3.1. The Impractiability of Government All-round Control
![Bureaucracy by Ludwig von Mises](https://cdn.mises.org/styles/responsive_4_3_650w/s3/static-page/img/Bureaucracy_525x361.jpg.webp?itok=pCmu6WaT 650w,https://cdn.mises.org/styles/responsive_4_3_870w/s3/static-page/img/Bureaucracy_525x361.jpg.webp?itok=x12G8Jum 870w,https://cdn.mises.org/styles/responsive_4_3_1090w/s3/static-page/img/Bureaucracy_525x361.jpg.webp?itok=O9UgMbLl 1090w,https://cdn.mises.org/styles/responsive_4_3_1310w/s3/static-page/img/Bureaucracy_525x361.jpg.webp?itok=lDlCYfTN 1310w,https://cdn.mises.org/styles/responsive_4_3_1530w/s3/static-page/img/Bureaucracy_525x361.jpg.webp?itok=P9JMdR2X 1530w)
Socialism (i.e., full government control of all economic activities) is impracticable because a socialist community lacks the indispensable intellectual instrument of economic planning and designing: economic calculation. The very idea of central planning by the state is self-contradictory. A socialist central board of production management will be helpless in the face of the problems to be solved.
From Chapter III: “Bureaucratic Management of Publicly Owned Enterprises”. Narrated by Millian Quinteros.