Murray N. Rothbard
by
David Gordon
Murray
N. Rothbard, a scholar of extraordinary range, made major contributions
to economics, history, political philosophy, and legal theory. He
developed and extended the Austrian economics of Ludwig von Mises,
in whose seminar he was a principal participant for many years.
He established himself as the main Austrian theorist in the latter
half of the twentieth century and applied Austrian analysis to topics
such as the Great Depression of 1929 and the history of American
banking.
Rothbard
was no ivory-tower scholar, interested only in academic controversies.
Quite the contrary, he combined Austrian economics with a fervent
commitment to individual liberty. He developed a unique synthesis
that combined themes from nineteenth-century American individualists
such as Lysander Spooner and Benjamin Tucker with Austrian economics.
A new political philosophy was the result, and Rothbard devoted
his remarkable intellectual energy, over a period of some forty-five
years, to developing and promoting his style of libertarianism.
In doing so, he became a major American public intellectual.
Murray
Rothbard was born March 2, 1926, the son of David and Rae Rothbard.
He was a brilliant student even as a young child; and his academic
record at Columbia University, where he majored in mathematics and
economics, was stellar. In the Columbia economics department, Rothbard
did not receive any instruction in Austrian economics, and Mises
was no more than a name to him. In a course on price theory given
by George Stigler, however, he encountered arguments against such
then popular measures as price and rent control. These arguments
greatly appealed to him; and he wrote to the publisher of a pamphlet
that Stigler and Milton Friedman had written on rent control.
The
publisher in question was the Foundation for Economic Education;
and visits to this group’s headquarters led Rothbard to a meeting
with Ludwig von Mises. Rothbard was at once attracted to Mises’s
laissez-faire economics, and when Mises’s masterwork Human
Action appeared in 1949, it made a great impression on him.
He was henceforward a praxeologist: here in Mises’s treatise was
the consistent and rigorous defense of a free economy for which
he had long been in search. He soon became an active member of Mises’s
seminar at New York University. Meanwhile, he continued his graduate
studies at Columbia, working toward his Ph.D. His mentor was the
eminent economic historian Joseph Dorfman, and Rothbard received
the degree in 1956, with a thesis on The
Panic of 1819 that remains a standard work.
As
he deepened his understanding of laissez-faire economics, he confronted
a dilemma. The arguments for market provision of goods and services
applied across the board. If so, should not even protection and
defense be offered on the market rather than supplied by a coercive
monopoly? Rothbard realized that he would either have to abandon
laissez-faire or embrace individualist anarchy. The choice, arrived
at in the winter of 1949, was not difficult.
Rothbard
soon attracted the attention of the William Volker Fund, the main
group that supported classical liberal scholars in the 1950s and
early 1960s. He began a project to write a textbook to explain Human
Action in a fashion suitable for college students; a sample
chapter he wrote on money and credit won Mises’s approval. As Rothbard
continued his work, he transformed the project. The result, Man,
Economy, and State (1962), was a central work of Austrian
economics.
Rothbard
was entirely in accord with Mises’s endeavor to deduce the whole
of economics from the axiom of action, combined with a few subsidiary
postulates. In much more detail than Mises had done, he carried
out the deduction; and in the process, he contributed major theoretical
innovations to praxeology. He showed that the socialist calculation
argument applies, not only to a governmentally controlled economy,
but to a single private firm owning the entire economy as well.
It too could not calculate. He also integrated Frank Fetter’s theory
of rent with Austrian capital theory; and argued that a monopoly
price could not exist on the free market. Further, he offered a
brilliant criticism of Keynesian economics, and he anticipated much
of the "rational expectations" revolution for which Robert
Lucas later won a Nobel Prize.
As
Rothbard originally planned Man, Economy, and State, it was
to include a final part that presented a comprehensive classification
and analysis of types of government intervention. The section also
subjected to withering criticism the standard canons of justice
in taxation; a brief but brilliant passage refuted in advance the
anti-market arguments based on "luck" that were to prove
so influential in the later work of John Rawls and his many successors.
