Loading...
Hit search button!

Top Sellers

Economics in One Lesson
Price: $12.00 USD

Add Economics in One Lesson to Cart

Anatomy of the State
Price: $5.00 USD

Add Anatomy of the State to Cart

Mises Silver Coin
Price: $32.50 USD

Add Mises Silver Coin to Cart

Printed Catalog
Price: $0.00 USD

Add Printed Catalog to Cart

The Law
Price: $6.00 USD

Add The Law to Cart

Loading Mises Store Google Search...
Home  >  All Books
Nation, State, and Economy
Other products by Mises, Ludwig von
reviews
Item #: B802
Reg. Price: $25.00 USD
Our Price: $20.00 USD
Quantity:
More
Less
 
Add to Wishlist Add to Cart

Description 

This was Mises's second book. It was written following his military service in World War I. It is also his first book that dealt with political themes--and began Mises's full-scale launch into the fight against collectivism that would be a theme of his later writings. Its original title was Imperialism and one can only regret that the publisher didn't keep it, for that is its theme.

In Nation, State, and Economy, Mises takes up the question of the proper political order to sustain the peace in the age of democracy. It was published less than a year after Austria's defeat in World War I. It examines and compares prewar and postwar political and economic conditions. He argues that each country's prosperity supports rather than undercuts the prosperity of other countries.

Specifically, Mises warns of the consequences of the punitive terms of the Treaty of Versailles by victors more interested in punishing their defeated enemies than in building a Europe that would be able to meet the challenges of the future. With the benefit of hindsight we see how different European and world history might have been.

Mises recommends a radical vision of laissez-faire combined with a commitment to self-determination that would lead to a break up of the old imperial structures. It is in this book where Mises first advances his idea of secessionism. Every people ought to be permitted to choose their own political arrangements, even if they end up in tiny geographical units. With free trade, smaller units of government become completely viable.

This is also Mises's first attack on socialism, specifically war socialism. He shows that it will destroy a country and lead to complete chaos in economic organization. He provides the definitive case that war socialism is real socialism, and not qualitatively different from other forms of socialism. He further shows the relationship between socialism and the total state.

Also notable is Mises's pioneering theory of the relationship between language and nation. No matter what the state may attempt, our national identities preexist the political order. In this book, Mises makes a case for a form of "nationalism" that will lead to ever smaller units of government.

The reader can't but be impressed by the erudition on display here. The historical scholarship is masterful. The economic theory underlying the argument is robust. The prose is white hot. Here is a thinker who would be a fighter for liberty his entire life.

When the historian Robert Higgs first encountered this work, he was so impressed that he said he could have saved himself 20 years of research had he had access to it in graduate school.

The introduction of this masterpiece is by Leland Yeager. He compares Mises's book to Keynes's own book on postwar economic reform, and shows how Mises's views were far more sophisticated.

Of course Mises's advice was rejected but only at terrible cost. World War II might otherwise have been avoided.

This book has been unavailable for many years, and we can only celebrate its return, nearly a century after it was first published. We live in another age of empire, and Mises's voice needs to be heard more than ever.

220 page hardbound volume.

Reviews

Be the first to submit a review on this product!
Review and Rate this Item

Related Products


Century of War, A
$10.00 USD
Add to Cart



Email A Friend

Send this product to a friend...