Marxism
Unmasked
by
David Gordon
by David Gordon
Marxism
Unmasked: From Delusion to Destruction. By Ludwig von Mises.
Introduction by Richard M. Ebeling. Foundation for Economic Education,
2006. Xvii + 110 pages.
In
June and July 1952, Ludwig von Mises delivered nine lectures in
San Francisco on Marxism and capitalism. Bettina Greaves transcribed
these lectures, and she has done us a great service in making these
lectures available to the public. They display Mises's unparalleled
insight, and even experienced students of him will learn much from
what he says here.
Fashionable
Western Marxists such as Erich Fromm have stressed Marx's humanism,
principally on display in his early manuscripts, but Mises sees
Marx differently. For him, Marx embraced a crude version of materialism:
According
to Marx, everybody is forced by the material productive
forces to think in a way that the result shows his class
interests. You think in the way your "interests" force
you to think
Your "interests" are something independent
of your mind and your ideas. Consequently the production of your
ideas is not truth. Before the appearance of Karl Marx, the notion
of truth had no meaning for the whole historical period. What
the thinking of the people produced in the past was "ideology,"
not truth. (p. 6)
Mises locates
a contradiction in Marx's theory that, so far as I am aware, has
escaped other critics. Marx contended that class interests determine
a thinker's ideas. He also maintained, though, that these ideas
directly reflect the material productive forces. But these two accounts
by no means come to the same thing:
(1) The interpretation
he [Marx] gives to Descartes is that he was living in an age when
machines were introduced and, therefore, Descartes explained the
animal as a machine; and (2) The interpretation that he gave to
John Locke's inspiration that it came from the fact that
he was a representative of bourgeois class interests. Here are
two incompatible explanations for the source of ideas. (p. 6)
In his discussion
of materialism, Mises makes in passing a brilliant remark:
No materialist
philosopher ever fails to use the word "simply" [as
in, "thoughts are simply secretions of the brain"].
That means, "I know, but I can't explain it." (p. 3)
Economics of
course lies at the heart of Marxism, and Mises expertly exposes
Marx's key errors. Marx claimed that he had discovered the "law
of motion" of capitalism, just as Newton had discovered the
laws of motion in physics. The value of a commodity under capitalism
depends on the socially necessary time required to produce it. This
applies to labor as well: the value of labor depends on how much
labor is required to keep a laborer alive and able to work. But,
in return for paying this amount, the capitalist employer obtains
the worker's labor power. He must work for the capitalist a certain
number of hours; and, in that time, he expends labor, the source
of value. If the amount of labor he expends exceeds what the employer
has paid him, the employer makes a profit.
This famous
exploitation theory of profit rests, as Mises points out, on the
"iron law of wages." If wages rise above subsistence,
population increases will drive them back down again. The rising
standard of living in England in Marx's own day, as capitalism continued
to develop, falsified the iron law, but Marx ignored this.
Mises finds
another problem with this part of Marx's theory:
If you think
it is absolutely impossible under the capitalist system for wages
to deviate from this rate [of subsistence], then how can you still
talk, as Marx did, about the progressive impoverishment of the
workers as being inevitable? There is an insoluble contradiction
between the iron law of wage rates
and his philosophy of
history, which maintains that the workers will be more and more
impoverished until they are driven to open rebellion, thus bringing
about socialism. Of course both doctrines are untenable
What is amazing is that, during the century since Marx's writings,
no one has pointed out this contradiction. (p. 13)
Mises
resolves a question that has long puzzled me. Marx thinks that when
socialism arrives, people will no longer be subjected to the division
of labor. How can he believe this? Surely his extensive knowledge
of economic history must have taught him that civilization cannot
exist without the division of labor.1 Mises contends
that Marx read the history of technology in a different way:
Marx didn't
take into account the evolution of mankind above the level of
very primitive men. He considered unskilled labor to be the normal
type of labor and skilled labor to be the exception. He wrote
in one of his books that progress in the technological improvement
of machines causes the disappearance of specialists because the
machine can be operated by anyone; it takes no special skill to
operate a machine. Therefore the normal type of man in the future
will be the non-specialist. (p. 14)
Again and again
Mises draws from his extraordinary knowledge to make illuminating
remarks. He says, e.g.,
In French,
the words "organize" and "organizer" were
unknown before the end of the eighteenth century or the beginning
of the nineteenth century. With regard to the term "organize,"
Balzac observed "This is a new-fangled Napoleonic term. This
means you alone are the dictator and you deal with the individual
as the builder deals with stones." (p. 45)
I have concentrated
in this review on Mises's analysis of Marxism, but four of the lectures
deal with capitalism. I shall confine myself to two important remarks
Mises makes about Austrian business-cycle theory. First, he does
not claim that the theory accounts for all business fluctuations:
We do not
mean economic crises brought about by some obvious event that
makes it possible to explain the emergence of this crisis
[such as the crisis in Europe when the Civil War prevented cotton
exports]. We do not deal with such crises due to a definite identifiable
situation. We deal with a genuine crisis in all branches of business
although it is sometimes worse in some branches than in
others a crisis for which people couldn't see any special
reason. (p. 69)
Mises's second
remark is of vital importance today, when, in our present troubles,
cries for bailout and stimulus abound. Mises says, by contrast,
that all expansion of bank credit must absolutely cease: "no
more legal tender banknotes and no more credit expansion!"
(p. 75, emphasis in original).
I cannot resist
one more of Mises's brilliant remarks:
Hegel
was the man who destroyed German thinking and German philosophy
for more than a century, at least. He found a warning in Immanuel
Kant
who said the philosophy of history can be written
only by a man who has the courage to pretend that he sees the
world with the eyes of God. Hegel believed he had the "eyes
of god," that he knew the end of history, that he knew the
plans of God. (pp. 89)
I have noted
a few mistakes in the text: The reference to those who interpreted
history as the history of technology cannot have been to Leopold
von Ranke: this was not his view (p. 5). "Albrecht von Heiler"
should be "von Haller" (p. 6). Mannheim's sociology of
knowledge grew out of Marx's ideas, not Hitler's (p. 7). "Darwin's
Origin of the Species" should be "Origin of Species"
(p. 14). The abbreviation for "dialectical materialism"
is "diamat," not "diamet" (p. 15). Bergson's
élan vital does not mean "myths, fairy tales,
and legends" (p. 30). "House of Orange" should be
"House of Orléans" (p. 30). The famous book of
Friedrich Lange was The History of Materialism, not The
History of Marxism (p. 43).
Note
- For an excellent
discussion of the division of labor, see Murray Rothbard, "Freedom,
Inequality, Primitivism, and the Division of Labor" in
Egalitarianism
as a Revolt Against Nature and Other Essays (Mises Institute,
2000).
Copyright ©
2009 Ludwig von Mises Institute
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