by Ludwig von Mises
A famous, very
often quoted phrase says, "That government is best, which governs
least." I do not believe this to be a correct description of the functions
of a good government. Government ought to do all the things for which it is
needed and for which it was established. Government ought to protect the
individuals within the country against the violent and fraudulent attacks of
gangsters, and it should defend the country against foreign enemies. These are
the functions of government within a free system, within the system of the
market economy.
Under socialism,
of course, the government is totalitarian, and there is nothing outside its
sphere and its jurisdiction. But in the market economy the main task of the
government is to protect the smooth functioning of the market economy against
fraud or violence from within and from outside the country.
People who do
not agree with this definition of the functions of government may say,
"This man hates the government." Nothing could be farther from the
truth. If I should say that gasoline is a very useful liquid, useful for many
purposes, but that I would nevertheless not drink gasoline because I think that
would not be the right use for it, I am not an enemy of gasoline, and I do not
hate gasoline. I only say that gasoline is very useful for certain purposes,
but not fit for other purposes. If I say it is the government's duty to arrest
murderers and other criminals, but not its duty to run the railroads or to
spend money for useless things, then I do not hate the government by declaring
that it is fit to do certain things but not fit to do other things.
It has been said
that under present-day conditions we no longer have a free-market economy.
Under present-day conditions we have something called the "mixed
economy." And for evidence of our "mixed economy," people point
to the many enterprises which are operated and owned by the government. The economy
is mixed, people say, because there are, in many countries, certain
institutions — like the telephone, telegraph, and railroads — which are owned
and operated by the government.
That some of
these institutions and enterprises are operated by the government is certainly
true. But this fact alone does not change the
character of our economic system. It does not even mean there is a "little
socialism" within the otherwise nonsocialist, free-market economy. For the
government, in operating these enterprises, is subject to the supremacy of the
market, which means it is subject to the supremacy of the consumers. The
government — if it operates, let us say, post offices or railroads — has to
hire people who have to work in these enterprises. It also has to buy the raw
materials and other things that are needed for the conduct of these
enterprises. And on the other hand, it "sells" these services or
commodities to the public. Yet, even though it operates these institutions
using the methods of the free economic system, the result, as a rule, is a
deficit. The government, however, is in a position to finance such a deficit —
at least the members of the government and of the ruling party believe so.
It is certainly
different for an individual. The individual's power to operate something with a
deficit is very limited. If the deficit is not very soon eliminated, and if the
enterprise does not become profitable (or at least show that no further deficit
losses are being incurred), the individual goes bankrupt and the enterprise
must come to an end.
But for the
government, conditions are different. The government can run at a deficit,
because it has the power to tax people. And
if the taxpayers are prepared to pay higher taxes in order to make it possible
for the government to operate an enterprise at a loss — that is, in a less
efficient way than it would be done by a private institution — and if the
public will accept this loss, then of course the enterprise will continue.
In recent years,
governments have increased the number of nationalized institutions and
enterprises in most countries to such an extent that the deficits have grown
far beyond the amount that could be collected in taxes from the citizens. What
happens then is not the subject of today's lecture. It is inflation, and I
shall deal with that tomorrow. I mentioned this only because the mixed economy
must not be confused with the problem of interventionism,
about which I want to talk tonight.
What is
interventionism? Interventionism means that the government does not restrict
its activity to the preservation of order, or — as people used to say a hundred
years ago — to "the production of security." Interventionism means
that the government wants to do more. It wants to interfere with market
phenomena.
If one objects
and says the government should not interfere with business, people very often
answer, "But the government necessarily always interferes. If there are
policemen on the street, the government interferes. It interferes with a robber
looting a shop or it prevents a man from stealing a car." But when dealing
with interventionism and defining what is meant by interventionism, we are
speaking about government interference with the market. (That the government and
the police are expected to protect the citizens, which includes businessmen,
and of course their employees, against attacks on the part of domestic or
foreign gangsters, is in fact a normal, necessary expectation of any
government. Such protection is not an intervention, for the government's only
legitimate function is, precisely, to produce security.)
What we have in
mind when we talk about interventionism is the government's desire to do morethan prevent assaults and fraud. Interventionism
means that the government not only fails to protect the smooth functioning of
the market economy but that it interferes with the various market phenomena; it
interferes with prices, with wage rates, interest rates, and profits.
The government
wants to interfere in order to force businessmen to conduct their affairs in a
different way than they would have chosen if they had obeyed only the
consumers. Thus, all the measures of interventionism by the government are
directed toward restricting the supremacy of consumers. The government wants to
arrogate to itself the power, or at least a part of the power, which, in the
free-market economy, is in the hands of the consumers.
