We’ve just completed another successful Mises University, the summer
instructional seminar for students hosted by the Ludwig von Mises Institute. Interest in
Austrian economics continues to grow: we could accept fewer than one-third of
qualified applicants.
Although the students are widely read, they share a particular fascination
with the works of Mr. Libertarian, Murray
N. Rothbard, whose books and articles are far more widely read today
than they were in his lifetime. Rothbard – economist, historian, philosopher
– produced an astonishing body of work in defense of liberty. Why are these
young people so captivated by him? Read him yourself and see.
With Mises University 2013 behind us, I thought this was an opportune
moment to look at Rothbard’s major works and suggest a program for reading
them. It is not strictly necessary that you read them in my recommended
order, of course, but I think in terms of difficulty level and subject
matter, the following program makes sense. What Has Government Do... Murray N. Rothbard Best Price:
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1. What Has Government Done to Our Money?This
little book, which has been translated into countless languages, has been the
entry point into sound money for more people than any other
work. It’s also an excellent entry point into the writings of
Rothbard, because it showcases so many of his outstanding qualities. You
discover not just the range of his economic and historical knowledge but also
the clarity of his prose and his ability to explain complicated matters
simply and briefly.
In fewer than 100 pages, you will learn what money is, where it comes
from, how government comes to monopolize its production, and how government
debases it. You’ll learn some American economic history as Rothbard reviews
the twentieth-century process by which the gold standard in the US was
transformed into the fiat paper system of today.
You may want to read it in the Mises Institute’s special edition, which
also includes Rothbard’s essay The
Case for a 100 Percent Gold Dollar.
2. Economic Depressions: Their Cause and Cure. This is not so much a book as a lengthy
essay, but Joe Salerno, our academic vice president at the Mises Institute,
credits it with getting him interested in Austrian economics. It is a
layman’s overview of the Austrian theory of the business cycle — in other
words, it’s a free-market explanation of why the economy experiences booms
and busts. The theory has undergone some development and elaboration in the
decades since this essay, but it will give you a good grounding in the basics
of the business cycle and the role of the central bank in causing it. Economic Depressions (... Murray N. Rothbard Best Price:
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3. Making Economic Sense. This is a
punchy and entertaining collection of Rothbard’s short articles on economics,
covering a wide-ranging series of topics. Rothbard is at his most
entertaining when doing this kind of writing. By showing you how economic
insights can shed light in so many different areas, these articles can help
train you to think like an economist.
4. The Anatomy of the State. This
essay appeared in Rothbard’s collection Egalitarianism as a Revolt Against
Nature and Other Essays, and the Mises Institute has since released
it as a stand-alone publication. Now that you’ve read Rothbard on basic economics
and have seen the sharpness of his mind and the persuasiveness of his
arguments, it’s time for something more challenging. Here Rothbard explains
the true nature of the state.
I’ll give you a hint: the state isn’t a benign institution that provides
for the common good.
Once you’ve read this essay, you may also enjoy the other essays in
the Egalitarianism book, particularly “War, Peace, and the State,”
Rothbard’s derivation of nonintervention from libertarianism’s nonaggression
principle.
5. For a New Liberty: The Libertarian Manifesto. Intended
for a general audience, this is Rothbard’s case for libertarianism. He shows
how the libertarian framework applies to welfare, the environment, foreign
policy, and much more.
Making Economic Sense Murray N. Rothbard Best Price:
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But
Rothbard goes beyond the traditional introduction to libertarianism by
extending his analysis to the provision of security and dispute resolution,
and indeed to the production of all goods and services in society. Much
specialized literature has been published since that time in support of
stateless approaches to matters like these, but Rothbard was the pioneer.
6. America’s Great Depression, 5th
ed. Rothbard wrote this book half a century ago, in 1963. It remains the
definitive Austrian work on the Great Depression in the United States. (For
an Austrian look at the European side of the Depression, see Lionel Robbins’s
book The Great Depression.) The conventional
wisdom that blamed “capitalism” for the Depression is systematically
dismantled.
Rothbard accomplishes several important things with this book.
First, he explains the Austrian theory of the business cycle to the
general public, and discusses the shortcomings of alternative theories.
Second, he shows that the 1920s really were an inflationary period in
terms of money creation. The price level remained stable, he said, because
the monetary inflation prevented it from falling, which is what
it should have been doing at a time of great productivity increases. Focusing
on the price level, as opposed to the level of money creation, gives a
misleading picture.
