Nietzsche’s Marginal Children: On Friedrich Hayek How did the
conservative ideas of Friedrich Hayek and the Austrian school become our
economic reality? By turning the market into the realm of great politics and
morals. Corey Robin May
27, 2013 The Nation. 1.Why Restraints on the 2% are not only
unjustified but bad for everyone In the last
half-century of American politics, conservatism has hardened around the
defense of economic privilege and rule. Whether it’s the libertarianism of
the GOP or the neoliberalism of the Democrats, that defense has enabled an
upward redistribution of rights and a downward redistribution of duties. The
1 percent possesses more than wealth and political influence; it wields
direct and personal power over men and women. Capital governs labor, telling workers what to say, how to vote and
when to pee. It has all the substance of noblesse
and none of the style of oblige.
That many of its most vocal defenders believe Barack Obama to be their mortal
enemy—a socialist, no less—is a testament less to the reality about which
they speak than to the resonance of the vocabulary they deploy. The Nobel Prize–winning economist Friedrich
Hayek is the leading theoretician of this movement, formulating the most
genuinely political theory of capitalism on the right we’ve ever seen. The theory does not imagine a shift from
government to the individual, as is often claimed by conservatives; nor does
it imagine a simple shift from the state to the market or from society to the
atomized self, as is sometimes claimed by the left. Rather, it recasts our understanding of politics
and where it might be found. This may explain why the University of
Chicago chose to reissue Hayek’s The Constitution of Liberty two years
ago after the fiftieth anniversary of its publication. Like The Road to Serfdom (1944), which
a swooning Glenn Beck catapulted to the bestseller list in 2010, The Constitution of Liberty is a text,
as its publisher says, of “our present moment.” But to understand
that text and its influence, it’s necessary to turn away from contemporary
America to fin de siècle Vienna. The
seedbed of Hayek’s arguments is the half-century between the “marginal
revolution,” which changed the field of economics in the late nineteenth
century, and the collapse of the Habsburg monarchy in 1918. It is by now
a commonplace of European cultural history that a dying Austro-Hungarian Empire gave birth to modernism,
psychoanalysis and fascism. Yet from the vortex of Vienna came not
only Wittgenstein, Freud and Hitler but also Hayek, who was born and educated
in the city, and the Austrian school of economics. Friedrich Nietzsche
figures critically in this story, less as an influence than a diagnostician.
This will strike some as an improbable claim: Wasn’t Nietzsche contemptuous
of capitalists, capitalism and economics? Yes, he was, and for all his
reading in political economy, he never wrote a treatise on politics or
economics. And despite the long shadow he cast over the Viennese avant-garde,
he is hardly ever cited by the economists of the Austrian school. Yet no one understood better than Nietzsche
the social and cultural forces that would shape the Austrians: the demise of
an ancient ruling class; the raising of the labor question by trade unions
and socialist parties; the inability of an ascendant bourgeoisie to crush or
contain democracy in the streets; the need for a new ruling class in an age
of mass politics. The relationship between Nietzsche and the free-market
right—which has been seeking to put labor back in its box since the
nineteenth century, and now, with the help of the neoliberal left, has succeeded—is
thus one of elective affinity rather than direct influence, at the level of
idiom rather than policy. “One day,” Nietzsche
wrote in Ecce Homo, “my name will
be associated with the memory of something tremendous, a crisis without equal
on earth, the most profound collision of conscience.” It is one of the
ironies of intellectual history that the terms of the collision can best be
seen in the rise of a discourse that Nietzsche, in all likelihood, would have
despised. * * * 2. In 1869, Nietzsche was
appointed professor of classical philology at Basel University. Like most
junior faculty, he was bedeviled by meager wages and bore major
responsibilities, such as teaching fourteen hours a week, Monday through
Friday, beginning at 7 am. He also sat on multiple committees and covered for
senior colleagues who couldn’t make their classes. He lectured to the public
on behalf of the university. He dragged himself to dinner parties. Yet within
three years he managed to complete The
Birth of Tragedy, a minor masterwork of modern literature, which he
dedicated to his close friend and “sublime predecessor” Richard Wagner. One chapter,
however, he withheld from publication. In 1872, Nietzsche was invited to spend the Christmas holidays with
Wagner and his wife Cosima, but sensing a potential
rift with the composer, he begged off and sent a gift instead. He bundled “The Greek State” with four other
essays, slapped a title onto a cover page (Five Prefaces to Five Unwritten
Books), and mailed the leather-bound text to Cosima
as a birthday present. Richard was offended; Cosima,
unimpressed. “Prof. Nietzsche’s manuscript does not restore our spirits,” she
sniffed in her diary. Though presented as
a sop to a fraying friendship, “The Greek State” reflects the larger European
crisis of war and revolution that had begun in 1789 and would come to an end
only in 1945. More immediately, it bears the stamp of the Franco-Prussian War, which had broken out in 1870, and the
Paris Commune, which was declared the following year. Initially ambivalent about the war,
Nietzsche quickly became a partisan of the German cause. “It’s about our culture!” he wrote to his
mother. “And for that no sacrifice is too great! This damned French tiger.”