Let us consider
one example of interventionism, very popular in many countries and tried again
and again by many governments, especially in times of inflation. I refer to
price control.
Governments
usually resort to price control when they have inflated the money supply and
people have begun to complain about the resulting rise in prices. There are
many famous historical examples of price control methods that failed, but I
shall refer to only two of them because, in both these cases, the governments
were really very energetic in enforcing or trying to enforce their price
controls.
The first famous
example is the case of the Roman Emperor Diocletian, very well-known as the
last of those Roman emperors who persecuted the Christians. The Roman emperor
in the second part of the 3rd century had only one financial method, and this
was currency debasement. In those primitive ages, before the invention of the
printing press, even inflation was, let us say, primitive. It involved
debasement of the coinage, especially the silver. The government mixed more and
more copper into the silver until the color of the silver coins was changed and
the weight was reduced considerably. The result of this coinage debasement and
the associated increase in the quantity of money was an increase in prices,
followed by an edict to control prices. And Roman emperors were not very mild when
they enforced a law; they did not consider death too mild a punishment for a
man who had asked for a higher price. They enforced price control, but they
failed to maintain the society. The result was the disintegration of the Roman
Empire and the system of the division of labor.
Then, 1,500
years later, the same currency debasement took place during the French
Revolution. But this time a different method was used. The technology for
producing money was considerably improved. It was no longer necessary for the
French to resort to debasement of the coinage: they had the printing press. And
the printing press was very efficient. Again, the result was an unprecedented
rise in prices. But in the French Revolution maximum prices were not enforced
by the same method of capital punishment which the Emperor Diocletian had used.
There had also been an improvement in the technique of killing citizens. You
all remember the famous Doctor J. I. Guillotin (1738–1814), who advocated the
use of the guillotine. Despite the guillotine the French also failed with their
laws of maximum prices. When Robespierre himself was carted off to the
guillotine the people shouted, "There goes the dirty Maximum."
I wanted to
mention this, because people often say, "What is needed in order to make
price control effective and efficient is merely more brutality and more
energy." Now certainly, Diocletian was very brutal, and so was the French
Revolution. Nevertheless, price control measures in both ages failed entirely.
Now let us
analyze the reasons for this failure. The government hears people complain that
the price of milk has gone up. And milk is certainly very important, especially
for the rising generation, for children. Consequently, the government declares
a maximum price for milk, a maximum price that is lower than the potential
market price would be. Now the government says, "Certainly we have done
everything needed in order to make it possible for poor parents to buy as much
milk as they need to feed their children."
But what happens?
On the one hand, the lower price of milk increases the demand for milk; people
who could not afford to buy milk at a higher price are now able to buy it at
the lower price which the government has decreed. And on the other hand some of
the producers, those producers of milk who are producing at the highest cost —
that is, the marginal producers — are now suffering losses, because the price
which the government has decreed is lower than their costs. This is the
important point in the market economy. The private entrepreneur, the private
producer, cannot take losses in the long run. And as he cannot take losses in
milk, he restricts the production of milk for the market. He may sell some of
his cows for the slaughter house, or instead of milk he may sell some products
made out of milk, for instance sour cream, butter or cheese.
Thus the
government's interference with the price of milk will result in less milk than
there was before, and at the same time there will be a greater demand. Some
people who are prepared to pay the government-decreed price cannot buy it.
Another result will be that anxious people will hurry to be first at the shops.
They have to wait outside. The long lines of people waiting at shops always
appear as a familiar phenomenon in a city in which the government has decreed
maximum prices for commodities that the government considers as important. This
has happened everywhere when the price of milk was controlled. This was always
prognosticated by economists. Of course, only by sound economists, and their
number is not very great.
But what is the
result of the government's price control? The government is disappointed. It
wanted to increase the satisfaction of the milk drinkers. But actually it has
dissatisfied them. Before the government interfered, milk was expensive, but
people could buy it. Now there is only an insufficient quantity of milk
available. Therefore, the total consumption of milk drops. The children are
getting less milk, not more. The next measure to which the government now resorts
is rationing. But rationing only means that certain people are privileged and
are getting milk while other people are not getting any
at all. Who gets milk and who does not, of course, is always very arbitrarily
determined. One order may determine, for example, that children under four
years old should get milk, and that children over four years, or between the
age of four and six, should get only half the ration which children under four
years receive.