Unfortunately, the part appeared in the original edition only in
a severely truncated form. Its full publication came only in 1972,
under the title Power
and Market. The complete version of Man, Economy, and
State, as Rothbard originally intended it to appear, is now
available from the Mises Institute.
This
masterly work was far from exhausting Rothbard’s contributions to
economic theory. In a major paper, "Toward a Reconstruction
of Utility and Welfare Economics" (1956), he showed that if
one takes seriously the fact that utility is ordinal and not cardinal,
then the anti-market views of most modern welfare economists must
be abandoned. Strict application of demonstrated preference allows
one to say that the participants to a voluntary exchange expect
ex ante to benefit. Further than this, the economist, so
long as he remains value-free, cannot go. His main papers on economic
theory are available in the posthumously published two-volume collection
The
Logic of Action (1997).
Rothbard
devoted close attention to monetary theory. Here he emphasized the
virtues of the classical gold standard and supported 100% reserve
banking. This system, he held, would prevent the credit expansion
that, according to the Austrian theory of the business cycle developed
by Mises and Friedrich Hayek, led to inevitable depression. He summarized
his views for the general public in the often-reprinted pamphlet
What
Has Government Done to Our Money? (1964) and also wrote
a textbook, The
Mystery of Banking (1983).
Rothbard
showed the illumination that Austrian theory could bring to economic
history in America’s
Great Depression (1963). Far from being a proof of the failures
of unregulated capitalism, the 1929 Depression illustrates rather
the dangers of government interference with the economy. The economic
collapse came as a necessary correction to the artificial boom induced
by the Federal Reserve System’s monetary expansion during the 1920s.
The attempts by the government to "cure" the downturn
served only to make matters worse.
In
making this argument, Rothbard became a pioneer in "Hoover
revisionism." Contrary to the myths promoted by Hoover himself
and his acolytes, Hoover was not an opponent of big government.
Quite the contrary, the economic policies of the " Engineer
in Politics" prefigured the New Deal. Rothbard’s view of Hoover
is now widely accepted.
For
Rothbard, banking policy was a key to American economic history.
Like Michelet, he believed that history is a resurrection of the
flesh; and his discussions are no dry-as-dust presentations of statistics.
He was always concerned to identify the particular actors and interests
behind historical decisions. The struggle between the competing
Morgan and Rockefeller banking circles figures again and again in
his articles in this field, collected in his A
History of Money and Banking in the United States (1999).
Rothbard
ranged far beyond economics in his historical work. In a four-volume
series, Conceived
in Liberty, (19751979) he presented a detailed account
of American colonial history that stressed the libertarian antecedents
of the American Revolution. As usual, he challenged mainstream opinion.
He had little use for New England Puritanism, and the virtues and
military leadership of George Washington did not impress him. For
Rothbard, the Articles of Confederation were not an overly weak
arrangement that needed to be replaced by the more centrally focused
Constitution. Quite the contrary, the Articles themselves allowed
too much central control.
Although
Rothbard usually found himself in close agreement with Mises, in
one area he maintained that Mises was mistaken. Mises contended
that ethical judgments were subjective: ultimate ends are not subject
to rational assessment. Rothbard dissented, maintaining that an
objective ethics could be founded on the requirements of human nature.
His approach, based on his study of Aristotelian and Thomist philosophy,
is presented in his major work The
Ethics of Liberty (1982), his major study of political philosophy.
In
his system of political ethics, self-ownership is the basic principle.
Given a robust conception of self-ownership, a compulsory government
monopoly of protective services is illegitimate; and Rothbard endeavors
to refute the arguments to the contrary of supporters of a minimal
state, Robert Nozick chief among them. He contributes important
clarifications to problems of libertarian legal theory, such as
the nature of contracts and the appropriate standard of punishment.