He signed up to serve as a medical
orderly; Cosima tried to persuade him to stay
put in Basel, recommending that he send cigarettes to the front instead. But
Nietzsche was adamant. In August 1870, he left for Bavaria with his sister
Elisabeth, riding the rails and singing songs. He got his training, headed to
the battlefield, and in no time contracted dysentery and diphtheria. He lasted a month. The war lasted for six. A half-million soldiers were killed or
wounded, as were countless civilians. The preliminary peace treaty, signed in February 1871, favored the Germans and
punished the French, particularly the citizens of Paris, who were forced to
shoulder the burden of heavy indemnities to the Prussians. Enraged by its
impositions—and a quarter-century of simmering discontent and broken
promises—workers and radicals in Paris
rose up and took over the city in March.(See Brecht: The Days of the Commune)
Nietzsche was scandalized, his horror at the revolt inversely proportional to
his exaltation over the war. Fearing that the Communards had destroyed the
Louvre (they hadn’t), he wrote: The reports of the
past few days have been so awful that my state of mind is altogether
intolerable. What does it mean to be a scholar in the face of such
earthquakes of culture!… It is the worst day of my
life. In the quicksilver transmutation of a
conventional war between states into a civil war between classes, Nietzsche
saw a terrible alchemy of the future: “Over and above the struggle between nations the object of
our terror was that international hydra-head, suddenly and so terrifyingly
appearing as a sign of quite different struggles to come.” By May, the Commune had been ruthlessly put
down at the cost of tens of thousands of lives—much to the delight of the Parisian
aesthete-aristocrat Edmond Goncourt: All is well. There
has been neither compromise nor conciliation. The solution has been brutal,
imposed by sheer force of arms. The solution has saved everyone from the
dangers of cowardly compromise. The solution has restored its self-confidence
to the Army, which has learnt in the blood of the Communards that it was
still capable of fighting…a bleeding like that, by killing the rebellious
part of a population, postpones the next revolution by a whole
conscription. Of the man who wrote
these words and the literary milieu of which he was a part, Nietzsche would
later say: “I know these gentlemen inside out, so well that I have really had
enough of them already. One has to be more radical: fundamentally they all
lack the main thing—‘la force.’ ” * * * 3. The clash of these competing worlds of war and work
echoes throughout “The Greek State.” Nietzsche begins by announcing that the
modern era is dedicated to the “dignity of work.” Committed to “equal rights for all,” democracy elevates the worker
and the slave. Their demands for justice threaten to “swamp all other ideas,”
to tear “down the walls of culture.” Modernity has made a monster in the
working class: a created creator (shades of Marx and Mary Shelley), it has the temerity to see itself and its labor as a
work of art. Even worse, it seeks to be recognized and publicly acknowledged
as such. The Greeks, by contrast, saw work as a
“disgrace,” because the existence it serves—the finite life that each of us
lives—“has no inherent value.” Existence can be redeemed only by art, but art
too is premised on work. It is made, and its maker depends on the labor of
others; they take care of
him and his household, freeing him from the burdens of everyday life.
Inevitably, his art bears the taint of their necessity. No matter how
beautiful, art cannot escape the pall of its creation. It arouses shame, for
in shame “there lurks the unconscious
recognition that these conditions” of work “are required for the actual goal”
of art to be achieved. For that reason, the Greeks properly kept labor
and the laborer hidden from view. Throughout his
writing life, Nietzsche was plagued by the vision of workers massing on the
public stage—whether in trade unions, socialist parties or communist leagues.
Almost immediately upon his arrival in Basel, the First International
descended on the city to hold its fourth congress. Nietzsche was petrified. “There is nothing more terrible,” he
wrote in The Birth of Tragedy,
“than a class of barbaric slaves who have learned to regard their existence
as an injustice, and now prepare to avenge, not only themselves, but all
generations.” Several years after the International had left Basel, Nietzsche
convinced himself that it was slouching toward Bayreuth in order to ruin
Wagner’s festival there. And just weeks before he went mad in 1888 and
disappeared forever into his own head, he wrote, “The cause of every stupidity today…lies in the existence of a labour
question at all. About certain things one does not ask questions.” One can hear in the
opening passages of “The Greek State”
the pounding march not only of European workers on the move but also of black
slaves in revolt. Hegel was brooding on Haiti while he worked out the
master-slave dialectic in The
Phenomenology of Spirit. Though generations of scholars have told us
otherwise, perhaps Nietzsche had a similar engagement in mind when he wrote, “Even if it were true that the Greeks
were ruined because they kept slaves, the opposite is even more certain, that
we will be destroyed because we fail to keep slaves.” What theorist,
after all, has ever pressed so urgently—not just in this essay but in later
works as well—the claim that “slavery
belongs to the essence of a culture”? What theorist ever had to? Before the eighteenth century, bonded
labor was an accepted fact. Now it was the subject of a roiling debate,
provoking revolutions and emancipations throughout the world. Serfdom had
been eliminated in Russia only a decade before—and in some German states,
only a generation before Nietzsche’s birth in 1844—while Brazil would soon
become the last state in the Americas to abolish slavery. An edifice of the
ages had been brought down by a mere century’s vibrations; is it so
implausible that Nietzsche, attuned to the vectors and velocity of decay as
he was, would pause to record the earthquake and insist on taking the full
measure of its effects? If slavery was one condition of great art,
Nietzsche continued in “The Greek State,” war and high politics were another. “Political
men par excellence,” the Greeks channeled their agonistic urges into bloody
conflicts between cities and less bloody conflicts within them: healthy states were built on the
repression and release of these impulses. The arena for conflict created
by that regimen gave “society time to germinate and turn green everywhere”
and allowed “blossoms of genius” periodically to “sprout forth.” Those
blossoms were not only artistic but also political. Warfare sorted society into lower and higher ranks, and from that
hierarchy rose “the military genius,” whose artistry
was the state itself. The real dignity of man, Nietzsche insisted, lay not in
his lowly self but in the artistic and political genius his life was meant to
serve and on whose behalf it was to be expended. Instead of the Greek state, however, Europe
had the bourgeois state; instead of aspiring to a work of art, states let markets
do their work. Politics, Nietzsche complained, had
become “an instrument of the stock exchange” rather than the terrain of
heroism and glory. With the “specifically political impulses” of Europe
so weakened—even his beloved Franco-Prussian War had not revived the spirit
in the way that he had hoped—Nietzsche could only “detect dangerous signs of atrophy in the political sphere, equally
worrying for art and society.” The
age of aristocratic culture and high politics was at an end. All that
remained was the detritus of the lower orders: the disgrace of the laborer,
the paper chase of the bourgeoisie, the barreling threat of socialism. “The
Paris commune,” Nietzsche would later write in his notebooks, “was perhaps no
more than minor indigestion compared to what is coming.” Nietzsche had
little, concretely, to offer as a counter-volley to democracy, whether
bourgeois or socialist. Despite his appreciation of the political impulse and
his studious attention to political events in Germany—from the Schleswig-Holstein
crisis of the early 1860s to the imperial push of the late 1880s—he remained
leery of programs, movements and platforms. The best he could muster was a
vague principle: that society is “the
continuing, painful birth of those exalted men of culture in whose service
everything else has to consume itself,” and the state a “means of setting [that] process of society in motion and
guaranteeing its unobstructed continuation.” It was left to later
generations to figure out what that could mean in practice—and where it might
lead. Down one path might lay fascism; down another, the free market. * * * 4. The Marginal Revolution: Changing
Conceptions of Value Around the
time—almost to the year—that Nietzsche was launching his revolution of
metaphysics and morals, a trio of economists, working separately across three
countries, were starting their own. It began with the publication in 1871 of Carl Menger’s
Principles of Economics and William
Stanley Jevons’s The Theory of
Political Economy. Along with Léon Walras’s Elements of Pure Economics, which
appeared three years later, these were the European faces—Austrian, English
and French-Swiss—of what would come to be called the marginal revolution. The marginalists focused less on supply and production than
on the pulsing demand of consumption.
