Why the Interest in Hayek and The Road to Serfdom?
A few years ago, if you said the name Friedrich Hayek to the average
person in society, they wouldn’t know his name. They might wrongly guess
that he was the father of actress Selma Hayek. His name was unknown to
non-economists.
Today he has much more visibility. People are reading his classic book, The Road to Serfdom,
perhaps in order to make sense of our troubled economic climate and the
current administration’s policies. When TV host Glenn Beck talked about
Hayek and The Road to Serfdom, the book went to number one on Amazon and stayed in the top ten for some time. A rap video featuring cartoon versions of Hayek and John Maynard Keynes have been viewed over a million times on YouTube.
Why all the interest in a Vienna-born, Nobel Prize-winning economist
who passed off the scene some time ago? People are taking a second look
at Hayek because of our current economic troubles. Russ Roberts, in his
op-ed, “Why Friedrich Hayek is Making a Comeback,”{1} says people are reconsidering four ideas Hayek championed.
First, Hayek and his fellow Austrian School economists such as Ludwig
Von Mises argued that the economy is much more complicated than the
simple economic principles set forth by Keynes. Boosting aggregate
demand by funding certain sectors with a stimulus package of the economy
won’t necessarily help any other sector of the economy.
Second, Hayek highlighted the role of the Federal Reserve in the
business cycle. The artificially low interest rates set by the Fed
played a crucial role in inflating the housing bubble. Our current
monetary policy seems to merely be postponing the economic adjustments
that must take place to heal the housing market.
Third, Hayek argued in his book that political freedom and economic
freedom are connected and intertwined. The government in a centrally
controlled economy controls more than just wages and prices. It
inevitably infringes on what we do and where we live.
Even when the government tries to steer the economy in the name of
the “public good,” the increased 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.”{2}
A final point by Hayek is that order can emerge not just from the top
down but also from the bottom up. At the moment, citizens in many of
the modern democracies are suffering from a top-down fatigue. A free
market not only generates order but the freedom to work and trade with
others. The opposite of top-down collectivism is not selfishness but
cooperation.
Although The Road to Serfdom was written at the end of World
War II to warn England that it could fall into the same fate as
Germany, its warning to every generation is timeless.
Misconceptions About The Road to Serfdom (part one)
Hayek wrote his classic book The Road to Serfdom{3}
more than sixty years ago, yet people are still reading it today. As
they read it and apply its principles, many others misunderstand. Let’s
look at some of the prevalent misconceptions.
Because Hayek was a Nobel-winning economist, people wrongly believe that The Road to Serfdom
is merely a book about economics. It is much more. It is about the
impact a centrally planned socialist society can have on individuals.
Hayek says one of the main points in his book is “that the most
important change which extensive government control produces is a
psychological change, an alteration in the character of the people. This
is necessarily a slow affair, a process which extends not over a few
years but perhaps over one or two generations.”{4}
The character of citizens is changed because they have yielded their
will and decision-making to a totalitarian government. They may have
done so willingly in order to have a welfare state. Or they may have
done so unwillingly because a dictator has taken control of the reins of
power. Either way, Hayek argues, their character has been altered
because the control over every detail of economic life is ultimately
control of life itself.
In the forward to his book, Hayek makes his case about the insidious
nature of a soft despotism. He quotes from Alexis de Tocqueville’s
prediction in Democracy in America of the “new kind of servitude” when
after having thus successively taken each member of the community in
it powerful grasp, and fashioned him at will, the supreme power then
extends its arm over the whole community. It covers the surface of
society with a network of small, complicated rules, minute and uniform,
through which the most original minds and the most energetic characters
cannot penetrate to rise above the crowd. The will of man is not
shattered but softened, bent and guided; men are seldom forced by it to
act, but they are constantly restrained from acting. Such a power does
not destroy, but it prevents existence, and stupefies a people, till
each nation is reduced to be nothing more than a flock of timid and
industrious animals, of which the government is the shepherd.{5}
Tocqueville warned that the search for greater equality typically is
accompanied by greater centralization of government with a corresponding
loss of liberty. The chapter was insightfully titled, “What Sort of
Despotism Democratic Nations Have to Fear.”
