The Other Hayek
Russ Roberts in the WSJ on the lesser-known Hayek -- the one who isn't the Spanish hottie:
...As Hayek contended in "The Road to Serfdom," political freedom and economic freedom are inextricably intertwined. In a centrally planned economy, the state inevitably infringes on what we do, what we enjoy, and where we live. When the state has the final say on the economy, the political opposition needs the permission of the state to act, speak and write. Economic control becomes political control.Even when the state tries to steer only part of the economy in the name of the "public good," the power of the state corrupts those who wield that power. Hayek pointed out that powerful bureaucracies don't attract angels--they attract people who enjoy running the lives of others. They tend to take care of their friends before taking care of others. And they find increasing that power attractive. Crony capitalism shouldn't be confused with the real thing.
The fourth timely idea of Hayek's is that order can emerge not just from the top down but from the bottom up. The American people are suffering from top-down fatigue. President Obama has expanded federal control of health care. He'd like to do the same with the energy market. Through Fannie and Freddie, the government is running the mortgage market. It now also owns shares in flagship American companies. The president flouts the rule of law by extracting promises from BP rather than letting the courts do their job. By increasing the size of government, he has left fewer resources for the rest of us to direct through our own decisions.
Hayek understood that the opposite of top-down collectivism was not selfishness and egotism. A free modern society is all about cooperation. We join with others to produce the goods and services we enjoy, all without top-down direction. The same is true in every sphere of activity that makes life meaningful--when we sing and when we dance, when we play and when we pray. Leaving us free to join with others as we see fit--in our work and in our play--is the road to true and lasting prosperity. Hayek gave us that map.
If you haven't read "The Road to Serfdom," you should. I have the Milton Friedman edition, but that's $28 on Amazon, so here's the $9.35 version.







Outstanding book; amazingly prescient.
And a model of clarity.
No wonder the left hates it.
Hey Skipper at June 29, 2010 5:30 AM
You can get the Reader's Digest condensed version here for free.
AllenS at June 29, 2010 9:52 AM
Downloaded the condensed version.
I think its time to grab a copy of Liberty and Tyranny from Mark Levin.
But the grandmother of all this is Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged.
Jim P. at June 29, 2010 6:41 PM
"Hayek contended in "The Road to Serfdom," political freedom and economic freedom are inextricably intertwined." To that I think should be added, religious freedom, since over zealous religious fundamentalists will attempt to gain and use political power to have their views enforced on the whole population, even those that do not have the same religious beliefs.
LarryAJ at June 30, 2010 8:35 AM
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