The protagonist was not the landowner or the laborer, working his way through
the farm, the factory or the firm; it was the universal man in the market whose signature act was to consume
things. That’s how market man increased his utility: by consuming
something until he reached the point where consuming one more increment of it
gave him so little additional utility that he was better off consuming
something else. Of such microscopic calculations at the periphery of our
estate was the economy made. Though the early marginalists helped transform economics from a humanistic
branch of the moral sciences into a technical discipline of the social
sciences, they were still able to command an audience and an influence all
too rare in contemporary economics. Jevons spent his career as an independent
scholar and professor in Manchester and London worrying about his lack of
readers, but William Gladstone invited him over to discuss his work, and John
Stuart Mill praised it on the floor of Parliament. Keynes tells us that “for
a period of half a century, practically all elementary students both of Logic
and of Political Economy in Great Britain and also in India and the Dominions
were brought up on Jevons.” According to Hayek,
the “immediate reception” of Menger’s Principles
“can hardly be called encouraging.” Reviewers seemed not to understand it.
Two students at the University of Vienna,
however, did. One was Friedrich von Wieser, the other Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk, and both became legendary educators and theoreticians.
Their students included Hayek; Ludwig
von Mises, who attracted a small but devoted
following in the United States and elsewhere; and Joseph Schumpeter, dark
poet of capitalism’s forces of “creative destruction.” Through Böhm-Bawerk and Wieser, Menger’s text became the groundwork of the Austrian
school, whose reach, due in part to the efforts of Mises
and Hayek, now extends across the globe. The contributions of
Jevons and Menger
were multiple, yet each of them took
aim at a central postulate of economics shared by everyone from Adam Smith to
the socialist left: the notion that labor is a—if not the—source of value.
Though adumbrated in the idiom of prices and exchange, the labor theory of value evinced an almost primitive faith in the
metaphysical objectivity of the economic sphere—a faith made all the more
surprising by the fact that the objectivity of the rest of the social world
(politics, religion and morals) had been subject to increasing scrutiny since
the Renaissance. Commodities may
have come wrapped in the pretty paper of the market, but inside, many
believed, were the brute facts of
nature: raw materials from the earth
and the physical labor that turned those materials into goods. Because those
materials were made useful, hence valuable, only by labor, labor was the
source of value. That, and the fact that labor could be measured in some
way (usually time), lent the world of work a kind of ontological status—and
political authority—that had been increasingly denied to the world of courts and kings, lands and lords, parishes and priests.
As the rest of the world melted into air, labor was crystallizing as the one
true solid. By the time the marginalists came on the scene, the most politically threatening version of the labor theory of value
was associated with the left. Though Marx
would significantly revise and recast it in his mature writings, the simple
notion that labor produces value
remained associated with his name—and even more so with that of his
competitor Ferdinand Lasalle, about whom Nietzsche read a fair amount—as
well as with the larger socialist and trade union movements of which he was a
part. That association helped set the stage for the marginalists’
critique. Admittedly, the relationship between marginalism and anti-socialism is complex. On the one
hand, there is little evidence to suggest that the first-generation marginalists had heard of, much less read, Marx, at least
not at this early stage of their careers. Much more than the threat of
socialism underpinned the emergence of marginalist
economics, which was as opposed to traditional defenses of the market as it
was to the market’s critics. By the twentieth century, moreover, many marginalists were on the left and used their ideas to
help construct the institutions of social democracy; even Walras
and Alfred Marshall, another early marginalist,
were sympathetic to the claims of the left. And on some readings, the mature
Marx shares more with the constructivist thrusts of marginalism
than he does with the objectivism of the labor theory of value. On the other hand, Jevons was a tireless polemicist against
trade unions, which he identified as “the best example…of the evils and
disasters” attending the democratic age. Jevons
saw marginalism as a critical antidote to the labor
movement and insisted that its teachings be widely transmitted to the working
classes. “To avoid such a disaster,” he argued, “we must diffuse
knowledge” to the workers—empowered as they were by the vote and the
strike—“and the kind of knowledge required is mainly that comprehended in the
science of political economy.” Menger interrupted his abstract reflections on value to make the
point that while it may “appear deplorable to a lover of mankind that
possession of capital or a piece of land often provides the owner a higher
income…than the income received by a laborer,” the “cause of this is not
immoral.” It was “simply that the
satisfaction of more important human needs depends upon the services of the
given amount of capital or piece of land than upon the services of the
laborer.” Any attempt to get around that truth, he warned, “would
undoubtedly require a complete transformation of our social order.” Finally, there is no
doubt that the marginalists of the Austrian school,
who would later prove so influential on the American right, saw their project
as primarily anti-Marxist and anti-socialist. “The most momentous consequence
of the theory,” declared Wieser in 1891, “is, I
take it, that it is false, with
the socialists, to impute to labor
alone the entire productive return.” * * * 5. Nietzsche on
Labor, Morality and Value: “Through
esteeming alone is there value,” With its division of
intellectual labor, the modern academy often separates economics from ethics
and philosophy. Earlier economists and philosophers did not make that
separation. Even Nietzsche recognized that economics rested on genuine moral
and philosophical premises, many of which he found dubious, and that it had
tremendous moral and political effects, all of which he detested. In The Wanderer and His Shadow, Nietzsche
criticized “our economists” for having “not yet wearied of scenting a similar
unity in the word ‘value’ and of searching after the original root-concept of
the word.” In his preliminary outline for the summa he hoped to publish on
“the will to power,” he scored the “nihilistic consequences of the ways of
thinking in politics and economics.” For that reason, Nietzsche saw in labor’s appearance more
than an economic theory of goods: he saw a terrible diminution of the good.
