The
Faith of Entrepreneurs
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Recently
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.: Fail,
Fail, Fail, Fail
This originally appeared in the December 2005 issue of The
Free Market
Ludwig von
Mises didnt like references to the "miracle" of
the marketplace or the "magic" of production or other
terms that suggest that economic systems depend on some force that
is beyond human comprehension. In his view, we are better off coming
to a rational understanding of why markets are responsible for astounding
levels of productivity that can support exponential increases in
population and ever higher living standards.
There was no
German miracle after World War II, he used to say; the glorious
recovery was a result of economic logic working itself out through
market forces. Once we understand the relationship between property
rights, market prices, the time structure of production, and the
division of labor, the mystery evaporates and we observe the science
of human action making great things happen.
He is right
that understanding economics does not require faith, but there are
actions undertaken by market actors themselves that require faith
(and Mises would not disagree with this) immense faith, faith
that moves mountains and raises up civilizations. If we accept the
interesting description of faith by St. Paul ("evidence of
things unseen") we can understand entrepreneurship and capitalist
investment as acts of faith.
Everyone who
is in business understands this. It requires a thousand daily acts
of seeing the unseen future to be in business. The reality of the
marketplace is that the consuming public can shut you down tomorrow.
All they need to do is to fail to show up and buy.
This is true
for the smallest business to the largest. There is no certainty
in any business. Nothing is a sure thing. Every business in a market
economy is only a short step from bankruptcy. No business possesses
the power to make people buy what they do not want. All success
is potentially fleeting.
Success does
yield a profit, but that provides no comfort. Every bit of profit
you take for yourself comes out of what might otherwise be an investment
in the development of the business. But neither is this investment
a sure thing. Todays smash hit could be tomorrows flop.
What you perceive to be a solid investment could turn out to be
a short-term craze. What you see, based on past sales, as having
a potential mass appeal could actually be a market segment that
was quickly saturated.
Emperors can
rest on their laurels but capitalists never can.
Sales
history provides nothing but a look backwards. The future is never
seen with clarity but only through a glass, darkly. Past performance
is not only not a guarantee of future success; it is no more or
less than a data set of history that can tell us nothing about the
future. If the future turns out to look like the past, the probabilities
still do not change, any more than the probability of the next coin
toss landing on heads increases because it happened previously five
times in a row.
Despite the
utter absence of a road map, the entrepreneur-investor must act
as if some future is mapped out. He or she must still hire employees
and pay them long before the products of their labor come to market,
and even longer before those marketable products are sold and turn
a profit. The equipment must be purchased, upgraded, serviced, and
replaced, which means that the entrepreneur must think about todays
costs and tomorrows and the next days saecula saeculorum.
Especially
now, the costs can be mind-boggling. A retailer must consider an
amazing array of options concerning suppliers and web services.
There must be some means of alerting the world to your existence,
and despite a century of attempts to employ scientific methods for
finding out what makes the consumer tick, advertising remains high
art, not positive science. But it is also art with high expense.
Are you throwing money down a rathole or really getting the message
out? There is no way to know in advance.
The heck of
it too is that there are no testable causes of success because there
is no way to perfectly control for all important factors. Sometimes
not even the most successful business is clued into what it is,
precisely, what makes its products sell more as compared with its
competitors. Is it price, quality, status, geography, promotion,
psychological associations people make with the product, or what?
Back into the
1980s, for example, Coca Cola decided to change its formula and
advertise it as New Coke. The result was a catastrophe as consumers
fled, even though the taste tests said that people liked the new
better than the old.
If the historical
data are so difficult to interpret, think how much more difficult
it is to discern probable outcomes in the future. You can hire accountants,
marketing agencies, financial wizards, and designers. They are technicians,
but there are no such things as reliable experts in overcoming uncertainty.
An analogy might be a man in a pitch-black room who hires people
to help him put one foot in front of the other. His steps can be
steady and sure but neither he nor his helpers can know for sure
what is in front of him.
"What
distinguishes the successful entrepreneur and promoter from other
people," writes Mises, "is precisely the fact that he
does not let himself be guided by what was and is, but arranges
his affairs on the ground of his opinion about the future. He sees
the past and the present as other people do; but he judges the future
in a different way."
It is for this
reason that entrepreneurial habit of mind cannot be implanted through
training or education. It is something possessed and cultivated
by an individual. There are no entrepreneurial committees, much
less entrepreneurial planning boards.
The inability
of governments to engage in the entrepreneurial act of faith is
one of many reasons why socialism cannot work. Even if a bureaucrat
can look at history and claim that his agency could have made a
car, dry wall, or a microchip, that same person is at a loss to
figure out how innovations in the future can take place. His only
guide is technology: he can speculate about what might work better
than what is presently available. But that is not the economic issue:
the real issue concerns what is the best means given all the alternative
uses of resources to satisfy the most urgent wants of consumers
in light of an infinity of possible wants.
This is impossible
for governments to do.
There are thousands
of reasons why entrepreneurship should never take place but only
one good one for why it does: these individuals have superior speculative
judgment and are willing to take the leap of faith that is required
to test their speculation against the facts of an uncertain future.
And yet it is this leap of faith that drives forward our standards
of living and improves life for millions and billions of people.
We are surrounded by faith. Growing economies are infused with it.
Mises forgive
me: this is a miracle.
Books
by Lew Rockwell
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is founder and chairman of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author, most recently, of The
Left, The Right, and The State.
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