| True then, true now. Difference is, it's probably less well known today 
 
 Man, Economy, and State: The Economics of Freedom
 
 
   
 [Editor's note: The following is Henry Hazlitt's review of  Man, Economy, and State published in National Review in September, 1962.]
 
 One of the unhappy casualties of World War I was the old-fashioned  treatise on economic "principles." This was a work not too technical to  be read by the intelligent layman, on the one hand, nor, on the other,  like current textbooks, a choppy and oversimplified compilation of  currently fashionable doctrine. One of the last of the species was Frank  W. Taussig's Principles of Economics, first published in 1911. The spirit of that book was revealed in a passage from the preface:
 
 I have tried in this book to state the principles of  economics in such form that they shall be comprehensible to an educated  and intelligent person who has not before made any systematic study of  the subject. Though designed in this sense for beginners, the book does  not gloss over difficulties or avoid severe reasoning. No one can  understand economic phenomena or prepare himself to deal with economic  problems who is unwilling to follow trains of reasoning which call for  sustained attention. I have done my best to be clear, and to state with  care the grounds on which my conclusions rest, as well as the  conclusions themselves, but have made no vain pretense of simplifying  all things.It is the announced purpose of Dr. Rothhard's Man, Economy, and State  (two volumes running to a total of 1,000 pages) to write in this spirit  and "to fill part of the enormous gap of forty years' time." And he has  succeeded. He has given us a work in the tradition of Taussig,  Wicksteed, Fetter, Knight and Mises, a comprehensive study of  principles, which treats economics as a coherent edifice, not a  fragmented study of "utility," "monopoly," "international trade,"  "labor," "agriculture," "public finance," and "linear programming."
 
 
 Such a unified edifice, as Rothbard explains, can be built only by  treating economics as a deductive science using verbal logic. For "if  economics proceeds by deductive logic grounded on a few simple and  evident axioms, then the corpus of economics can be presented as an  interrelated whole to the intelligent layman with no loss of ultimate  rigor."
 
 This was the method of the "Austrian" economists. It is the method of  Ludwig von Mises. In fact, Rothbard, a former student of Mises, frankly  takes off from Human Action: "From now on, little constructive work can be done in economics unless it starts from Human Action....In  one sense, the present work attempts to isolate the economic, fill in  the interstices, and spell out the detailed implications, as I see them,  of the Misesian structure."
 
 What contributions has Rothbard made to the structure? He indicates  some of them in his own preface. His book begins by deducing the entire  corpus of economics from a few simple "axioms": "the Fundamental Axiom  of action—that men employ means to achieve ends"; that "there is a  variety of human and natural resources," and that "leisure is a  consumers' good."
 
 Rothbard is not afraid to be old-fashioned enough to begin with  "Crusoe economics" before he takes up interpersonal relations, and  barter before he takes up indirect exchange through money. One of the  features of his consumption-and-production theory is "the resurrection  of Professor Frank A. Fetter's brilliant and completely neglected theory  of rent—i.e., the concept of rent as the hire prices of a unit service.  Capitalization then becomes the process of determining the present  values of the expected future rents of a good.
 
 The Fetter-Mises pure time-preference theory of interest  is synthesized with the Fetter rent theory [and] with the Austrian  theory of the structure of production....One 'radical' feature of our  analysis of production is a complete break with the currently  fashionable 'short-run' theory of the firm, substituting for this a  general theory of marginal value productivity and capitalization. It is a  'general equilibrium' analysis in the dynamic Austrian, and not in the  static, currently popular Walrasian sense.Rothbard also expounds "a completely new theory of monopoly—that  monopoly can be meaningfully defined only as a grant of privilege by the  state, and that a monopoly price can be attained only from, such a  grant. In short, there can be no monopoly price on a free market."
 