Morals must be “understood as the
doctrine of the relations of supremacy,” he wrote in Beyond Good and Evil; every morality “must be forced to
bow…before the order of rank.” But like so many before them, including
the Christian slave and the English utilitarian, the economist and the socialist promoted an inferior human type—and
an inferior set of values—as the driving agent of the world. Nietzsche
saw in this elevation not only a transformation of values but also a loss of
value and, potentially, the elimination of value altogether. Conservatives from Edmund Burke to Robert
Bork have conflated the transformation of values with the end of value.
Nietzsche, on occasion, did too: “What does nihilism mean?” he asked himself
in 1887. “That the highest values devaluate themselves.” The nihilism
consuming Europe was best understood as a democratic “hatred against the
order of rank.” Part of Nietzsche’s
worry was philosophical: How was it possible in a godless world,
naturalistically conceived, to deem anything of value? But his concern was
also cultural and political. Because
of democracy, which was “Christianity made natural,” the aristocracy had lost
“its naturalness”—that is, the traditional vindication of its power. How then might a hierarchy of excellence,
aesthetic and political, re-establish itself, defend itself against the
mass—particularly a mass of workers—and dominate that mass? As Nietzsche
wrote in the late 1880s: A reverse movement
is needed—the production of a synthetic, summarizing, justifying man for
whose existence this transformation of mankind into a machine is a
precondition, as a base on which he can invent his higher form of being. He needs the opposition of the masses,
of the “leveled,” a feeling of distance from them. [He] stands on them, he
lives off them. This higher form of aristocracy is that of the
future.—Morally speaking, this overall machinery, this solidarity of all
gears, represents a maximum of exploitation of man; but it presupposes those
on whose account this exploitation has meaning. Nietzsche’s response
to that challenge was not to revert or resort to a more objective notion of
value: that was neither possible nor desirable. Instead, he embraced one part of the modern understanding of value—its
fabricated nature—and turned it against its democratic and Smithian premises. Value was indeed a human creation,
Nietzsche acknowledged, and as such could just as easily be conceived as a
gift, an honorific bestowed by one man upon another. “Through esteeming alone is there value,” Nietzsche has Zarathustra declare; “to esteem is to create.” Value
was not made with coarse and clumsy hands; it was enacted with an appraising
gaze, a nod of the head signifying a matchless abundance of taste. It was, in
short, aristocratic. While slaves had
once created value in the form of Christianity, they had achieved that feat
not through their labor but through their censure and praise. They had also
done it unwittingly, acting upon a deep and unconscious compulsion: a sense
of inferiority, a rage against their powerlessness, and a desire for revenge
against their betters. That combination of overt impotence and covert drive
made them ill-suited to creating values of excellence. Nietzsche explained in
Beyond Good and Evil that the self-conscious exercise and enjoyment
of power made the noble type a better candidate for the creation of values in
the modern world, for these were values that would have to break with the
slave morality that had dominated for millennia. Only insofar as “it
knows itself to be that which first accords honor to things” can the noble
type truly be “value-creating.” Labor belonged to nature, which is not
capable of generating value. Only the man who arrayed himself against nature—the artist,
the general, the statesman—could claim that role. He alone had the necessary
refinements, wrought by “that pathos
of distance which grows out of ingrained difference between strata,” to
appreciate and bestow value: upon men, practices and beliefs. Value was not a product of the prole; it was an imposition of peerless taste. In the
words of The Gay Science: Whatever has value
in our world now does not have value in itself, according to its
nature—nature is always value-less, but has been given value at some time, as
a present—and it was we who gave and bestowed it. That was in 1882.
Just a decade earlier, Menger had written: “Value
is therefore nothing inherent in goods, no property of them, but merely the
importance that we first attribute to the satisfaction of our needs, that is,
to our lives and well-being.” Jevons’s position was identical, and like
Nietzsche, both Menger and Jevons thought value was instead a high or low
estimation put by a man upon the things of life. But lest that desiring
self be reduced to a simple creature of tabulated needs, Menger and Jevons took care to distinguish their positions from traditional
theories of utility. Jevons, for example,
was prepared to follow Jeremy Bentham in his definition of utility as “that property in an object, whereby it tends to produce benefit,
advantage, pleasure, good, or happiness.” He thought this “perfectly expresses the meaning of the word Economy.” But
he also insisted on a critical rider:
“provided that the will or inclination of the person concerned is taken as
the sole criterion, for the time, of what is good and desirable.” Our
expressed desires and aversions are not measures of our objective or
underlying good; there is no such thing. Nor can we be assured that those
desires or aversions will bring us pleasure or pain. What we want or don’t
want is merely a representation, a
snapshot of the motions of our will—that black box of preference and
partiality that so fascinated Nietzsche precisely because it seemed so
groundless and yet so generative. Every mind is inscrutable to itself: we
lack, said Jevons, “the means of measuring directly the feelings of the human
heart.” The inner life is inaccessible to our inspections; all we can know
are its effects, the will it powers and the actions it propels. “The will is our pendulum,” declared
Jevons, a representation of forces that cannot be seen but whose effects are
nevertheless felt, “and its oscillations are minutely registered in all the
price lists of the markets.” Menger thought
the value of any good was connected to our needs, but he was extraordinarily
attuned to the complexity—and contingency—of that relationship. Needs,
wrote Menger, “at least as concerns their origin,
depend upon our wills or on our habits.” Needs
are more than the givens of our biology or psyche; they are the desideratum
of our volitions and practices, which are idiosyncratic and arbitrary. Only
when our needs finally “come into existence”—that is, only when we become
aware of them—can we truly say that “there is no further arbitrary element”
in the process of value formation. Even then, needs must pass through a series of
checkpoints before they can enter the land of value. Awareness of a need,
says Menger, entails a comprehensive knowledge of
how the need might be fulfilled by a particular good, how that good might
contribute to our lives, and how (and whether) command of that good is