Tocqueville also described the contrast between democracy and socialism:
Democracy extends the sphere of individual freedom; socialism
restricts it. Democracy attaches all possible value to each man;
socialism makes each man a mere agent, a mere number. Democracy and
socialism have nothing in common but one word: equality. But notice the
difference: while democracy seeks equality in liberty, socialism seeks
equality in restraint and servitude.{6}
Hayek believed that individual citizens should develop their own
abilities and pursue their own dreams. He argued that government should
be a means, a mere instrument, “to help individuals in their fullest development of their individual personality.”{7}
Misconceptions About The Road to Serfdom (part two)
Another misconception about Hayek is that he was making a case for
radical libertarianism. Some of the previous quotes illustrate that he
understood that the government could and should intervene in
circumstances. He explains that his book was not about whether the
government should or should not act in every circumstance.
What he was calling for was a government limited in scope and power.
On the one hand, he rejected libertarian anarchy. On the other hand, he
devoted the book to the reasons why we should reject a pervasive,
centrally controlled society advocated by the socialists of his day. He
recognized the place for government’s role.
The government, however, should focus its attention on setting the
ground rules for competition rather than devote time and energy to
picking winners and losers in the marketplace. And Hayek reasoned that
government cannot possibly know the individual and collective needs of
society. Therefore, Hayek argues that the “state should confine itself
to establishing rules applying to general types of situations and should
allow the individuals freedom in everything which depends on the
circumstances of time and place, because only the individuals concerned
in each instance can fully know these circumstances and adapt their
actions to them.”{10}
Wise and prudent government must recognize that there are fundamental
limitations in human knowledge. A government that recognizes its
limitations is less likely to intervene at every level and implement a
top-down control of the economy.
One last misconception has to do with helping those who suffer
misfortune. It is true that he rejected the idea of a top-down,
centrally controlled economy and socialist welfare state. But that did
not exclude the concept of some sort of social safety net.
In his chapter on “Security and Freedom” he says, “there can be no
doubt that some minimum of food, shelter, and clothing, sufficient to
preserve health and the capacity to work can be assured to everybody.”{11} He notes that this has been achieved in England (and we might add in most other modern democracies).
He went on to argue that the government should provide assistance to
victims of such “acts of God” (such as earthquakes and floods). Although
he might disagree with the extent governments today provide ongoing
assistance for years, Hayek certainly did believe there was a place for
providing aid to those struck by misfortune.
Paved With Good Intentions
Friedrich Hayek wrote The Road to Serfdom to warn us that
sometimes the road can be paved with good intentions. Most government
officials and bureaucrats write laws, rules, and regulations with every
good intention. They desire to make the world a better place by
preventing catastrophe and by encouraging positive actions from their
citizens. But in their desire to control and direct every aspect of
life, they take us down the road to serfdom.
Hayek says the problem comes from a “passion for conscious control of everything.”{12}
People who enter into government and run powerful bureaucracies are
often people who enjoy running not only the bureaucracy but also the
lives of its citizens. In making uniform rules from a distance, they
deprive the local communities of the freedom to apply their own
knowledge and wisdom to their unique situations.
Socialist government seeks to be a benevolent god, but usually morphs
into a malevolent tyrant. Micromanaging the details of life leads to
what Hayek calls “imprudence.” Most of us would call such rules
intrusive, inefficient, and often downright idiotic. But the
governmental bureaucrat may believe he is right in making such rules,
believing that the local people are too stupid to know what is best for
them. Hayek argues that citizens are best served when they are given the
freedom to make choices that are best for them and their communities.
Hayek actually makes his case for economic freedom using a moral
argument. If government assumes our moral responsibility, then we are no
longer free moral agents. The intrusion of the state limits my ability
to make moral choices. “What our generation is in danger of forgetting
is not only that morals are of necessity a phenomenon of individual
conduct but also that they can exist only in the sphere in which the
individual is free to decide for himself and is called upon voluntarily
to sacrifice personal advantage to the observance of a moral rule.”{13}
This is true whether it is an individual or a government that takes
responsibility. In either case, we are no longer making free moral
decisions. Someone or something else is making moral decisions for us.
“Responsibility, not to a superior, but to one’s conscience, the
awareness of duty is not exacted by compulsion, the necessity to decide
which of the things one values are to be sacrificed to others, and to
bear the consequences of one’s own decision, are the very essence of any
morals which deserve the name.”{14}
A socialist government may promise freedom to its citizens but it
adversely affects them when it frees them from making moral choices. “A
movement whose main promise is the relief from responsibility cannot but
be antimoral in its effect, however lofty the ideals to which it owes
its birth.”{15}
Hayek also warned about the danger of centralizing power in the hands
of a few bureaucrats. He argued that, “by uniting in the hands of a
single body power formerly exercised independently by many, an amount of
power is created infinitely greater than any that existed before, so
much more far reaching as almost to be different in kind.”{16}
He even argues that once we centralize power in a bureaucracy, we are
headed down the road to serfdom. “What is called economic power, while
it can be an instrument of coercion, is, in the hands of private
individuals, never exclusive or complete power, never power over the
whole of life of a person. But centralized as an instrument of political
power it creates a degree of dependence scarcely distinguishable from
slavery.”{17}
Biblical Perspective
How does The Road to Serfdom compare to biblical principles?
