

- Navigation
- Hot
- New
- Recent Comments
- Activity Feed
- Marketplace
- Members Directory
- Producer's Lounge
- Producer's Vault
- The Gulch: Live! (New)
- Ask the Gulch!
- Going Galt
- Books
- Business
- Classifieds
- Culture
- Economics
- Education
- Entertainment
- Government
- History
- Humor
- Legislation
- Movies
- News
- Philosophy
- Pics
- Politics
- Science
- Technology
- Video
- The Gulch: Best of
- The Gulch: Bugs
- The Gulch: Feature Requests
- The Gulch: Featured Producers
- The Gulch: General
- The Gulch: Introductions
- The Gulch: Local
- The Gulch: Promotions
Well then...looking forward to your book. You may be aware from a previous post, that I am reading L. Von Mises Socialism... so far the subject matter of this particular book does not enter into areas of which you have raised objections excepting one. That is the Malthus Theory of Population. Here I find Mises seems a bit too sympathetic and I must remind myself that the book was first written in 1922 and grant a bit of allowance. Otherwise it is proving to be a most lengthy, boring and difficult read, but it has no equal in breaking down every favorable, conceivable argument for state control while supporting private ownership.
Respectfully,
O.A.
The short answer is no. I embarked on such a quest about 10 years ago. A book on economics that really got me thinking was called, Farewell to Alms. I did not agree with the book, but it got me to start looking at economic history over a much longer time frame and somewhere around then is when I first heard an economist say that all real per capita growth is the result of technology. Paul Romer does a good job of making this point, but then goes off the ranch on property rights including patents. (There is a good article with him in Reason Magazine - online) His is a mathematical Keynesian and tries to preserve Perfect Competition. I spend a fair amount of time explaining his positions in my book.
A great book on the economics of invention is, Inventions and Economic Growth, by Jacob Schmookler an economist. Unfortunately, it is out of print. I got a second hand copy. He makes the point that classical and neo-classic economic is fine for a technologically stagnant world, but all the interesting things happen in economics because the world is not technologically stagnant. He does not express any real points about economic freedom per se, his book is an econometric study of inventions.
There are some other books that are great. One of them is called, The Most Powerful Idea in the World. Very readable with a good account about the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, but too biased toward Great Britain. Again he is not making any broad points about freedom.
There are some other good books on point, including one by the economist Zorina Khan, but her book is pretty dry and again no real points about freedom, it is about patents and inventions and from a historical point of view in the United States.
I think this area of economics presents a huge opportunity for Objectivists to make their mark on economics and provide a science of economics that is consistent with Objectivism. My talk at Atlas Society will focus on this point. My book makes the arguments without any reference to Objectivism.
I understand and appreciate the emphasis and examination you have done exposing the problems with some of the foundations of Austrian economics. If I am understanding correctly, the Austrians, despite their condemnation of socialist and etatistic economic models, are poor spokespersons for capitalism due to vulnerability of their underlying, supporting premises. Those that are inclined to examine the underlying problems would see holes that could be exploited, thus providing openings for socialists to exploit.
Despite the problems with Austrians, as you have related, I have always felt they were common warriors for free markets and more aligned with desirable policies in regards to capitalism than most other schools of economics. My thoughts have been that their arguments were not always the best, but supplementary... complimentary... that outcome, by convincing more people by whatever arguments are persuasive to their sensibilities was still of some benefit. However, if these weak arguments are to be turned against capitalism...
Though it is my intention to acquire and read your book, in the mean, could you recommend another school of economics that is less objectionable? Please list a few of the economists that you find most congruent with objectivist economic philosophy aside from Rand.
Respectfully,
O.A.
At it's worst, technology is a job killer. When productivity goes up so much 6 or 10 people can do the job 150 used to do, it's difficult for people and ultimately society to reallocate and re-educate that labor force. That happened at the main Post Office when they automated. A workforce of about 4000 is now replaced by about 150 people. And, the service is just about the same. Remember, the "Last" word in our name is Service! United States Postal Service.
I noticed that many Austrians seemed to be religious and I wondered why this was, so I started investigating. Von Mises was an atheist but more in the way Marx is an atheist than Rand. I found David Kelley's paper on Rand v. Hayek and it is clear that Hayek is talking about the fundamental limits of reason. He is clear that he thinks Locke's natural rights is not based in reason and cannot be based in reason, it is based on some sort of cultural evolution, which by the way makes him a moral relativist. I then investigated Von Mises and his idea that prices were subjective.. I use to make this argument myself, but it always bothered me because even the best interpretation turns economics into a game with little or no connection to reality. But Mises was not and is not saying prices and values are determined by each individual, he is saying they are not connected to reality.
The reason Austrians attract religious people like Robbie is because the philosophical foundations are consistent with religion not with science - which makes them more like the socialists (post modernist movement) than objectivists or Locke or the enlightenment. Rand used to warn that capitalisms defenders were worse than its enemies and I put the Austrian squarely in that camp.
ABCT is wrong about the source of economic growth - it does not matter whether you see it, it is a fact. They are wrong about Central Banks causing all recessions. They are wrong in equating fractional reserve banking with central banks and with creating money out of thin air.
Austrian Economics is not a science. It rejects the fundamental tenants for all sciences - an objective reality and that reason is capable of understand the world.
The 'differentiate' list is v. useful.
On the section "The O meta-ethics and ethics do not need to bought into .." I think this says that Objectivism provides a theoretical framework on which economic policies can be evaluated, and, if that first step is wrong, with inadequate foundations of logic and ethics, then so will be derivations into economics and politics.
There is a lot of marking up and down here.
If many of the markers are austrian economics supporters, could more thought out argument be given as well as down points please? Or, it could be that dbhalling's confrontational style builds resistance. Unfortunate as his inputs are very constructive.
A hypothesis: any central bank action makes recession more likely.
Economics is a science; it is the science of human action. It is not a "hard" science like math or physics that can be proven by future testers conducting the same experiment and observing identical results. The variable in economics is the human element; one of the tenants of economics is that people behave rationally. The problem with that is that some people do not act rationally at all times, therefore, the results of observations may vary with different people under their current circumstances.
I support the ABCT and see no errors in it. Austrians, like any other group of thinkers, will have differing views on property rights and IP, but they almost all fully agree on the concept of factional reserve banking, especially when orchestrated by a central bank, is the root cause of the business cycle. If the money supply is not manipulated, the business cycle would not exist!
Load more comments...