necessary for the satisfaction of that need. That last bit of knowledge
requires us to look at the external world: to ask how much of that good is
available to us, to consider how many sacrifices we must bear—how many
satisfactions we are willing to forgo—in order to secure it. Only when we
have answered these questions are we ready to speak of value, which Menger reminds us is “the importance we attribute to the
satisfaction of our needs.” Value is thus “a judgment” that “economizing
men make about the importance of the goods at their disposal for the
maintenance of their lives and well-being.” It “does not exist outside the consciousness of men.” Even though
previous economists had insisted on the “objectification of the value of
goods,” Menger, like Jevons and Nietzsche, concludes
that value “is entirely subjective in
nature.” * * * 6. The Marginalists’
War against Socialism: the market defines morality In their war against
socialism, the philosophers of capital faced two challenges. The first was
that by the early twentieth century,
socialism had cornered the market on morality. As Mises
complained in his 1932 preface to the second edition of Socialism, “Any advocate of socialistic measures is looked upon
as the friend of the Good, the Noble, and the Moral, as a disinterested
pioneer of necessary reforms, in short, as a man who unselfishly serves his
own people and all humanity.” Indeed, with
the help of kindred notions such as “social justice,” socialism seemed to be
the very definition of morality. Nietzsche had long been wise to this
insinuation; one source of his discontent with religion was his sense that it
had bequeathed to modernity an understanding of what morality entailed
(selflessness, universality, equality) such that only socialism and democracy
could be said to fulfill it. But where Nietzsche’s response to the equation
of socialism and morality was to question the value of morality, at least as
it had been customarily understood, economists like Mises
and Hayek pursued a different path, one Nietzsche would never have dared to
take: they made the market the very expression of morality. Moralists
traditionally viewed the pursuit of money and goods as negative or neutral;
the Austrians claimed it embodies our deepest values and commitments. “The
provision of material goods,” declared Mises,
“serves not only those ends which are usually termed economic, but also many
other ends.” All of us have ends or
ultimate purposes in life: the cultivation of friendship, the contemplation
of beauty, a lover’s companionship. We enter the market for the sake of those
ends. Economic action thus “consists firstly in valuation of ends, and then
in the valuation of the means leading to these ends. All economic
activity depends, therefore, upon the existence of ends. Ends dominate
economy and alone give it meaning.” We
simply cannot speak, writes Hayek in The
Road to Serfdom, of “purely economic ends separate from the other ends of
life.” This claim, however,
could just as easily be enlisted as an argument for socialism. In providing
men and women with the means of life—housing, food, healthcare—the socialist
state frees them to pursue the ends of life: beauty, knowledge, wisdom. The
Austrians went further, insisting that the
very decision about what constitutes means and ends was itself a judgment of
value. Any economic situation confronts us with the necessity of choice,
of having to deploy our limited resources—whether time, money or effort—on
behalf of some end. In making that
choice, we reveal which of our ends matters most to us: which is higher,
which is lower. “Every man who, in
the course of economic activity, chooses between the satisfaction
of two needs, only one of which can be satisfied, makes judgments of value,” says
Mises. For those choices to
reveal our ends, our resources must be
finite—unlimited time, for example, would obviate the need for choice—and our
choice of ends unconstrained by external interference. The best, indeed only,
method for guaranteeing such a situation is if money (or its equivalent in material goods) is the currency of
choice—and not just of economic choice, but of all of our choices. As
Hayek writes in The Road to Serfdom: So long as we can
freely dispose over our income and all our possessions, economic loss will
always deprive us only of what we regard as the least important of the
desires we were able to satisfy. A “merely” economic loss is thus one whose
effect we can still make fall on our less important needs…. Economic changes,
in other words, usually affect only the fringe, the “margin,” of our needs.
There are many things which are more important than anything which economic
gains or losses are likely to affect, which for us stand high above the
amenities and even above many of the necessities of life which are affected
by the economic ups and downs. Should the government decide which of our
needs are “merely economic,” we would be deprived of the opportunity to decide
whether these are higher or lower goods, the marginal or mandatory items of
our flourishing. So vast is the gulf
between each soul, so separate and unequal are we, that it is impossible to
assume anything universal about the sources and conditions of human
happiness, a point Nietzsche and Jevons would have found congenial. The judgment of what constitutes a means,
what an end, must be left to the individual self. Hayek again: Economic control is not merely control of a sector of human life which can be
separated from the rest; it is the
control of the means for all our ends. And whoever has sole control of
the means must also determine which ends are to be served, which values are
to be rated higher and which lower—in
short what men should believe and strive for. While the economic is, in one sense readily
acknowledged by Hayek, the sphere of our lower needs, it is in another and
altogether more important sense the
anvil upon which we forge our notion of what is lower and higher in this
world, our morality. “Economic values,” he writes, “are less important to
us than many things precisely because in economic matters we are free to
decide what to us is more, and what less, important.” But we can be free to make those choices only if they are left to us
to make—and, paradoxically, if we are forced to make them. If we didn’t
have to choose, we’d never have to value anything. * * * 7. Schumpeter and the Entrepreneurial Hero By imposing this
drama of choice, the economy
becomes a theater of self-disclosure,
the stage upon which we discover and reveal
our ultimate ends. It is not in the casual chatter of a seminar or the
cloistered pews of a church that we determine our values; it is in the duress—the ordeal—of our lived lives,
those moments when we are not only free to choose but forced to choose.
“Freedom to order our own conduct in the sphere where material circumstances
force a choice upon us,” Hayek wrote, “is the air in which alone moral sense
grows and in which moral values are daily re-created.” While progressives
often view this discourse of choice as either dime-store morality or
fabricated scarcity, the Austrians saw
the economy as the disciplining agent of all ethical action, a moment
of—and opportunity for—moral artistry.