Whatever the
government does, the fact remains, there is only a smaller amount of milk
available. Thus people are still more dissatisfied than they were before. Now
the government asks the milk producers (because the government does not have
enough imagination to find out for itself), "Why do you not produce the
same amount of milk you produced before?" The government gets the answer:
"We cannot do it, since the costs of production are higher than the
maximum price which the government has established." Now the government
studies the costs of the various items of production, and it discovers one of
the items is fodder.
"Oh,"
says the government, "the same control we applied to milk we will now
apply to fodder. We will determine a maximum price for fodder, and then you
will be able to feed your cows at a lower price, at a lower expenditure. Then
everything will be all right; you will be able to produce more milk and you
will sell more milk."
But what happens
now? The same story repeats itself with fodder, and as you can understand, for
the same reasons. The production of fodder drops and the government is again
faced with a dilemma. So the government arranges new hearings, to find out what
is wrong with fodder production. And it gets an explanation from the producers
of fodder precisely like the one it got from the milk producers. So the
government must go a step farther, since it does not want to abandon the
principle of price control. It determines maximum prices for producers' goods
which are necessary for the production of fodder. And the same story happens
again.
The government
at the same time starts controlling not only milk, but also eggs, meat, and
other necessities. And every time the government gets the same result,
everywhere the consequence is the same. Once the government fixes a maximum
price for consumer goods, it has to go farther back to producers' goods, and
limit the prices of the producers' goods required for the production of the
price-controlled consumer goods. And so the government, having started with
only a few price controls, goes farther and farther back in the process of
production, fixing maximum prices for all kinds of producers' goods, including
of course the price of labor, because without wage control, the government's
"cost control" would be meaningless.
Moreover, the
government cannot limit its interference into the market to only those things
which it views as vital necessities, like milk, butter, eggs, and meat. It must
necessarily include luxury goods, because if it did not limit their prices, capital and labor would abandon the
production of vital necessities and would turn to producing those things which
the government considers unnecessary luxury goods. Thus, the isolated
interference with one or a few prices of consumer goods always brings about
effects — and this is important to realize — which are even lesssatisfactory than the conditions that prevailed
before.
Before the
government interfered, milk and eggs were expensive; after the government
interfered they began to disappear from the market. The government considered those
items to be so important that it interfered; it wanted to increase the quantity
and improve the supply. The result was the opposite: the isolated interference
brought about a condition which — from the point of view of the government — is
even more undesirable than the previous state of
affairs which the government wanted to alter. And as the government goes
farther and farther, it will finally arrive at a point where all prices, all
wage rates, all interest rates, in short everything in the whole economic
system, is determined by the government. And this, clearly, is socialism.
What I have told
you here, this schematic and theoretical explanation, is precisely what
happened in those countries which tried to enforce a maximum price control,
where governments were stubborn enough to go step by step until they came to
the end. This happened in the First World War in Germany and England.
Let us analyze
the situation in both countries. Both countries experienced inflation. Prices
went up, and the two governments imposed price controls. Starting with a few
prices, starting with only milk and eggs, they had to go farther and farther.
The longer the war went on, the more inflation was generated. And after three
years of war, the Germans — systematically as always — elaborated a great plan.
They called it the Hindenburg Plan:
everything in Germany considered to be good by the government at that time was
named after Hindenburg.
The Hindenburg
Plan meant that the whole German economic system should be controlled by the
government: prices, wages, profits — everything. And the bureaucracy
immediately began to put this into effect. But before they had finished, the
debacle came: the German empire broke down, the entire bureaucratic apparatus
disappeared, the revolution brought its bloody results — things came to an end.
In England they
started in the same way, but after a time, in the spring of 1917, the United
States entered the war and supplied the British with sufficient quantities of
everything. Therefore the road to socialism, the road to serfdom, was
interrupted.
Before Hitler
came to power, Chancellor Brüning again introduced price control in Germany for
the usual reasons. Hitler enforced it, even before the war started. For in
Hitler's Germany there was no private enterprise or private initiative. In
Hitler's Germany there was a system of socialism which differed from the
Russian system only to the extent that the terminology and labels of the free economic system were still
retained. There still existed "private enterprises," as they were
called. But the owner was no longer an entrepreneur, the owner was called a
"shop manager" (Betriebsführer).
The whole of
Germany was organized in a hierarchy of führers; there was the Highest Führer,
Hitler of course, and then there were führers down to the many hierarchies of smaller
führers. And the head of an enterprise was the Betriebsführer.
