Mises Wire

Machiavelli Is Dead: Why Politics Without Property Rights, Rules, and Moral Limits Cannot Work

Machiavelli

Javier Milei’s Davos speech marks a decisive break with a dominant political mindset: the belief that upholding and expanding political power justifies moral compromise and that political authority should be judged primarily by effectiveness rather than legitimacy. This “might makes right” logic was perhaps most coherently formulated as a political philosophy by the early modern thinker Niccolò Machiavelli in his influential work Il Principe. It is this Machiavellian call for power regardless of moral cost that Milei fundamentally rejects.

At the core of the Argentine president’s argument lies a straightforward but radical claim: efficiency and justice are not adversaries, but complementary dimensions that can coexist only within capitalism. This runs counter to the modern tendency to treat markets as a narrowly-confined necessary evil, mere machines in need of technocratic optimization, while government intervention is cast as a necessary good to deliver “fairness.” Such a dualistic worldview overlooks the dynamic nature of economic order. Markets function, not because they are deliberately designed by a central authority, but because individuals are free to act, experiment, fail, learn, and adapt. This process, however, requires something unfashionable in contemporary politics: stable moral and legal rules grounded in individual rights.

Property rights illustrate this point clearly. In mainstream policy debates, property is often treated as negotiable, susceptible to taxation, regulation, or redistribution whenever “higher goals” are invoked. Milei reverses this premise. Property rights are not a concession from the state, but a pre-political right of the individual. Private property is the necessary precondition for all economic activity: trading, saving, investment, and long-term planning. If actors cannot trust that they will retain the fruits of their labor, they stop producing, innovating, and taking risks. Capital formation slows, entrepreneurship evaporates, and prosperity declines. Far from delivering justice, the continual erosion of property rights breeds stagnation and poverty.

This is not moralizing; it is empirical. When governments penalize success while socializing failure, incentives weaken in predictable ways—entrepreneurs become cautious, capital flows elsewhere, and innovation stalls. These outcomes can be observed repeatedly across the Western world, and particularly in Latin America. Argentina itself offers a clear example. For years, successive governments relied on capital controls, export taxes, price interventions, and monetary financing of fiscal deficits. The result was not social justice, but chronic inflation, capital flight, and collapsing investment. By 2023, annual inflation exceeded 200 percent per month, savings were eroded, and productive activity increasingly shifted into the informal economy. These outcomes were not the result of market failure, but of systematic political interference with prices, profits, and property. When returns are confiscated and losses are politicized, rational actors retreat. Economic stagnation under such conditions is not surprising; it is the predictable consequence of distorted incentives.

Milei’s critique also targets short-term economic engineering: price controls to combat inflation, subsidies to “relieve” scarcity, and regulations to curb so-called market power. Such measures may temporarily calm public anxiety, but they undermine the price system that coordinates economic activity in the long run. Price ceilings do not make goods more plentiful; they generate shortages, hoarding, and black markets. In the case of Maduro’s Venezuela, extensive food price controls have long been linked to disinvestment and chronic shortages of basic goods. Controls introduced in the 2000s were intended to make staples affordable, yet they reduced production, emptied shelves, and encouraged smuggling. In parallel, persistent inflation and scarcity continue to erode basic living conditions.

Drawing on the work of Jesús Huerta de Soto, Milei offers a counter-perspective through the concept of dynamic efficiency. Progress, in this view, is not centrally planned, but emerges from decentralized experimentation and entrepreneurial discovery. Deregulation does not mean chaos; it means removing artificial barriers so that voluntary cooperation can function. By lifting these constraints, supply, innovation, and coordination are allowed to re-emerge. Even if the neoclassical notion of perfectly competitive markets fails to hold in static terms, markets operate with remarkable efficiency dynamically through continuous adjustment and spontaneous reordering of supply and demand.

The connection between markets and moral rules is therefore not incidental. Markets depend on trust, enforceable contracts, respect for property, and the non-aggression principle. Where these principles are honored, wealth is created through voluntary exchange among many. Where they are violated, markets become coerced and distorted, serving the interests of the few. Authority justified by such “success” becomes authority without constraint.

Politics must therefore operate within moral limits to function at all. A regime that disregards property, exchange, and voluntary cooperation cannot sustain prosperity, regardless of its intentions. Calls for reform that avoid these foundations amount to administrative tinkering rather than genuine renewal.

Machiavelli’s logic has failed empirically. Systems built on manipulation, discretion, and centralized control collapse under their own contradictions. Freedom, by contrast, is not utopian; it is the institutional condition that makes peaceful cooperation possible. Rule-based orders grounded in predictable rights, voluntary exchange, and decentralized decision-making create the conditions for societies that are both economically productive and morally just. Freedom does not promise perfection in an imperfect world, but it remains the only framework that allows us to build a more perfect future.

image/svg+xml
Image Source: Adobe Stock
Note: The views expressed on Mises.org are not necessarily those of the Mises Institute.
What is the Mises Institute?

The Mises Institute is a non-profit organization that exists to promote teaching and research in the Austrian School of economics, individual freedom, honest history, and international peace, in the tradition of Ludwig von Mises and Murray N. Rothbard. 

Non-political, non-partisan, and non-PC, we advocate a radical shift in the intellectual climate, away from statism and toward a private property order. We believe that our foundational ideas are of permanent value, and oppose all efforts at compromise, sellout, and amalgamation of these ideas with fashionable political, cultural, and social doctrines inimical to their spirit.

Become a Member
Mises Institute