did the present writer, his seminar
student for ten years and friend for the rest of his life, hear him express any sadness or
bitterness at his treatment by American academia. The occasion was the Columbia University Bicentennial of
1954, an event that led Columbia to invite prominent scholars from all over the world to speak and participate. Mises saw his old students,
Hayek, Machlup, Haberler, and Morgenstern, invited to speak, but Mises, who
lived less than a mile from Columbia, was totally ignored. And this, even though four of
Mises?s former students?Mintz, Nurkse, Hart, and the qualitative school banking
theorist Benjamin H. Beckhart?were teaching at Columbia University. Margit von Mises
writes that only once did he express to her any longing for an academic
post?after visiting his old friend, the monetary economist Winfield W. Riefler,
at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. She writes that ?I remember Lu once told me that
Riefler?s job at Princeton was
the only position that really would have made him happy. It was very unusual for
Lu to express a longing for something out of his reach.? [55] If there
were any justice in the academic world, the Institute heads should have beaten
down Mises?s doors, clamoring for him to join
them.
For the present writer, who was privileged to join the
Mises seminar in its first session in 1949, the experience at the
seminar was inspiring and exhilarating. The same was true of fellow students
who were not registered at NYU, but audited the seminar regularly for years, and consisted of
libertarian and
free-market scholars and businessmen in the New York area. Due to the special arrangements of the
seminar, the university agreed
to allow Misesians to audit the course. But even though Mises had a small number
of excellent graduate students who did their doctorates under him?notably Israel
M. Kirzner, still teaching at NYU?the bulk of the regular students were uncomprehending business students, who took
the course for an easy A.[56] The
proportion of libertarians and budding Austrians to the class total ranged, I
would estimate, from about one-third to
one-half.
Mises did his
best to replicate the conditions of his great Vienna Privatseminar including repairing after the end
of the formal session at 9:30 PM to Childs? Restaurant to continue
informal and animated discussions. Mises was infinitely patient and kind with even
the most dimwitted of us,
constantly tossing out research projects to inspire us, and
always encouraging the shiest and most awestruck to speak. With a characteristic twinkle in his
eye, Mises would assure them: ?Don?t be
afraid to speak up. Remember,
whatever you say about the subject and however wrong it might be, the same thing has already been said by some eminent
economist.?
However wonderful the seminar experience for
knowledgeable students, I found it
heartbreaking that Mises should be reduced to these frowzy circumstances.
Poor Mises: there was scarcely a Hayek
or a Machlup or a Sch?tz among these accounting and finance majors, and Childs?
Restaurant was no Viennese
cafe. But one incident corrected
some of this view. One day, Mises was invited to speak before the graduate
economic students and faculty at Columbia University, a department then rated
among the top three economics departments in the country. Typical of the questions after his talk was
this: ?Professor Mises, you say you are in favor of repealing measures of
government intervention. But doesn?t such repeal itself constitute an act of intervention?? To
this inane question, Mises gave a perceptive and telling reply: ?Well, in the same way, you could say that a
physician who rushes to the side of a man hit by a truck, is ?intervening?
with the man in the same
way as the truck.? Afterwards, I asked Professor Mises how he liked the experience.
?Eh,? he replied, ?I like my students [at NYU] better.? After that,
I realized that perhaps Mises?s teaching at NYU was truly worthwhile,
even from his point of view.[57]
As early as
1942, Mises, dismayed but
undaunted by the sad fate of National?konomie, began work on an English-language version of
the book. The new book
was not simply an English translation
of National?konomie. It was revised, better written and greatly expanded, so much so as to be
virtually a new
book.[58] It
was the great work of Mises?s life. Under the care and aegis of Eugene Davidson, the Yale University
Press published the new treatise in 1949 as Human Action: a Treatise on
Economics.[59]
Happily, the
opening of Mises?s seminar coincided with the publication of Human
Action, which came
out on September 14, 1949. Human Action is it: Mises?s greatest achievement and one of
the finest products of the human mind in our century. It is economics made
whole, based on the methodology of praxeology that Mises himself had
developed, and grounded in the
ineluctable and fundamental axiom that human beings exist, and that they act in the world, using means to try to achieve their most valued
goals. Mises constructs the entire edifice of correct economic theory as
the logical implications of the
primordial fact of individual human action. It was a remarkable achievement, and
provided a way out for the discipline of economics, which had fragmented
into uncoordinated and clashing
sub-specialties. It is remarkable
that Human Action
was the first integrated
treatise on economics since
Taussig and Fetter had written theirs before World War I. In addition to providing
this comprehensive and integrated economic theory, Human Action
defended sound, Austrian economics against all its methodological opponents,
against historicists, positivists, and neo-classical practitioners of
mathematical economics and
econometrics. He also updated his critique of socialism and
interventionism.