Freud thought the compressions of the dream world made every man an artist;
these other Austrians thought the
compulsions of the economy made every man a moralist. It is only when we
are navigating its narrow channels—where every decision to expend some
quantum of energy requires us to make a calculation about the desirability of
its posited end—that we are brought face to face with ourselves and compelled
to answer the questions: What do I
believe? What do I want in this world? From this life? While there are
precedents for this argument in Menger’s theory of
value (the fewer opportunities there are for the satisfaction of our needs, Menger says, the more our choices will reveal which needs
we value most), its true and full dimensions can best be understood in
relation to Nietzsche. As much as
Nietzsche railed against the repressive effect of laws and morals on the
highest types, he also appreciated how much “on earth of freedom, subtlety,
boldness, dance, and masterly sureness” was owed to these constraints. Confronted
with a set of social strictures, the diverse and driving energies of the self
were forced to draw upon unknown and untapped reserves of ingenuity—either to
overcome these obstacles or to adapt to them with the minimum of sacrifice. The results were novel, value-creating. Nietzsche’s point
was primarily aesthetic. Contrary to
the romantic notion of art being produced by a process of “letting go,”
Nietzsche insisted that the artist “strictly and subtly…obeys thousandfold laws.” The language of invention—whether
poetry, music or speech itself—is bound by “the metrical compulsion of rhyme
and rhythm.” Such laws are capricious in their origin and tyrannical in
their effect. That is the point: from that unforgiving soil of power and
whimsy rises the most miraculous increase. Not just
in the arts—Goethe, say, or Beethoven—but in politics and ethics as well:
Napoleon, Caesar, Nietzsche himself (“Genuine
philosophers…are commanders and legislators: they say, ‘thus it shall be!’”). One school would find expression for these
ideas in fascism. Writers like Ernst Jünger
and Carl Schmitt imagined political artists of great novelty and
originality forcing their way through or past the filtering constraints of
everyday life. The leading legal theorist of the Third Reich, Schmitt looked
to those extraordinary instances in
politics—war, the “decision,” the “exception”—when “the power of real life,”
as he put it in Political Theology,
“breaks through the crust of a mechanism that has become torpid by
repetition.” In that confrontation between mechanism and real life, the
man of exception would find or make his moment: by taking an unauthorized
decision, ordaining a new regime of law, or founding a political order. In
each case, something was “created out of nothingness.” It was the
peculiar—and, in the long run, more significant—genius of the Austrian school to look for these moments and
experiences not in the political realm but in the marketplace. Money in a capitalist economy, Hayek came
to realize, could best be understood and defended in Nietzschean terms: as
“the medium through which a force”—the self’s “desire for power to achieve
unspecified ends”—“makes itself felt.” * * * 8. The second challenge
confronting the philosophers of capital was more daunting. While Nietzsche’s transvaluation
of values gave pride of place to the highest types of humanity—values were a
gift, the philosopher their greatest source—the political implications of
marginalism were more ambidextrous. If on one reading it was the capitalist
who gave value to the worker, on another it was the worker—in his capacity as
consumer—who gave value to capital. Social democrats pursued the latter
argument with great zeal. The result was the welfare state, with its emphasis
on high wages and good benefits—as well as unionization—as the driving agent
of mass demand and economic prosperity. More than a macroeconomic policy,
social democracy (or liberalism, as it was called in
America) reflected an ethos of the
citizen-worker-consumer as the creator and center of the economy. Long
after economists had retired the labor theory of value, the welfare state remained lit by its afterglow. The political
economy of the welfare state may have been marginalist,
but its moral economy was workerist. The midcentury right
was in desperate need of a response that, squaring Nietzsche’s circle, would
clear a path for aristocratic action
in the capitalist marketplace. It needed not simply an alternative
economics but an answering vision of
society. Schumpeter provided
one, Hayek another. Schumpeter’s entrepreneur is one of the more enigmatic characters of
modern social theory. He is not inventive, heroic or charismatic. “There is
surely no trace of any mystic glamour about him,” Schumpeter writes in Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy.
His instincts and impulses are confined to the office and the counting table.
Outside those environs, he cannot “say boo to a goose.” Yet it is this nothing, this great
inscrutable blank, that will “bend a nation to his will”—not unlike the
father figures of a Mann or Musil novel. What the entrepreneur has—or, better, is—are
force and will. As Schumpeter explains in a 1927 essay, the entrepreneur
possesses “extraordinary physical and
nervous energy.” That energy gives
him focus (the maniacal, almost brutal, ability to shut out what is
inessential) and stamina. In those late hours when lesser beings have “given
way to a state of exhaustion,” he retains his “full force and originality.”
By “originality,” Schumpeter means
something peculiar: “receptivity to
new facts.” It is the entrepreneur’s
ability to recognize that sweet spot of novelty and occasion (an untried
technology, a new method of production, a different way to market or
distribute a product) that enables him to revolutionize the way business gets
done. Part opportunist, part fanatic, he is “a leading man,”
Schumpeter suggests in Capitalism,
Socialism and Democracy, overcoming all resistance in order to create the
new modes and orders of everyday life. Schumpeter is
careful to distinguish entrepreneurialism from politics as it is
conventionally understood: the entrepreneur’s power “does not readily
expand…into the leadership of nations”; “he wants to be left alone and to
leave politics alone.” Even so, the entrepreneur is best understood as
neither an escape from nor an evasion of politics but as its sublimation, the
relocation of politics in the economic sphere. Rejecting the static
models of other economists—equilibrium is death, he says—Schumpeter depicts the economy as a dramatic confrontation between
rising and falling empires (firms). Like Machiavelli in The Prince, whose
vision Nietzsche described as “perfection in politics,” Schumpeter identifies
two types of agents struggling for position and permanence amid great flux:
one is dynastic and lawful, the other upstart and intelligent. Both are
engaged in a death dance, with the former in the potentially weaker position
unless it can innovate and break with routine. Schumpeter often
resorts to political and military metaphors to describe this dance. Production is “a history of revolutions.”
