Friedrich A. Hayek (1899-1992)
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| by Peter J. Boettke |
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Friedrich A. Hayek, who died on March 23,
1992, at the age of 92, was probably the
most prodigious classical liberal scholar of
the 20th century. Though his 1974 Nobel prize was
in Economic Science, his scholarly endeavors
extended well beyond economics. He published
130 articles and 25 books ranging from technical
economics to theoretical psychology, from political
philosophy to legal anthropology, and from the
philosophy of science to the history of ideas.
Hayek was no mere dabbler; he was an accomplished
scholar in each of these fields of inquiry.
He made major contributions to our understanding
in at least three different areas-government
intervention, economic calculation under socialism,
and development of the social structure. It is
unlikely that we will see the likes
of such a wide-ranging scholar of the human sciences
again.
Hayek was born into a family of intellectuals in
Vienna on May 8,1899. He earned doctorates
from the University of Vienna (1921 and 1923).
During the early years of the 20th century the theories
of the Austrian School of Economics,
sparked by Menger's Principles of Economics
(1871), were gradually being formulated and
refined by Eugen Boehm-Bawerk, his brother-in-law,
Friedrich Wieser, and Ludwig von Mises.
When Hayek attended the University of Vienna,
he sat in on one of Mises' classes, but found Mises'
anti-socialist position too strong for his liking.
Wieser was a Fabian socialist whose approach was
more attractive to Hayek at the time, and Hayek
became his pupil. Yet, ironically it was Mises,
through his devastating critique of socialism
published in 1922, who turned Hayek away from
Fabian socialism.
The best way to understand Hayek's vast contributions
to economics and classical liberalism is to
view them in light of the program for the study of
social cooperation laid out by Mises. Mises, the
great system builder, provided Hayek with the
research program. Hayek became the great dissecter
and analyzer. His life's work can best be
appreciated as an attempt to make explicit what
Mises had left implicit, to refine what Mises had
outlined, and to answer questions Mises had left
unanswered. Of Mises, Hayek stated: "There is no
single man to whom I owe more intellectually."
The Misesian connection is most evident in
Hayek's work on the problems with socialism. But
the insights derived from the analysis of socialism
permeate the entire corpus of his work, from business
cycles to the origin of social cooperation.
Hayek did not meet Mises when he was attending
the University of Vienna. He was introduced to
Mises after he graduated through a letter from his
teacher, Wieser. The Hayek-Mises collaboration
then began. For five years, Hayek worked under
Mises in a government office. In 1927, he became
the Director of the Institute for Business Cycle
Research which he and Mises had set up together.
The Institute was devoted to theoretical and
empirical examinations of business cycles.
Building on Mises' The Theory of Money and
Credit (1912), Hayek refined both the technical
understanding of capital coordination and the
institutional details of credit policy. Seminal studies
in monetary theory and the trade cycle followed.
Hayek's first book, Monetary Theory and
the Trade Cycle (1929), analyzed the effects of
credit expansion on the capital structure of an
economy.
Publication of that book prompted an invitation
from Lionel Robbins for Hayek to lecture at the
London School of Economics. His lectures there
were published in a second book on the "Austrian
Theory of the Trade Cycle," Prices and Production
(1931), which was cited by the Nobel Prize
Committee in 1974.
Hayek's 1930-1931 lectures at the London
School were received with such great acclaim that
he was called back to the prestigious University of
London and appointed Tooke Professor of Economic
Science and Statistics. At age 32, Hayek had
reached the pinnacle of the economics profession.
The Mises-Hayek theory of the trade cycle
explained the "cluster of errors" that characterizes
the cycle. Credit expansion, made possible by the
artificial lowering of interest rates, misleads businessmen;
they are led to engage in ventures that
would not otherwise have appeared profitable.
The false signal generated by credit expansion
leads to malcoordination of the production and
consumption plans of economic actors. This malcoordination
first manifests itself in a "boom," and
then, later, in the "bust" as the time pattern of production
adjusts to the real pattern of savings and
consumption in the economy.
Hayek versus Keynes
Soon after Hayek's arrival in London he crossed
swords with John Maynard Keynes. Keynes, a
prominent member of the British civil service then
serving on the governmental Committee on
Finance and Industry, was credited by the academic
community as the author of serious books on
economics. The Hayek-Keynes debate was perhaps
the most fundamental debate in monetary
economics in the 20th century. Beginning with his
essay, "The End of Laissez Faire" (1926), Keynes
presented his interventionist pleas in the language
of pragmatic classical liberalism. As a result,
Keynes was heralded as the "savior of capitalism,"
rather than being recognized as the advocate of
inflation and government intervention that he was.
