The Road to Serfdom after 60 Years
By James A. Dorn
F. A. Hayek, one of the greatest liberals of the 20th century, wrote his classic book The
Road to Serfdom to warn against the dangers posed by postwar socialism. He believed with
David Hume that it is seldom that liberty of any kind is lost all at once. To
stem the growth of big government and the erosion of economic and personal freedom that
accompanies that growth, Hayek argued passionately for a liberal international order
grounded in limited government, free trade and the rule of law. His message is as relevant
today as it was in 1944.
Hayeks vision of a market-liberal order with private property, freedom of contract
and limited government rested on the work of Adam Smith and other 18th-century liberals. A
central concept in that body of work is the notion of spontaneous order or what Smith
called a simple system of natural liberty. According to Smith, when all
systems either of preference or of restraint are abolished, the obvious and
simple system of natural liberty establishes itself of its own accord. In such a
system, every man, as long as he does not violate the laws of justice, is left
perfectly free to pursue his own interest his own way, and to bring forth his industry and
capital into competition with those of any other man, or order of men.
Smith dismissed central planning as a utopian vision because no human wisdom or
knowledge could ever be sufficient to direct resources toward the employments
most suitable to the interest of the society. The duties of the sovereign are
definite and few: (1) protect society from the violence and invasion of other
independent societies; (2) safeguard every member of the society from the
injustice or oppression of every other member of it, in so far as possible; and (3)
erect and maintain certain public works and certain public institutions. When
government is limited to those core functions, a great society will emerge.
In 1850, Frederic Bastiat, a well-known French liberal, wrote: It is under the law
of justice, under the rule of right, under the influence of liberty, security, stability,
and responsibility, that every man will attain to the full worth and dignity of his being,
and that mankind will achieve... the progress to which it is destined.
Hayek grasped these liberal principles and, in The Road to Serfdom and other works,
expounded them and warned against creeping socialism in the West. He understood that
substituting socialist endsin particular, freedom from wantfor
capitalist meanscompetition and choicewould destroy the very freedom necessary
for a great society. Under economic liberalism, the individual is at the center, not the
collective, and consent is the organizing principle, not coercion.
Attempts to plan economic life and achieve social justice wrought havoc
in the 20th century. The Soviet Union, the Peoples Republic of China, East Germany,
and other totalitarian states learned the hard way that Marx was wrong and Hayek was
right. What still needs to be emphasized, however, is Hayeks message that
political freedom is meaningless without economic freedom. When private
property rights are violated and economic freedom is attenuated by various forms of
government intervention, our other freedoms are threatened. The Jews in Nazi Germany first
had their economic liberties violated. The rest of the horrors followed.
Any infringement of economic liberty must be nipped in the bud. Constant vigilance
is necessary to prevent the erosion of the principles of a market-liberal order.
As Nobel Laureate economist James Buchanan has written, Liberals should not
lean back and say, our work is done. The organization and the intellectual
bankruptcy of socialism in our time have not removed the relevance of a renewed and
continuing discourse in political philosophy. We need discourse to preserve, save, and
recreate that which we may, properly, call the soul of classical liberalism.
Many emerging market countries still have a long way to go before they reach the
level of economic and personal freedom envisioned by Hayek. Many developed countries,
including the United States and have expanded the welfare state without recognizing the
danger it poses to the future of freedom. The political challenge for the 21st century is
to hold on to and strengthen economic freedom and limited government while at the same
time creating new constitutional democracies that support, rather than erode, liberal
principles.
[James A. Dorn is vice president for academic affairs at the Cato Institute and author of
The Rise of Government and the Decline of Morality.]
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