In addition,
Mises provided important theoretical corrections of his predecessors. Thus, he incorporated
the American Austrian Frank
Fetter?s pure time
preference theory of interest into
economics, at long last rectifying B?hmBawerk?s muddying of the waters by
bringing back the fallacious
productivity theory of interest after he had disposed of it in the first volume of his Capital
and Interest.
It is another
blot on American academia that I had gone through all the doctoral courses at Columbia
University without once discovering that there was such a thing as an Austrian
school, let alone that Ludwig von Mises was its foremost living champion. I was
scarcely familiar with Mises?s name,
outside of the usual distorted story of the socialist calculation debate,
and was therefore surprised to learn in the spring of 1949 that Mises was going to
begin a regular seminar at NYU. I was also told that Mises was going to
publish a magnum opus in the
fall. ?Oh,? I asked, ?what?s the
book about?? ?About everything,? they
replied.
Human Action was indeed about everything. The book was a
revelation to those of us drenched in modern economics; it solved all problems
and inconsistencies that I had sensed in economic theory, and it provided an
entirely new and superb structure of correct economic methodology and theory.
Furthermore, it provided eager libertarians with a policy of uncompromising
laissez-faire; in contrast to all other free-market economists of that
day or later, there were no escape hatches, no giving the case away with ?of
course, the government must break up monopolies,? or ?of course, the government
must provide and regulate the money supply.? In all matters, from theoretical to
political, Mises was the soul of rigor and consistency. Never would Mises
compromise his principles, never
would he bow the knee to a quest for respectability or social or
political favor As a scholar, as an economist, and as a person, Ludwig von Mises
was a joy and an inspiration, an exemplar for us all.
Human Action
was and continues to be a
remarkable publishing phenomenon. The book to this day is a best seller for the
press, so much so that the publisher refuses to put it into paperback. This is
truly noteworthy for a massive and intellectually difficult work such
as Human Action. Astonishingly, the book was
made an alternate selection of the Book-of-the-Month Club, and it has
been published in Spanish, French,
Italian, Chinese, and Japanese
editions.[60] Thus, through
Human Action Mises was able to
forge an Austrian and laissez-faire movement of national and even international
scope.
Remarkably
too, the Misesian movement forged by Human Action was multi-class: it ranged from scholars to students to businessmen, ministers,
journalists, and housewives. Mises himself always placed great
importance on outreach to businessmen
and the general public. At one time, there were plans afoot for a graduate school, entitled the
American School of Economics, to
be financed by J. Howard Pew with Mises as president. Some of
us younger Misesian scholars
were on the Board of Trustees. Mises emphasized that, as was common in Europe, the faculty of the school should give periodic lectures
to the general public, so that sound economic education would not be confined to
professional scholars. Unfortunately, plans for the school eventually fell
through.
Yale University
Press was so impressed with the
popularity as well as the
quality of Mises?s book that it served for the next decade as the publisher
of his work. The press published
a new, expanded edition of Socialism in 1951, and a similarly expanded edition of The Theory of
Money and Credit in 1953.
Remarkably, too, Mises did not rest on
his laurels after the publication of Human
Action. His essay on
?Profit and Loss? is perhaps the best discussion ever
written of the function
of the entrepreneur and of the
profit-and-loss system of the
market.[61] In 1957, the press
published Mises?s last great work, the profound Theory and
History, his philosophical
masterpiece that explains
the true relation between
praxeology, or economic theory, and
human history, and
engages in a critique of
Marxism, historicism, and various forms of scientism. Theory and
History was, understandably,
Mises?s favorite next to
Human Action. [62] However, after the departure in 1959 of
Eugene Davidson to be founding editor of the conservative quarterly
Modern Age, Yale
University Press no longer
served as a friendly home for
Mises?s works. [63] In its
final years the publishing program of the William Volker Fund took up the slack, and provided
the world with an English edition of Liberalismus (as The Free and Prosperous
Commonwealth), and of
Grundprobleme der National?konomie (as Epistemological
Problems of Economics), both
published in 1962. Also,
in the same last year of Volker Fund existence, the Fund
published Mises?s final book, The Ultimate Foundation of Economic
Science: An Essay on Method, a critique of logical positivism in economics.[64]
During his post-World War II
American years, Mises
experienced ups and downs from
observing the actions and influence of his former students, friends, and
followers. On the one hand, he
was happy to be one of the founding members in 1947 of the Mont Pelerin Society, an international
society of free market
economists and scholars. He was also delighted to see such friends as
Luigi Einaudi, as President of
Italy, Jacques Rueff, as
monetary adviser to general Charles De Gaulle, and R?pke and Alfred
M?ller-Armack as influential advisers of Ludwig Erhard, play a major role in
shifting their respective nations, during the 1950s, in the direction of free
markets and hard money. Mises played a leading part in the Mont Pelerin
Society in early years, but after a while became disillusioned with its
accelerating statism and mushy views on economic policy. And even though Mises and Hayek maintained
cordial relations until the end, and
Mises never spoke a bad word about his long-time friend and
protege, Mises was clea