An Austrian Analysis of the Fourth Estate
William Anderson presents the Henry Hazlitt Memorial Lecture: An Austrian Analysis of th
William Anderson presents the Henry Hazlitt Memorial Lecture: An Austrian Analysis of th
I consider it as a very good sign that, while 50 years ago, practically nobody in the world had the courage to say anything in favor of a free economy, we have now, at least in some of the advanced countries of the world, institutions that are centers for the propagation of a free economy.
This talk was delivered to the Auburn University Libertarians on February 16, 2006.
We are living through a revolutionary moment, seeing the collapse of socialism at the end of the Twentieth Century. Socialism lost its moral legitimacy. The force of modern technology required markets.
Richard Cantillon was quite Misesian before Mises. He wrote of utility theory and the entrepreneur’s uncertainty in the 1970s. Cantillon was a great money practitioner. He became a bank and banker to the Jacobite Stuart line and to John Law who launched paper money inflation.
History is not an inevitable march upward, as concluded in the 1830s. That determinist view put the stamp of approval on everything past and present. It permeates economic history. It ignores the great moral choices. History is a race between state power and social power.
Carl Menger, 1840-1921, founded Austrian economics. Eugen von Bohm-Bawerk was the most important student. Weiser was his brother-in-law, but was fairly pre-Keynesian. Mises was the great successor to Bohn-Bawerk.
The roots of Marxism were in messianic communism. Marx’s devotion to communism was his crucial point. Violent, worldwide revolution, in Marx’s version made by the oppressed proletariat, would be the instrument of the advent of his millennium, communism.
Originally published as chapter 16 in An Austrian Perspective on the History of Economic Thought, Vol. I