Hayek pinpointed the fundamental problem
with Keynes's economics-his failure to understand
the role that interest rates and capital structure
play in a market economy. Because of
Keynes's unfortunate habit of using aggregate
(collective) concepts, he failed to address these
issues adequately in A Treatise on Money (1930).
Hayek pointed out that Keynes's aggregation
tended to redirect the analytical focus of the
economist away from examining how the industrial
structure of the economy emerged from the economic
choices of individuals.
Keynes did not take kindly to Hayek's criticism.
He responded at first by attacking Hayek's Prices
and Production. Then Keynes claimed that he no
longer believed what he had written in A Treatise
on Money, and turned his attention to writing
another book, The General Theory of Employment,
Interest, and Money (1936), which in time
became the most influential book on economic
policy in the 20th century.
Rather than attempting to criticize directly what
Keynes presented in his General Theory, Hayek
turned his considerable talents to refining capital
theory. Hayek was convinced that the essential
point to convey to Keynes and the rest of the economics
profession concerning monetary policy lay
in capital theory. Thus Hayek proceeded to set
forth his thesis in The Pure Theory of Capital
(1941). However correct his assessment may have
been, this book, Hayek's most technical, was his
least influential. By the end of the 1930s, Keynes's
brand of economics was on the rise. In the eyes of
the public Keynes had defeated Hayek. Hayek lost
standing in the profession and with students.
During this time, Hayek was also involved in
another grand debate in economic policy-the
socialist calculation debate, triggered by a 1920
article by Mises which stated that socialism was
technically impossible because it would lack market
prices. Mises had refined this argument in 1922
in Socialism: An Economic and Sociological
Analysis, the book which had profoundly impressed
the young Hayek when it appeared.
Hayek developed Mises' argument further in
several articles during the 1930s. In 1935, he collected
and edited a series of essays on the problems
of socialist economic organization: Collectivist
Economic Planning. Additional Hayek essays on
the problems of socialism, and specifically the
model of "market socialism" developed by Oskar
Lange and Abba Lerner in their attempt to answer
Mises and Hayek, were later collected in Individualism
and Economic Order (1948).
Again, the economics profession and the intellectual
community in general did not appreciate
Hayek's criticism. Had not modern science given
man the ability to control and design society
according to moral rules of his own choosing? The
planned society envisioned under socialism was
supposed to be not only as efficient as capitalism
(especially in view of the chaos capitalism was said
to generate with its business cycles and monopoly
power), but socialism, with its promise of social
justice, was expected to be fairer. Moreover, it was
considered the wave of the future. Only a reactionary,
it was argued, could resist the inevitable
tide of history. Not only had Hayek appeared to
lose the technical economic debate with Keynes
and the Keynesians concerning the causes of business
cycles but, in view of the rising tide of socialism
throughout the world, his general philosophical
perspective was increasingly labeled as a
primitive version of liberalism.
The Road to Serfdom
Hayek, however, kept on refining the argument
for the liberal society. The problems of
socialism that he had observed in Nazi Germany
and that he saw beginning in Britain led him to
write The Road to Serfdom (1944). This book
forced advocates of socialism to confront an additional
problem, over and beyond the technical
economic one. If socialism required the replacement
of the market with a central plan, then,
Hayek pointed out, an institution must be established
that would be responsible for formulating
this plan. Hayek called this institution the Central
Planning Bureau. To implement the plan and to
control the flow of resources, the Bureau would
have to exercise broad discretionary power in
economic affairs. Yet the Central Planning
Bureau in a socialist society would have no market
prices to serve as guides. It would have no
means of knowing which production possibilities
were economically feasible. The absence of a
pricing system, Hayek said, would prove to be
socialism's fatal flaw.
In The Road to Serfdom Hayek also argued that
there was good reason to suspect that those who
would rise to the top in a socialistic regime would
be those who had a comparative advantage in
exercising discretionary power and were willing to
make unpleasant decisions. And it was inevitable
that these powerful men would run the system to
their own personal advantage.