He explains why Mises’s instrumental argument for the market does
not fully succeed, though he finds much of value in it; and he criticizes
in careful detail Hayek’s view of the rule of law.
Rothbard
modified the famous dictum of Marx: he wished both to understand
and change the world. He endeavored to apply the ideas he had developed
in his theoretical work to current politics and to bring libertarian
views to the attention of the general public. One issue for him
stood foremost. Like Randolph Bourne, he maintained that "war
is the health of the state"; he accordingly opposed an aggressive
foreign policy.
His
support for nonintervention in foreign policy led him to champion
the Old Right. John T. Flynn, Garet Garrett and other pre-World
War II "isolationists" shared Rothbard’s belief in the
close connection between state power and bellicose foreign policy.
The
situation was quite otherwise with postwar conservatism. Although
Rothbard was an early contributor to William Buckley’s National
Review, he rejected the aggressive pursuit of the Cold War advocated
by Buckley and such members of his editorial staff as James Burnham
and Frank S. Meyer. He broke with these self-styled conservatives
and thereafter became one of their strongest opponents. For similar
reasons, he condemned their neoconservative successors. He followed
a pragmatic policy of temporary alliances with whatever groups were,
at a given time, opposed to militarism and foreign adventures. He
set forward the basis for his political stance in a key essay, "Left
and Right: The Prospects for Liberty." This appeared in
an important scholarly journal, Left
and Right, which he established. This contained major essays
on revisionist history and foreign policy, but unfortunately lasted
only from 19651968.
In
an effort to widen the influence of libertarian thought in the academic
world, Rothbard founded the Journal
of Libertarian Studies in 1977. The journal began auspiciously
with a symposium on Robert Nozick’s Anarchy,
State, and Utopia. Down to the present, it has remained
the most important journal hospitable to libertarian ideas.
Rothbard
established in 1987 another journal, the Review
of Austrian Economics, to provide a scholarly venue for
economists and others interested in Austrian theory. It too is the
key journal in its area of specialty. It has continued to the present,
after 1997 under the new name Quarterly
Journal of Austrian Economics.
In
his comments on current events, Rothbard displayed an amazing ability
to digest vast quantities of information on whatever subject interested
him. Whether, e.g., the question was competing factions in Afghanistan
or the sources of investment in oil in the Middle East, he would
always have the relevant data at his command. A sample of his columns,
taken from the Rockwell Rothbard Report, is available in
The
Irrepressible Rothbard (2000). Another journal that he founded,
The
Libertarian Forum, provides his topical comments for the
period 1969-1984. He presented a comprehensive popular account of
libertarianism in For
A New Liberty (1973).
One
last academic triumph remained for Rothbard, though sadly it appeared
only after his death. In two massive volumes, Economic
Thought Before Adam Smith and Classical
Economics (1995), he presented a minutely detailed
and erudite account of the history of economic theory. Adam Smith,
contrary to general belief, was not the founder of modern economics.
His defense of a labor theory of value, modified and continued by
his Ricardian successors, shunted economics onto the wrong path.
The heroes of Rothbard’s study were the Spanish scholastics, who
long before Smith had developed a subjective theory of value, and
such later figures as Cantillon, Turgot, and Say. He dissects the
heretical religious thought that prefigured Marxism and gives a
mordant portrayal of the personality and thought of John Stuart
Mill.
Rothbard
was closely associated with the Ludwig von Mises Institute from
its founding in 1982 by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr. This organization
became the main vehicle for the promotion of his ideas, and he served
as its Academic Vice-President.
He
taught at Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute from the mid 1960s to the
mid 1980s; from 1986 to his death on January 7, 1995, he was S.J.
Hall Distinguished Professor of Economics at the University of Nevada,
Las Vegas.
The
"indispensable framework" for the life and work of this
creative genius and polymath was his beloved wife, JoAnn
Rothbard. His combination of scholarly achievement and engaged
advocacy on behalf of freedom is unmatched.
July
30,
2005
Copyright ©
2005 Ludwig von Mises Institute
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