Competitors “command” and wield “pieces of armor.” Competition
“strikes” at the “foundations” and “very lives” of firms; entrepreneurs
in equilibrium “find themselves in much the same situations as generals would
in a society perfectly sure of permanent peace.” In the same way that Schmitt
imagines peace as the end of politics, Schumpeter sees equilibrium as the end
of economics. Against this
backdrop of dramatic, even lethal, contest, the entrepreneur emerges as a legislator of values and new ways of
being. The entrepreneur demonstrates a penchant for breaking with “the
routine tasks which everybody understands.” He overcomes the multiple resistances of his world—“from simple refusal either
to finance or to buy a new thing, to physical attack on the man who tries to
produce it.” To act with
confidence beyond the range of familiar beacons and to overcome that resistance requires aptitudes that are present in
only a small fraction of the population and that define the entrepreneurial
type. The entrepreneur, in
other words, is a founder. As Schumpeter describes him in The Theory of Economic Development: There is the dream and the will to found a private
kingdom, usually, though not necessarily, also a dynasty. The modern
world really does not know any such positions, but what may be attained by
industrial and commercial success is still the nearest approach to medieval lordship possible to modern man. That may be why his
inner life is so reminiscent of the
Machiavellian prince, that other
virtuoso of novelty. All of his energy and will, the entirety of his
force and being, is focused outward, on the enterprise of creating a new
order. And yet even as he
sketched the broad outline of this legislator of value, Schumpeter sensed
that his days were numbered. Innovation
was increasingly the work of departments, committees and specialists. The
modern corporation “socializes the bourgeois mind.” In the same way that
modern regiments had destroyed the “very personal affair” of medieval battle,
so did the corporation eliminate the need for “individual leadership acting
by virtue of personal force and personal responsibility for success.” The “romance
of earlier commercial adventure” was “rapidly wearing away.” With the
entrepreneurial function in terminal decline, Schumpeter’s experiment in
economics as great politics seemed to be approaching an end. * * * 9. Hayek offered an alternative account of the
market as the proving ground of aristocratic action. Schumpeter had already hinted at it in a
stray passage in Capitalism, Socialism
and Democracy. Taking aim at the notion of a rational chooser who knows
what he wants, wants what is best (for him, at any rate) and works
efficiently to get it, Schumpeter
invoked a half-century of social thought—Le Bon, Pareto and Freud—to
emphasize not only “the importance of the extra-rational and irrational
element in our behavior,” but also the power of capital to shape the
preferences of the consumer. Consumers do not
quite live up to the idea that the economic textbooks used to convey. On the
one hand, their wants are nothing like as definite, and their actions upon
those wants nothing like as rational and prompt. On the other hand, they are so amenable to the influence of
advertising and other methods of persuasion that producers often seem to
dictate to them instead of being directed by them. In The Constitution of Liberty, Hayek
developed this notion into a full-blown theory
of the wealthy and the well-born as an avant-garde of taste, as makers of new horizons of value from
which the rest of humanity took its bearings. Instead of the market of
consumers dictating the actions of capital, it would be capital that would determine the market of consumption—and beyond that, the deepest beliefs and
aspirations of a people. The distinction that
Hayek draws between mass and elite has not received much attention from his
critics or his defenders, bewildered or beguiled as they are by his repeated
invocations of liberty. Yet a careful reading of Hayek’s argument reveals
that liberty for him is neither the
highest good nor an intrinsic good. It is a contingent and instrumental good
(a consequence of our ignorance and the condition of our progress), the
purpose of which is to make possible the emergence of a heroic legislator of
value. Civilization and progress, Hayek argues,
depend upon each of us deploying knowledge that is available for our use yet
inaccessible to our reason. The computer on
which I am typing is a repository of centuries of mathematics, science and
engineering. I know how to use it, but I don’t understand it. Most of our
knowledge is like that: we know the “how” of things—how to turn on the
computer, how to call up our word-processing program and type—without knowing
the “that” of things: that electricity is the flow of electrons,
that circuits operate through binary choices and so on. Others possess
the latter kind of knowledge; not us. That
combination of our know-how and their
knowledge advances the cause of
civilization. Because they have thought through how a computer can be
optimally designed, we are free to ignore its transistors and microchips;
instead, we can order clothes online, keep up with old friends as if they
lived next door, and dive into previously inaccessible libraries and archives
in order to produce a novel account of the Crimean War. We can never know what serendipity of
knowledge and know-how will produce the best results, which union of genius
and basic ignorance will yield the greatest advance. For that reason,
individuals—all individuals—must be free to pursue their ends, to exploit the
wisdom of others for their own purposes. Allowing for the
uncertainties of progress is the greatest guarantor of progress. Hayek’s argument for freedom rests
less on what we know or want to know than on what we don’t know, less on what
we are morally entitled to as individuals than on the beneficial consequences
of individual freedom for society as a whole. In fact, Hayek
continues, it is not really my freedom that I should be concerned about; nor
is it the freedom of my friends and neighbors. It is the freedom of that
unknown and untapped figure of invention to whose imagination and ingenuity
my friends and I will later owe our greater happiness and flourishing: “What is important is not what freedom I
personally would like to exercise but what freedom some person may need in
order to do things beneficial to society. This freedom we can assure to the
unknown person only by giving it to all.” Deep inside Hayek’s
understanding of freedom, then, is the notion that the freedom of some is worth more than the freedom of others: “The freedom that will be used by only
one man in a million may be more important to society and more beneficial to
the majority than any freedom that we all use.” Hayek cites approvingly
this statement of a nineteenth-century philosopher: “It may be of extreme
importance that some should enjoy liberty…although such liberty may be
neither possible nor desirable for the great majority.” That we don’t grant freedom only to that individual is due solely to
the happenstance of our ignorance: we cannot know in advance who he might be.
“If there were omniscient men, if we could know not only all that affects the
attainment of our present wishes but also our future wants and desires, there
would be little case for liberty.” * * * 9. The
Ubermensch
as Arbitrator of Value: Cultural Legislators As this reference to
“future wants and desires” suggests, Hayek has much more in mind than producers
responding to a pre-existing market of demand; he’s talking about men who create new markets—and not just of wants
or desires, but of basic tastes and beliefs. The freedom Hayek cares most
about is the freedom of those legislators of value who shape and determine
our ends. The overwhelming
majority of men and women, Hayek says, are simply not capable of breaking
with settled patterns of thought and practice; given a choice, they would
never opt for anything new, never do anything better than what they do
now. Action by collective
agreement is limited to instances where previous efforts have already created
a common view, where opinion about what is desirable has become settled, and
where the problem is that of choosing between possibilities already generally
recognized, not that of discovering new possibilities. While some might
claim that Hayek’s argument here is driven less by a dim view of ordinary men
and women than his dyspepsia about
politics, he explicitly excludes “the
decision of some governing elite” from the acid baths of his skepticism.
Nor does he hide his misgivings about
the individual abilities of wage laborers who comprise the great majority.