Hayek was right on both counts, of course-on
the economic as well as the political problem of
socialism. The 20th century is replete with the
blood of the innocent victims of socialist experiments.
Stalin, Hitler, Mao, Pol Pot, and a host of
lesser tyrants have committed heinous crimes
against humanity in the name of one or another
variant of socialism. Totalitarianism is not an historical
accident that emerges solely because of a
poor choice of leaders under a socialist regime.
Totalitarianism, Hayek shows, is the logical outcome
of the institutional order of socialist planning.
After the defeat in the public forum of his critique
of Keynes and the controversy that arose
over the debate on economic calculation under
socialism, Hayek turned his attention away from
technical economics and concentrated on restating
the principles of classical liberalism. Hayek had
pointed out the need for market prices as conveyors
of dispersed economic information. He
showed that attempts to replace or control the
market lead to a knowledge problem. Hayek also
described the totalitarian problem associated with
placing discretionary power in the hands of a few.
This led him to examine the intellectual prejudices
which blind men from seeing the problems of
government economic planning.
During the 1940s, Hayek published a series of
essays in professional journals examining the dominant
philosophical trends that prejudiced intellectuals
in a way that did not allow them to recognize
the systemic problems that economic planners
would confront. These essays were later collected
and published as The Counter-Revolution of
Science (1952). The Counter-Revolution, perhaps
Hayek's best book, provides a detailed intellectual
history of "rational constructivism" and the problems
of "scientism" in the social sciences. It is in
this work that Hayek articulates his version of the
Scottish Enlightenment project of David Hume
and Adam Smith of using reason to whittle down
the claims of reason. Modern civilization was not
threatened by irrational zealots hell-bent on
destroying the world, but rather it was the abuse of
reason by rational constructivists trying to consciously
design the modern world that had placed
mankind in chains of his own making.
In 1950, Hayek moved to the University of
Chicago, where he taught until 1962 in the Committee
on Social Thought. While there, he wrote
The Constitution of Liberty (1960). This work
represented Hayek's first systemic treatise on
classical liberal political economy.
In 1962, Hayek moved to Germany, where he
had obtained a position at the University of
Freiburg. He then increasingly centered his efforts
on examining and elaborating the "spontaneous"
ordering of economic and social activity. Hayek set
about to reconstruct liberal social theory and to
provide a vision of social cooperation among free
individuals.
With his three-volume study, Law, Legislation
and Liberty (1973-1979) and The Fatal Conceit
(1988), Hayek extended his analysis of society to
an examination of the "spontaneous" emergence
of legal and moral rules. His political and legal theory
emphasized that the rule of law was the necessary
foundation for peaceful co-existence. He contrasted
the tradition of the common law with that
of statute law, i.e., legislative decrees. He showed
how the common law emerges, case by case, as
judges apply to particular cases general rules
which are themselves products of cultural evolution.
Thus, he explained that embedded within the
common law is knowledge gained through a long
history of trial and error. This insight led Hayek to
the conclusion that law, like the market, is a "spontaneous"
order-the result of human action, but
not of human design.
Hayek's work in technical economics, political
and legal philosophy, and methodology of the
social sciences has attracted great interest among
scholars of at least two generations, and interest in
his work is growing. His contributions to economic
and classical liberalism are vast and will live on in
the progressive research program he has bequeathed
to future generations of scholars.
Friedrich Hayek lived a long and fruitful life. He
had to endure the curse of achieving fame at a
young age and then having that fame turn to
ridicule as the Keynesians and socialists gained
popularity and the intellectual and political world
moved away from his ideas. Fortunately he lived
long enough to see his towering intellect recognized
again. Both Keynesians and socialists were
eventually defeated soundly by the tide of events
and the truth of his teachings. Classical liberalism
is once again a vibrant body of thought. Austrian
economics has re-emerged as a major school of
economic thought, and younger scholars in law,
history, economics, politics, and philosophy are
pursuing Hayekian themes. We may mourn the
loss of this great champion of liberalism, but at the
same time we can rejoice that F. A. Hayek left us
such a brilliant gift.
A great scholar is defined not so much by the
answers he provides as by the questions he asks.
Successive generations of scholars, intellectuals,
and political activists throughout the world will
long be pursuing questions that Hayek has
posed.
Peter J. Boettke is a professor of economics at New York
University and the author of The Political Economy of
Soviet Socialism and Why Perestroika Failed.