by F.A. Hayek
There can be no doubt that most of those in the democracies who demand a
central direction of all economic activity still believe that socialism and
individual freedom can be combined. Yet socialism was early recognized by many
thinkers as the gravest threat to freedom.
It is rarely remembered now that socialism in its beginnings was frankly
authoritarian. It began quite openly as a reaction against the liberalism of
the French Revolution. The French writers who laid its foundation had no doubt
that their ideas could be put into practice only by a strong dictatorial
government. The first of modern planners, Saint-Simon, predicted that those who
did not obey his proposed planning boards would be "treated as cattle."
Nobody saw more clearly than the great political thinker de Tocqueville
that democracy stands in an irreconcilable conflict with socialism:
"Democracy extends the sphere of individual freedom," he said.
"Democracy attaches all possible value to each man," he said in 1848,
"while 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."
To allay these suspicions and to harness to its cart the strongest of
all political motives—the craving for freedom — socialists began increasingly
to make use of the promise of a "new freedom." Socialism was to bring
"economic freedom," without which political freedom was "not worth
having."
To make this argument sound plausible, the word "freedom" was
subjected to a subtle change in meaning. The word had formerly meant freedom
from coercion, from the arbitrary power of other men. Now it was made to mean
freedom from necessity, release from the compulsion of the circumstances which
inevitably limit the range of choice of all of us. Freedom in this sense is, of
course, merely another name for power or wealth. The demand for the new freedom
was thus only another name for the old demand for a redistribution of wealth.
The claim that a planned economy would produce a substantially larger
output than the competitive system is being progressively abandoned by most
students of the problem. Yet it is this false hope as much as anything which
drives us along the road to planning.
Although our modern socialists' promise of greater freedom is genuine
and sincere, in recent years observer after observer has been impressed by the
unforeseen consequences of socialism, the extraordinary similarity in many
respects of the conditions under "communism" and "fascism."
As the writer Peter Drucker expressed it in 1939, "the complete collapse
of the belief in the attainability of freedom and equality through Marxism has
forced Russia to travel the same road toward a totalitarian society of
un-freedom and inequality which Germany has been following. Not that communism
and fascism are essentially the same. Fascism is the stage reached after
communism has proved an illusion, and it has proved as much an illusion in
Russia as in pre-Hitler Germany."
No less significant is the intellectual outlook of the rank and file in
the communist and fascist movements in Germany before 1933. The relative ease
with which a young communist could be converted into a Nazi or vice versa was
well known, best of all to the propagandists of the two parties. The communists
and Nazis clashed more frequently with each other than with other parties
simply because they competed for the same type of mind and reserved for each
other the hatred of the heretic. Their practice showed how closely they are
related. To both, the real enemy, the man with whom they had nothing in common,
was the liberal of the old type. While to the Nazi the communist and to the
communist the Nazi, and to both the socialist, are potential recruits made of
the right timber, they both know that there can be no compromise between them
and those who really believe in individual freedom.
What is promised to us as the Road to Freedom is in fact the Highroad to
Servitude. For it is not difficult to see what must be the consequences when
democracy embarks upon a course of planning. The goal of the planning will be
described by some such vague term as "the general welfare." There
will be no real agreement as to the ends to be attained, and the effect of the
people's agreeing that there must be central planning, without agreeing on the
ends, will be rather as if a group of people were to commit themselves to take
a journey together without agreeing where they want to go: with the result that
they may all have to make a journey which most of them do not want at all.
Democratic assemblies cannot function as planning agencies. They cannot
produce agreement on everything — the whole direction of the resources of the
nation-for the number of possible courses of action will be legion. Even if a
congress could, by proceeding step by step and compromising at each point,
agree on some scheme, it would certainly in the end satisfy nobody.
To draw up an economic plan in this fashion is even less possible than,
for instance, successfully to plan a military campaign by democratic procedure.
As in strategy it would become inevitable to delegate the task to experts. And
even if, by this expedient, a democracy should succeed in planning every sector
of economic activity, it would still have to face the problem of integrating
these separate plans into a unitary whole. There will be a stronger and
stronger demand that some board or some single individual should be given power
to act on their own responsibility. The cry for an economic dictator is a
characteristic stage in the movement toward planning. Thus the legislative body
will be reduced to choosing the persons who are to have practically absolute
power. The whole system will tend toward that kind of dictatorship in which the
head of the government is position by popular vote, but where he has all the
powers at his command to make certain that the vote will go in the direction he
desires.
Planning leads to dictatorship because dictatorship is the most
effective instrument of coercion and, as such, essential if central planning on
a large scale is to be possible. There is no justification for the widespread
belief that, so long as power is conferred by democratic procedure, it cannot
be arbitrary; it is not the source of power which prevents it from being
arbitrary; to be free from dictatorial qualities, the power must also be
limited. A true "dictatorship of the proletariat," even if democratic
in form, if it undertook centrally to direct the economic system, would
probably destroy personal freedom as completely as any autocracy has ever done.
Individual freedom cannot be reconciled with the supremacy of one single
purpose to which the whole of society is permanently subordinated. To a limited
extent we ourselves experience this fact in wartime, when subordination of
almost everything to the immediate and pressing need is the price at which we
preserve our freedom in the long run. The fashionable phrases about doing for
the purposes of peace what we have learned.to do for the purposes of war are
completely misleading, for it is sensible temporarily to sacrifice freedom in
order to make it more secure in the future, but it is quite a different thing
to sacrifice liberty permanently in the interests of a planned economy.
To those who have watched the transition from socialism to fascism at
close quarters, the connection between the two systems is obvious. The
realization of the socialist program means the destruction of freedom.
Democratic socialism, the great utopia of the last few generations, is simply
not achievable.
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