We must begin by stating that Friedrich Hayek was not a Christian. He
did not confess Christian faith nor did he attend religious services.
Hayek could best be described as an agnostic.
He was born in 1899 into an affluent, aristocratic family in Austria.
He grew up in a nominally Roman Catholic home. Apparently there was a
time when he seriously considered Christianity. Shortly before Hayek
became a teenager, he began to ask some of the big questions of life. In
his teen years, he was influenced by a godly teacher and even came
under the conviction of sin. However, his quest ended when he felt that
no one could satisfactorily answer his questions. From that point on he
seems to have set aside any interest in Christianity and even expressed
hostility toward religion.
Perhaps the most significant connection between Hayek and
Christianity can be found in their common understanding of human nature.
Hayek started with a simple premise: human beings are limited in their
understanding. The Bible would say that we are fallen creatures living
in a fallen world.
Starting with this assumption that human beings are not God, he
constructed a case for liberty and limited government. This was in
contrast to the prevailing socialist view that human beings possessed
superior knowledge and could wisely order the affairs of its citizens
through central planning. Hayek rejected the idea that central planners
would have enough knowledge to organize the economy and instead showed
that the spontaneous ordering of economic systems would be the mechanism
that would push forward progress in society.
Hayek essentially held to a high view and a low view of human nature.
Or we could call it a balanced view of human nature. He recognized that
human beings did have a noble side influenced by rationality,
compassion, and even altruism. But he also understood that human beings
also are limited in their perception of the world and subject to
character flaws.
Such a view comports with a biblical perspective of human nature.
First, there is a noble aspect to human beings. We are created in the
image of God (Gen. 1:27-28) and are made a little lower than the angels
(Psalm 8:5). Second, there is a flaw in human beings. The Bible teaches
that all are sinful (Rom. 3:23) and that the heart of man is deceitful
above all things (Jer. 17:9).
Hayek believed that “man learns by the disappointment of
expectations.” In other words, we learn that we are limited in our
capacities. We do not have God’s understanding of the world and thus
cannot effectively control the world like socialists confidently believe
that we can. We are not the center of the universe. We are not gods. As
Christians we can agree with the concept of the “disappointment of
expectations” because we are fallen and live in a world that groans in
travail (Romans 8:22).
Although Hayek was not a Christian, many of the ideas in The Road to Serfdom connect with biblical principles. Christians would be wise to read it and learn from him the lessons of history.
Notes
1. Russ Roberts, "Why Friedrich Hayek is Making a Comeback," Wall Street Journal, 28 June 2010.
2. Ibid.
3. F.A. Hayek, The Road to Serfdom: Text and Documents, the Definitive Edition, ed. Bruce Caldwell (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007).
4. Ibid., 48.
5. Ibid., 49.
6. Ibid., 77.
7. Ibid., 115.
8. Ibid., 57.
9. Ibid., 59.
10. Ibid., 114.
11. Ibid., 148.
12. Ibid.
13. Ibid., 216.
14. Ibid., 217.
15. Ibid.
16. Ibid., 165.
17. Ibid., 166.
© 2010 Probe Ministries
About the Author
Kerby Anderson
is National Director of Probe Ministries International. He holds
masters degrees from Yale University (science) and from Georgetown
University (government). He is the author of several books, including Christian Ethics in Plain Language, Genetic Engineering, Origin Science, Signs of Warning, Signs of Hope and Making the Most of Your Money in Tough Times. His new series with Harvest House Publishers includes: A Biblical Point of View on Islam, A Biblical Point of View on Homosexuality, A Biblical Point of View on Intelligent Design and A Biblical Point of View on Spiritual Warfare.
He is the host of "Point of View" (USA Radio Network) and regular guest
on "Prime Time America" (Moody Broadcasting Network) and "Fire Away"
(American Family Radio). He produces a daily syndicated radio commentary
and writes editorials that have appeared in papers such as the Dallas Morning News, the Miami Herald, the San Jose Mercury, and the Houston Post.
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