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Ideas
On Liberty
Economics on Trial
May 2001
It
All Started with Adam
by Mark Skousen
Adam
Smith, that is. Having just completed writing a history of
economics,1 I have concluded that, despite the protestations
of Murray Rothbard and other detractors, the eighteenth-century
moral philosopher and celebrated author of The Wealth of
Nations deserves to be named the founding father of modern
economics.
The
reason: Adam Smith is the first major figure to articulate
in a profound way what has become known as the first fundamental
theorem of welfare economics: that the invisible hand of competition
automatically transforms self-interest into the common good.
George Stigler rightly labels Smith's model of laissez-faire
capitalism (Smith never used the phrase) the "crown jewel"
of The Wealth of Nations and "the most important substantive
proposition in all of economics." He states, "Smith had one
overwhelmingly important triumph: he put into the center of
economics the systematic analysis of the behavior of individuals
pursuing their self-interests under conditions of competition."2
In
short, Smith's thesis is that a "system of natural liberty,"
an economic system that allows individuals to pursue their
own self-interest under conditions of competition and common
law, would be a self-regulating and highly prosperous economy.
Eliminating restrictions on prices, labor, and trade meant
that universal prosperity could be maximized through lower
prices, higher wages, and better products. Smith assured the
reader that his model would result in "universal opulence
which extends itself to the lowest ranks of the people."3
Indeed
it has. Published in 1776, The Wealth of Nations was
the intellectual shot heard around the world, a declaration
of economic independence to go along with Thomas Jefferson's
declaration of political independence. It was no accident
that the industrial revolution and sharply higher economic
growth began in earnest shortly after its publication. As
Ludwig von Mises declares, "It paved the way for the unprecedented
achievements of laissez-faire capitalism."4
For
or Against Smith
The
most amazing discovery I made in researching and writing over
the past three years is that every major economic figure—whether
Marx, Mises, Keynes, or Friedman—could be judged by his support
of or opposition to Adam Smith's invisible-hand doctrine.
Karl Marx, Thorstein Veblen, John Maynard Keynes, and even
British disciples Thomas Robert Malthus and David Ricardo
denigrated Adam Smith's classical model of capitalism, while
Alfred Marshall, Irving Fisher, Ludwig von Mises, and Milton
Friedman, among others, remodeled and improved on Smithian
economics.
For
example, Keynes is unsympathetic to Adam Smith's worldview.
"It is not true that individuals possess a prescriptive 'natural
liberty' in their economic activities. . . . Nor is it true
that self-interest generally is enlightening. . . . Experience
does not show that individuals, when they make up a social
unit, are always less clear-sighted than when they act separately."5
The basic thesis of Keynes's magnum opus, The General Theory
of Employment, Interest, and Money (1936), is that laissez-faire
capitalism is inherently unstable and requires heavy state
intervention to survive. Keynesian disciple Paul Samuelson
correctly understood the true meaning of Keynes: "With respect
to the level of total purchasing power and employment, Keynes
denies that there is an invisible hand channeling the self-centered
action of each individual to the social optimum."6 Thus, I
conclude that Keynesian economics, rather than its savior,
is an enemy of Adam Smith's system of natural liberty.
Karl
Marx went even further. Instead of creating a system of natural
liberty, Marx set out to destroy it. Modern-day Marxist John
Roemer agrees. The "main difference" between Smith and Marx
is: "Smith argues that the individual's pursuit of self-interest
would lead to an outcome beneficial to all, whereas Marx argued
that the pursuit of self-interest would lead to anarchy, crisis,
and the dissolution of the private property-based system itself.
. . . Smith spoke of the invisible hand guiding individual,
self-interested agents to perform those actions that would
be, despite their lack of concern for such an outcome, socially
optimal; for Marxism the simile is the iron fist of competition,
pulverizing the workers and making them worse off than they
would be in another feasible system, namely, one based on
the social or public ownership of property."7
Adam
Smith as a Heroic Figure
By
measuring economists against a single standard, Adam Smith's
invisible-hand doctrine, I found a fresh way to unite the
history of economic thought. Virtually all previous histories
of economics, including Robert Heilbroner's popular work,
The Worldly Philosophers, present the story
of economics as one conflicting idea after another without
resolution or a running thread of truth. This hodgepodge approach
to history leaves the reader confused and unable to separate
the wheat from the chaff.
My
approach places Adam Smith and his system of natural liberty
at the center of the discipline. Think of it as a story of
high drama with a singular heroic figure. Adam Smith and his
classical model face one battle after another against the
mercantilists, socialists, and other enemies of liberty. Sometimes
even his "dismal" disciples (Malthus, Ricardo, and Mill) wound
him. Marx and the radical socialists attack him with a vengeance
and leave him for dead, only to have him resuscitated by the
leaders of the marginalist revolution (Menger, Jevons, and
Walras) and raised up to become the inspiration of a whole
new science.
But
the "neo-classical" model of capitalism faced its greatest
threat from the Keynesian revolution during the Great Depression
and the postwar era. Fortunately, the story has a good ending.
Through the untiring efforts of free-market advocates, especially
Milton Friedman and F. A. Hayek, Adam Smith's model of capitalism
is re-established and in the end triumphs. As Milton Friedman
proclaims, "To judge from the climate of opinion, we have
won the war of ideas. Everyone-left or right-talks about the
virtues of markets, private property, competition, and limited
government."8
Long
live Adam Smith!
1.
The Making of Modern Economics (Annonk, N.Y.: M. E.
Sharpe Publishers, 2001). 2. George Stigler, "The Successes
and Failures of Professor Smith," Journal of Political
Economy, December 1976, p. 1201.
3. Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations (New York: Modern
Library, 1965 [1776]), p. 11.
4. Ludwig von Mises, "Why Read Adam Smith Today," in The
Wealth of Nations Washington, D.C.: Regnery, 1998), p.
xi.
5. John Maynard Keynes, "The End of Laissez-Faire," Essays
in Persuasion (New York: Norton, 1963 [1931]), p. 312.
Keynes's speech was given in 1926, a full decade before The
General Theory came out.
6. Paul A. Samuelson, "Lord Keynes and the General Theory,"
The New Economics, ed. Seymour Harris (New York: Knopf,
1947), p.151.
7. John E. Roemer, Free to Lose (Cambridge, Mass.:
Harvard University Press, 1988), pp. 2-3. Note the title,
imitative, albeit negatively, of Milton and Rose Friedman's
popular Free to Choose (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich,
1980).
8. Milton and Rose Friedman, Two Lucky People (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1998), p. 582.
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