The working stiff is a being of limited horizons. Unlike the employer or the
“independent,” both of whom are dedicated to “shaping and reshaping a plan of
life,” the worker’s orientation is
“largely a matter of fitting himself into a given framework.” He lacks
responsibility, initiative, curiosity and ambition. Though some of this is by
necessity—the workplace does not countenance “actions which cannot be prescribed
or which are not conventional”—Hayek insists that this is “not only the actual but the preferred
position of the majority of the population.” The great majority enjoy
submitting to the workplace regime because it “gives them what they mainly
want: an assured fixed income available for current expenditure, more or less
automatic raises, and provision for old age. They are thus relieved of some
of the responsibilities of economic life.” Simply put, these are people for whom taking orders from a
superior is not only a welcome relief but a prerequisite of their fulfillment:
“To do the bidding of others is for the employed the condition of achieving
his purpose.” It thus should come
as no surprise that Hayek believes in
an avant-garde of tastemakers, whose power and position give them a
vantage from which they can not only see beyond the existing horizon but also
catch a glimpse of new ones: Only from an
advanced position does the next range of desires and possibilities become
visible, so that the selection of new goals and the effort toward their
achievement will begin long before the majority can strive for them. These horizons
include everything from “what we
regard as good or beautiful,” to the
ambitions, goals and ends we pursue in our everyday lives, to “the propagation of new ideas in
politics, morals, and religion.” On all of these fronts, it is the
avant-garde that leads the way and sets our parameters. More interesting is
how explicit and insistent Hayek is about linking the legislation of new values to the possession of vast
amounts of wealth and capital, even—or
especially—wealth that has been inherited. Often, says Hayek, it is only the very rich who can afford
new products or tastes. Lavishing
money on these boutique items, they give producers the opportunity to
experiment with better designs and more efficient methods of production.
Thanks to their patronage, producers
will find cheaper ways of making and delivering these products—cheap enough,
that is, for the majority to enjoy them. What was before a luxury of the idle
rich—stockings, automobiles, piano lessons, the university—is now an item of
mass consumption. The most important
contribution of great wealth,
however, is that it frees its
possessor from the pursuit of money so that he can pursue nonmaterial goals.
Liberated from the workplace and the rat race, the “idle rich”—a phrase Hayek
seeks to reclaim as a positive good—can devote themselves to patronizing the
arts, subsidizing worthy causes like abolition or penal reform, founding new philanthropies and cultural
institutions. Those born to wealth are especially important: not only are
they the beneficiaries of the higher
culture and nobler values that have been transmitted across the generations—Hayek
insists that we will get a better elite if we allow parents to pass their
fortunes on to their children; requiring
a ruling class to start fresh with every generation is a recipe for
stagnation, for having to reinvent the wheel—but they are immune to the
petty lure of money. “The grosser
pleasures in which the newly rich often indulge have usually no
attraction for those who have inherited wealth.” (How Hayek reconciles this
position with the agnosticism about value he expresses in The Road to Serfdom remains unclear.) The men of capital,
in other words, are best understood not as economic magnates but as cultural legislators: “However
important the independent owner of property may be for the economic order of
a free society, his importance is perhaps even greater in the fields of thought
and opinion, of tastes and beliefs.” While this seems to be a universal truth
for Hayek, it is especially true in societies where wage labor is the rule. The dominance of paid employment has
terrible consequences for the imagination, which are most acutely felt by
the producers of that imagination: “There is something seriously lacking in a
society in which all the intellectual, moral, and artistic leaders belong to
the employed classes…. Yet we are moving everywhere toward such a position.” When labor becomes
the norm, in both senses of the term, culture doesn’t stand a chance. * * * 10. In a virtuoso
analysis of what he calls “The
Intransigent Right,” the British
historian Perry Anderson identifies four figures of the twentieth-century
conservative canon: Schmitt, Hayek, Michael Oakeshott
and Leo Strauss. Strauss and Schmitt come off best (the sharpest, most
profound and far-seeing), Oakeshott the worst, and
Hayek somewhere in between. This hierarchy of judgment is not completely
surprising. Anderson has never taken seriously the political theory produced
by a nation of shopkeepers, so the receptivity of the English to Oakeshott and Hayek, who became a British subject in
1938, renders them almost irresistible targets for his critique. Anderson’s
cosmopolitan indifference to the indiscreet charms of the Anglo bourgeoisie
usually makes him the most sure-footed of guides, but in Hayek’s case it has
led him astray. Like many on the left, Anderson is so taken with the bravura
and brutality of Strauss’s and Schmitt’s self-styled realism that he can’t
grasp the far greater daring and profundity of Hayek’s political theory of shopkeeping—his
effort to locate great politics in the economic relations of capitalism. What distinguishes
the theoretical men of the right from their counterparts on the left,
Anderson writes, is that their voices were “heard in the chancelleries.” Yet whose voice has been more listened
to, across decades and continents, than Hayek’s? Schmitt and Strauss have
attracted readers from all points of the political spectrum as writers of
dazzling if disturbing genius, but the two projects with which they are most
associated—European fascism and American neoconservatism—have
never generated the global traction or gathering energy that neoliberalism
has now sustained for more than four decades. It would be a
mistake to draw too sharp a line between the
marginal children of Nietzsche—with political man on one branch of the
family tree, economic man on the other. Hayek, at times, could sound the most
Schmittian notes. At the height of Augusto Pinochet’s power in Chile, Hayek told a
Chilean interviewer that when any “government is in a situation of rupture,
and there are no recognized rules, rules have to be created.” The sort of
situation he had in mind was not anarchy or civil war but Allende-style social democracy, where
the government pursues “the mirage of social justice” through administrative
and increasingly discretionary means. Even in The Constitution of Liberty, an
extended paean to the notion of a “spontaneous order” that slowly evolves
over time, we get a brief glimpse of “the lawgiver” whose “task” it is
“to create conditions in which an orderly arrangement can establish and ever
renew itself.” (“Of the modern German writings” on the rule of law, Hayek
also says, Schmitt’s “are still
among the most learned and perceptive.”) Current events seemed to supply
Hayek with an endless parade of candidates. Two years after its publication
in 1960, he sent The Constitution of
Liberty to Portuguese strongman António
Salazar, with a cover note professing his hope that it might assist the
dictator “in his endeavour to design a constitution
which is proof against the abuses of democracy.” Pinochet’s Constitution of 1980 is named after the 1960 text. Still, it’s
difficult to escape the conclusion that though Nietzschean politics may have
fought the battles, Nietzschean economics won the war. Is there any better
reminder of that victory than the Detlev-Rohwedder-Haus
in Berlin? Built to house the Luftwaffe during World War II, it is now the
headquarters of the German Ministry of Finance. Corey Robin May 7,
2013 | This article appeared in the May 27, 2013 edition
of The Nation. |