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Ideas
On Liberty
Economics on Trial
July 2001
Where
Are the Best Schools in Austrian Economics?
by Mark Skousen
"We
must raise and train an army of fighters for freedom."
—F.
A. Hayek
Frequently
students or parents approach me at investment or economics
conferences with the question, "Can you recommend an undergraduate
or graduate program in free-market economics?" With the explosive
interest in a degree in economics, it’s imperative that students
get a topnotch education.* In my experience, if students aren’t
exposed early to the principles of Adam Smith and
Ludwig von Mises, it is often difficult for them to shed the
philosophies of John Maynard Keynes, Karl Marx, and other
interventionsts later on.
Here
in the United States most colleges and universities have a
goodly number of "neoclassical" economists with a free-market
bent. (There are a number of "free market" colleges and universities
in Latin America, Europe, and Asia, a topic I shall pursue
in a future column.) The American schools include the University
of Virginia; the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA);
Florida State University; and the University of Chicago. However,
anyone pursuing a degree in economics from these institutions
will need to be well-versed in advanced mathematics in order
to understand the professional language. As New York University
Professor Mario Rizzo wrote me, "Contemporary economics has
become a branch of applied mathematics."
Graduate
Schools in Austrian Economics
Fortunately,
there’s a growing number of schools that specialize in Austrian
economics. The best-known program is located at New York University,
ranked as one of the top 20 economics departments in the country.
The Austrian Economics Program, under the tutelage of Israel
Kirzner, David Harper, and Rizzo, has been functioning at
NYU since the days of Mises. The Austrian course work attracts
students from around the world.
NYU
also offers a weekly Austrian Economics Colloquium and an
annual summer course held at FEE. (Go to www.econ.nyu.edu/dept/austrian.)
However, it should be noted that the NYU program is small,
and most of the teachers there are non-Austrian.
George
Mason University (in northern Virginia) is also attracting
undergraduate and graduate students who want to specialize
in Austrian economics, although Professor Peter Boettke, who
also edits The Review of Austrian Economics, says that
"what makes GMU particularly attractive are its affiliated
fields of
Public
Choice, history of thought, and constitutional economics."
Boettke and Karen Vaughn teach the Austrian theory of the
market process; Richard Wagner offers a course in institutional
economics; and Walter Williams serves as chairman of the department.
(Go to www.gmu.edu/departments/economics.)
The Institute for Humane Studies is also located at GMU (www.theihs.org).
Another
graduate Austrian program that is gaining prominence is at
Walsh College of Accountancy and Business Administration in
Troy, Michigan (near Detroit). Walsh College (www.walshcol.edu)
specializes in business degrees—in marketing, management,
finance, and economics. Under the direction of Harry Veryser,
the school now offers a two-year bachelor’s degree and a master’s
degree in economics.
The entire faculty consists of free-market economists, with
a special emphasis on Austrian economics. Students are assigned
books and readings by Mises, Hayek, Henry Hazlitt, Wilhelm
Ropke, Paul Heyne, and me, among others. Walsh’s program is
impressive.
The
Expanding Austrian Universe
With
the Ludwig von Mises Institute (www.mises.org)
next door, Auburn University (www.auburn.edu/business/economics)
has attracted a large number of students over the years. The
most prominent Austrian economist on campus is Roger Garrison,
author of the new advanced macro text Time and Money.
Garrison teaches the main course in macroeconomics. (Leland
Yeager, former Ludwig von Mises Professor of Economics at
Auburn, is now retired.) Unfortunately, Auburn recently discontinued
its Ph.D. program. There are a goodly number of colleges offering
solid undergraduate courses. Two mainstays are Hillsdale College
in Michigan and Grove City College, near Pittsburgh. Grove
City College (www.gcc.edu)
no longer has Hans Sennholz as chairman of the department,
but Hans indicates that the school is still free-market oriented,
and John Moore, the president, is an economist. Hillsdale
College (www.hillsdale.edu/dept/economics)
has several free-market professors, the most well-known being
Richard Ebeling, who runs the annual Ludwig von Mises lecture
series. Hillsdale also houses the Mises library.
I
should also mention Northwood University, an associate- or
full-degree business school with campuses in Midland, Michigan;
West Palm Beach, Florida; and Cedar Hill, Texas. Founded by
Gary Stauffer and Arthur Turner in 1958, Northwood stresses
free-market and Austrian economics. (Go to www.northwood.edu.)
In
California, there are two universities with an Austrian bent.
Santa Clara University, under the guidance of Daniel Klein,
offers the Civil Society Institute (www.scu.edu/csi),
which involves a weekly colloquium, lectures series,
and "coffeehouse" for libertarian ideas. Other prominent members
of the faculty are Laurence Iannaccone, Henry Demmert, Fred
Foldvary, and David Friedman. Charles Baird, labor economist
and Ideas on Liberty columnist, is the co-chairman
of the department at California State University at Hayward
(www.sbe.csuhayward.edu)
and director of the Smith Center for Private Enterprise Studies.
According to Baird, half the tenure-track economists there
are "unabashedly free-market."
Lawrence
H. White, a specialist in free banking, was recently appointed
the first F A. Hayek Professor of Economic History at University
of Missouri-St. Louis (www.umsl.edu/divisions/artscience/economics).
According to his colleague David C. Rose, "a number of economists
are either outright Austrian or are very
sympathetic to the Austrian school and free market ideals."
If
you want year-round sunshine, you can always come to central
Florida and take one of my courses in investments, history
of thought, or Austrian economics at Rollins College in Winter
Park, Florida (near Orlando). (See www.rollins.edu/.)
Austriae
est imperare orbi universo!
*See
Jon E. Hilsenrath, "In Hot Pursuit of Economics Ph.D.s—Short
Supply and Big Demand Mean Young Graduates Are Courted Like
Royalty," Wall Street Journal, February 20, 2001, p.
B1.
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