And the workers of the enterprise were named by a word that, in the Middle
Ages, had signified the retinue of a feudal lord: the Gefolgschaft. And all of these people had to obey the
orders issued by an institution which had a terribly long name:Reichsführerwirtschaftsministerium (Führer of the
Reich's — i.e., the empire's — Ministry of Economics), at the head of which was
the well-known fat man, named Goering, adorned with jewelry and medals.
And from this
body of ministers with the long name came all the orders to every enterprise:
what to produce, in what quantity, where to get the raw materials and what to
pay for them, to whom to sell the products and at what prices to sell them. The
workers got the order to work in a definite factory, and they received wages
which the government decreed. The whole economic system was now regulated in
every detail by the government.
The Betriebsführer did not have the right to take the
profits for himself; he received what amounted to a salary, and if he wanted to
get more he would, for example, say, "I am very sick, I need an operation
immediately, and the operation will cost 500 marks," then he had to ask
the führer of the district (the Gauführer or Gauleiter) whether he had the right to take out more
than the salary which was given to him. The prices were no longer prices, the
wages were no longer wages, they were all quantitative terms in a system of socialism.
Now let me tell
you how that system broke down. One day, after years of fighting, the foreign
armies arrived in Germany. They tried to preserve this government-directed
economic system, but the brutality of Hitler would have been necessary to
preserve it and, without this, it did not work.
And while this
was going on in Germany, Great Britain — during the Second World War — did
precisely what Germany did. Starting with the price control of some commodities
only, the British government began step by step (in the same way Hitler had
done in peacetime, even before the start of the war) to control more and more
of the economy until, by the time the war ended, they had reached something
that was almost pure socialism.
Great Britain
was not brought to socialism by the Labour government which was established in
1945. Great Britain became socialist during the war,
through the government of which Sir Winston Churchill was the prime minister.
The Labour government simply retained the system of socialism which the
government of Sir Winston Churchill had already introduced. And this in spite
of great resistance by the people.
The
nationalizations in Great Britain did not mean very much; the nationalization
of the Bank of England was merely nominal, because the Bank of England was
already under the complete control of the government. And it was the same with
the nationalization of the railroads and the steel industry. The "war
socialism," as it was called — meaning the system of interventionism
proceeding step by step — had already virtually nationalized the system.
The difference
between the German and British systems was not important since the people who
operated them had been appointed by the government and in both cases they had
to obey the government's orders in every respect. As I said before, the system
of the German Nazis retained the labels and terms of the capitalistic
free-market economy. But they meant something very different: there were now
only government decrees.
This was also
true for the British system. When the Conservative party in Britain was
returned to power, some of those controls were removed. In Great Britain we now
have attempts from one side to retain controls and from the other side to
abolish them. (But one must not forget that, in England, conditions are very
different from conditions in Russia.) The same is true for other countries which
depend on the importation of food and raw materials and therefore have to
export manufactured goods. For countries depending heavily on export trade, a
system of government control simply does not work.
Thus, as far as
there is economic freedom left (and there is still substantial freedom in some
countries, such as Norway, England, Sweden), it exists because of the necessity to retain export trade. Earlier, I chose the
example of milk, not because I have a special preference for milk, but because
practically all governments — or most of them — in recent decades, have
regulated milk, egg, or butter prices.
I want to refer,
in a few words, to another example, and that is rent control. If the government
controls rents, one result is that people who would otherwise have moved from
bigger apartments to smaller ones when their family conditions changed, will no
longer do so. For example, consider parents whose children left home when they
came into their 20s, married or went into other cities to work. Such parents
used to change their apartments and take smaller and cheaper ones. This
necessity disappeared when rent controls were imposed.
In Vienna,
Austria, in the early '20s, where rent control was well-established, the amount
of money that the landlord received for an average apartment under rent control
was not more than twice the price of a ticket for a ride on the city-owned
street cars. You can imagine that people did not have any incentive to change
their apartments. And, on the other hand, there was no construction of new
houses. Similar conditions prevailed in the United States after the Second
World War and are continuing in many cities to this day.
One of the main
reasons why many cities in the United States are in such great financial
difficulty is that they have rent control and a resulting shortage of housing.
So the government has spent billions for the building of new houses. But why
was there such a housing shortage? The housing shortage developed for the same
reasons that brought milk shortages when there was milk price control. That
means: when the government interferes with the market, it is more and
more driven towards socialism.
And this is the
answer to those people who say, "We are not socialists, we do not want the
government to control everything. We realize this is bad. But why should not
the government interfere a little bit with the market? Why shouldn't the
government do away with some things which we do not like?"
