Agnapostate
Banned
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2009
- Messages
- 67
I posted this commentary at one or two other places, but was hoping to hear feedback from those explicitly devoted to Austrian economics. Anyway, an early objection to the inevitable failures of central planning that the self-described socialist USSR had embarked upon on the basis of its failure to incorporate dispersed knowledge and a condemnation of the party dictatorship that state "socialism" involved is found in Peter Kropotkin's 1919 postscript to Words of a Rebel, which was published the year before the publication of Mises's 1920 Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth. As Kropotkin wrote:
The entire libertarian approach went virtually ignored by the Austrian school (Mises did devote an irrelevant cutting remark to Proudhon in his essay without actual argument), which placed focus on central planning mechanisms and procedures on account of the emergence of them in the economic structure of a country which was to later become a superpower of the world. That was their first failure.
Secondly, democratic market socialists have progressed beyond the mere punch in the gut that the development of the bureaucratic Lange model presented to Mises and have utilized Hayek's insights into dispersed knowledge problems to form a sound basis for advocacy of a decentralized market economy reliant on workers' ownership and management and in some cases a stakeholder economy, with Theodore Burczak in particular being integral in the development of "post-Hayekian" socialism, which even major Austrian scholars have admitted is serious. With the absence of any major Austrian argument against dispersedly planned socialism (with Mises incorrectly dismissing much of it as "workers' syndicalism," which he regarded as a form of capitalism), and the more recent development of adaptation of Hayek's insights by market socialists, have the Austrians now truly lost the economic calculation debate?
[P]roduction and exchange represent an undertaking so complicated that the plans of the state socialists, which lead inevitably to a party dictatorship, would prove to be absolutely ineffective as soon as they were applied to life. No government would be able to organize production if the workers themselves through their unions did not do it in each branch of industry; for in all production there arise daily thousands of difficulties which no government can solve or foresee. It is certainly impossible to foresee everything. Only the efforts of thousands of intelligences working on the problems can cooperate in the development of a new social system and find the best solutions for the thousands of local needs.
The entire libertarian approach went virtually ignored by the Austrian school (Mises did devote an irrelevant cutting remark to Proudhon in his essay without actual argument), which placed focus on central planning mechanisms and procedures on account of the emergence of them in the economic structure of a country which was to later become a superpower of the world. That was their first failure.
Secondly, democratic market socialists have progressed beyond the mere punch in the gut that the development of the bureaucratic Lange model presented to Mises and have utilized Hayek's insights into dispersed knowledge problems to form a sound basis for advocacy of a decentralized market economy reliant on workers' ownership and management and in some cases a stakeholder economy, with Theodore Burczak in particular being integral in the development of "post-Hayekian" socialism, which even major Austrian scholars have admitted is serious. With the absence of any major Austrian argument against dispersedly planned socialism (with Mises incorrectly dismissing much of it as "workers' syndicalism," which he regarded as a form of capitalism), and the more recent development of adaptation of Hayek's insights by market socialists, have the Austrians now truly lost the economic calculation debate?