 
 So far I have adhered to Rothbard's own summary. But I am not sure he  has done full justice to his own contribution. For example, I do not  recall any book (with the possible exception of the works of Mises,  Fetter and Bohm-Bawerk) that gives so full a recognition to the inherent  and omnipresent (but neglected) role of time, not merely in the  explanation of interest, but in all economic activity. Rothbard  constantly emphasizes time as an indispensable factor in all production,  and as a necessary but "scarce" means to all our ends.
 
 On a score of other major points, also, he contributes lucidity and  light: his excellent description of the enormous benefits of a money  economy over one of the direct exchange; his explanation of why a  separate theory of "international" trade is unnecessary and why the  "balance of payments problem" for a nation is no different from that for  an individual; his rigorous exposition of a pure time-preference theory  of interest; his mordant exposure of labor union fallacies; his  beautiful explanation of why the free market, far from being "anarchic"  or "planless," is the only organization under which true economic  balance and order are possible.
 
 What does Rothbard's book give us that Mises' does not? The question  can best be answered by a comparison. One mathematician does not  necessarily differ from another when he explores other fields or other  specific problems. The chief difference between Mises and Rothbard is  that the latter, treating at much less length some of the basic problems  that Mises has explored more thoroughly, devotes a much larger part of  his work to the refutation of opposing doctrines: some as found in the  older works, such as those of Henry George, Veblen, Marshall, Fisher,  Schumpeter, and Knight; but more particularly those found in the  literature of the last twenty-five years —in the Keynesians, in the  "mathematical economists," in W. W. Rostow, in Galbraith.
 
 It is in the controversial part of his work that Rothbard is most  stimulating. With the statistical and mathematical economists he is  unsparing. He points out the arbitrary and unscientific nature of all  index numbers, as well as the emptiness or deceptiveness of the  equations in which the mathematical economists deal:
 
 In human action there are no quantitative constants. As a  necessary corollary, all praxeological-economic laws are qualitative,  not quantitative.His exposure of the chief Keynesian doctrines is thorough, and his criticism of Galbraith is devastating.
 
 
 In discussing a book of such importance, with so much in it to  praise, and with an instructive challenge on nearly every page to some  "orthodox" or "unorthodox" doctrine, it seems ungrateful to call  attention to flaws. Yet in a structure of thought of which the  foundations are so carefully laid, and in the midst of an otherwise  brilliant and penetrating discussion, Rothbard will suddenly announce  some extraordinary conclusion based on a fragment of abstract  doctrinaire logic. Examples are his sharp contrast between copyrights  and patents, and his implication that the former might well be granted  in perpetuity and the latter not at all; his conclusion that repudiation  of government debt is no great evil; that it even has a "social  utility," and the added advantage of making future government borrowing  more difficult; his opinion that libel and slander ought not to be  illegalized, and that even blackmail "would not be illegal in the free  society. For blackmail is the receipt of money in exchange for the  service of not publicizing certain information about the other person.  No violence or threat of violence to person or property is involved."
 
 It is hard to explain these aberrations. They are in such sharp  contrast to the rest of the book that they seem almost as if stuck in by  another hand. But they are practically all in the legal and political,  rather than in the economic, field. The nearest I can come to a rational  explanation of them is to assume that when Rothbard wanders out of the  strictly economic realm, in which his scholarship is so rich and his  reasoning so rigorous, he is misled by his epistemological doctrine of  "extreme apriorism" into trying to substitute his own instant  jurisprudence for the common law principles built up through generations  of human experience.
 
 I mention these lapses because I am certain that opponents of the  book, and victims of his devastating refutations, trying to discredit so  much that is brilliant and original and profound, will cite them with  relish and with the implication that the rest of the book can be  ignored. But it cannot be ignored. It is in fact the most important  general treatise on economic principles since Ludwig von Mises' Human Action in 1949.
 
 Henry Hazlitt (1894-1993) was a well-known journalist who wrote on economic affairs for the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and Newsweek, among many other publications. He is perhaps best known as the author of the classic, Economics in One Lesson (1946).
 
 
 
 
 
 
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