These people
talk of a "middle-of-the-road" policy. What they do not see is that
the isolatedinterference, which means the interference with
only one small part of the economic system, brings about a situation which the
government itself — and the people who are asking for government interference —
find worse than the conditions they wanted to abolish: the people who are
asking for rent control are very angry when they discover there is a shortage
of apartments and a shortage of housing.
But this
shortage of housing was created precisely by government interference, by the
establishment of rents below the level people would have had to pay in a free
market.
The idea that
there is a third system — between
socialism and capitalism, as its supporters say — a system as far away from
socialism as it is from capitalism but that retains the advantages and avoids
the disadvantages of each — is pure nonsense. People who believe there is such
a mythical system can become really poetic when they praise the glories of
interventionism. One can only say they are mistaken. The government interference
which they praise brings about conditions which they themselves do not like.
One of the
problems I will deal with later is protectionism. The
government tries to isolate the domestic market from the world market. It
introduces tariffs which raise the domestic price of a commodity above the
world market price, making it possible for domestic producers to form cartels.
The cartels are then attacked by the government declaring, "Under these
conditions, anti-cartel legislation is necessary."
This is precisely
the situation with most of the European governments. In the United States,
there are yet other reasons for antitrust legislation and the government's
campaign against the specter of monopoly.
It is absurd to
see the government — which creates by its own intervention the conditions
making possible the emergence of domestic cartels — point its finger at
business, saying, "There are cartels, therefore government interference
with business is necessary." It would be much simpler to avoid cartels by
ending the government's interference with the market — an interference which
makes these cartels possible.
The idea of
government interference as a "solution" to economic problems leads,
in every country, to conditions which, at the least, are very unsatisfactory and
often quite chaotic. If the government does not stop in time, it will bring on
socialism.
Nevertheless,
government interference with business is still very popular. As soon as someone
does not like something that happens in the world, he says, "The government
ought to do something about it. What do we have a government for? The
government should do it." And this is a characteristic remnant of thought
from past ages, of ages preceding modern
freedom, modern constitutional government, before representative government or
modern republicanism.
For centuries
there was the doctrine — maintained and accepted by everyone — that a king, an
anointed king, was the messenger of God; he had more wisdom than his subjects,
and he had supernatural powers. As recently as the beginning of the 19th
century, people suffering from certain diseases expected to be cured by the
royal touch, by the hand of the king. Doctors were usually better;
nevertheless, they had their patients try the king.
This doctrine of
the superiority of a paternal government, of the supernatural and superhuman
powers of the hereditary kings gradually disappeared — or at least we thought
so. But it came back again. There was a German professor named Werner Sombart
(I knew him very well), who was known the world over, who was an honorary
doctor of many universities and an honorary member of the American Economic
Association. That professor wrote a book, which is available in an English
translation, published by the Princeton University Press. It is available also
in a French translation, and probably also in Spanish — at least I hope it is
available, because then you can check what I am saying. In this book, published
in our century, not in the Dark Ages, Werner Sombart, a professor of economics,
simply says, "The Führer, our Führer" — he means, of course, Hitler —
"gets his orders directly from God, the Führer of the Universe."
I spoke of this
hierarchy of the führers earlier, and in this hierarchy. I mentioned Hitler as
the "Supreme Führer." But there is, according to Werner Sombart, a
still higher Führer, God, the Führer of the universe. And God, he wrote, gives
his orders directly to Hitler. Of course, Professor Sombart said very modestly,
"We do not know how God communicates with the Führer. But the fact cannot
be denied."
Now, if you hear
that such a book can be published in the German language, the language of a
nation which was once hailed as "the nation of philosophers and
poets," and if you see it translated into English and French, then you
will not be astonished at the fact that even a little bureaucrat considers
himself wiser and better than the citizens and wants to interfere with
everything, even though he is only a poor little bureaucrat, and not the famous
Professor Werner Sombart, honorary member of everything.
Is there a
remedy against such happenings? I would say, yes, there is a remedy. And this
remedy is the power of the citizens; they have to prevent the establishment of
such an autocratic regime that arrogates to itself a higher wisdom than that of
the average citizen. This is the fundamental difference between freedom and
serfdom.
The socialist
nations have arrogated to themselves the term democracy. The
Russians call their own system a People's Democracy; they probably maintain
that the people are represented in the person of the dictator. I think that one dictator, Juan Perón here in Argentina, was given a
good answer when he was forced into exile in 1955. Let us hope that all other
dictators, in other nations, will be accorded a similar response.
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