Third, Rothbard’s historical work on the presidential term of Herbert
Hoover makes quick work of the claim that the Depression was prolonged
because of the chief executive’s dogmatic adherence to laissez-faire. Hoover
was an interventionist from whom Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal would later
extrapolate. Anatomy of the State Murray Rothbard Best Price: $2.12
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The non-specialist should not be concerned if chapter 4 seems technical or
difficult. Scholars will want to examine Rothbard’s evidence in this chapter,
but the layman does not need to master the details regarding the process of
inflation and various features of the financial world of the 1920s in order
to absorb the book’s thesis.
Note, finally, that Milton Friedman, too, says the Fed caused the Great
Depression. But Friedman’s view is that the Fed didn’t do enough — hardly a
free-market analysis. Rothbard’s position is that the Fed did too much, and
that the 1920s, a period in which Friedman perceives no fundamental problems
that should have yielded a depression, were the years in which the Fed sowed
the seeds of the later catastrophe.
7. The Irrepressible Rothbard. This is
a collection of Rothbard’s commentaries on politics and culture from late in
his life. In these writings we encounter Rothbard at his most joyous — and,
when necessary, at his most biting and devastating.
8. The Mystery of Banking. This is
Rothbard’s textbook in money and banking. It’s a systematic,
Austrian-inspired overview of money and banking, along with copious doses of
political, legal, and economic history. If time is at a premium for you, The Case
Against the Fed, Rothbard’s shorter book covering similar material,
can substitute for The Mystery
of Banking.
9. Man, Economy and State: A Treatise on
Economic Principles. This is Rothbard’s magnum opus. It takes you
from the most basic principles, involving an economy with only a single
person, all the way through production, consumption, monopoly, interest
rates, money, and much more. It is a systematic treatise on economics from
the Austrian perspective. For a New Liberty: The... Murray N. Rothbard, Mu... Best
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This is a long book. It’s even longer if you read it the way it was
intended to be read: with Power and Market. Power and
Market originally formed the last part of Man, Economy and State,
but the publisher feared it was too radical and urged that it be published as
a separate work. In our Scholar’s Edition of Man, Economy and State,
the Mises Institute has integrated Power and Market back
into Man, Economy amd State, so you can read the text the way
Rothbard himself envisioned it.
Again, reading Rothbard’s treatise is a major undertaking, if only because
of its great length. But Rothbard is an outstanding teacher, writing in clear
prose that the intelligent reader can understand. I recommend using our Study
Guide, which can help you understand complicated issues and which explains
the significance of Rothbard’s insights and advances within the context of
the history of economic thought.
10. The Ethics of Liberty. Here Rothbard derives and defends the
principle of self-ownership, and applies it to a host of important issues,
including animal rights, lifeboat situations, and criminality and punishment.
Rothbard wrote numerous shorter works and thousands of articles, and
edited the journals Left
and Right, The Libertarian
Forum, The
Journal of Libertarian Studies, and The Review of Austrian
Economics (now the Quarterly Journal of Austrian
Economics). His short books Education: Free and Compulsory, and Wall Street, Banks, and American Foreign Policy may
be read at any time and without any prior knowledge. Americau2019s Great De... Murray N. Rothbard Best Price:
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11. Economic Controversies. Formerly the two-volume Logic of Action, this is a
collection of Rothbard’s articles in scholarly journals, from the American Economic Reviewto
the Review of
Austrian Economics. This book may be read either before or after Man, Economy and State. Some of the
material is accessible to the intelligent reader without any prior
background, while some of the economic articles assume some grounding in the
Austrian School.
Can academic articles really be so interesting to read? When they’re
Rothbard’s, absolutely.
Check out the tremendous scope
of material covered in this book.
Let me conclude with a couple more titles, neither of which requires prior
knowledge, and which people interested in American history may find
especially valuable.
Conceived in Liberty, originally
a four-volume history of colonial America and now available from the Mises
Institute as a large single volume, was Rothbard’s spare-time project in the
1970s. His command of the historical literature is clear, and his
interpretations challenging and exciting. As he indicates in the
introduction, he tells the story of history through the lens of the ongoing struggle
between liberty and power.
A History of Money and Banking in the United
States: The Colonial Period to World War II. Published
posthumously, this book collects articles and book chapters by Rothbard that
cover the monetary history of the US. Do not skip over the important
introduction by Professor Joseph Salerno.
The Panic of 1819was Rothbard’s
doctoral dissertation at Columbia University. It applies Austrian insights to
the first of the nineteenth-century panics. It was very well received in the
scholarly community and received excellent reviews in the professional
journals.
Don’t forget, too, the Rothbard archive here
at LRC.
A tremendous intellectual experience awaits you. Enjoy!
The Irrepressible Roth... Murray N. Rothbard Best Price:
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