
Interventionism: An Economic Analysis
Pages: 98
|Published: 1 Nov 1941
Description
Shortly after arriving in the United States, having fled a war-torn Europe, Ludwig von Mises sat down to complete his trilogy on economic systems. The result was this remarkably concise treatise, which tragically was not published until 1998. What Mises had foreseen was a world trapped between fully planned economies, which were clearly failing, and fully free markets, which were a casualty of depression and war. He warned that mixed systems give rise of political instability and economic stagnation, and proved that this was the case through a general model of interventionism and a specific analysis of price control, credit expansion, subsidies, welfare, corporatism, and the war economy. Particularly interesting is his discussion of the draft, which he sees as a species of socialism itself. A crucial book to understand in the post-socialist age. This book is not to be confused with his earlier book on price control entitled A Critique of Interventionism.
The contents of this volume
Introduction 1. The Problem 2. Capitalism or Market Economy 3. The Socialist Economy 4. The Capitalist State and the Socialist State 5. the Interventionist State 6. The Plea for Moral Reform I. Interference by Restriction 1. The Nature of Restrictive Measures 2. Costs and Benefits of Restrictive Measures 3. The Restrictive Measure as a Privilege 4. Restrictive Measures as Expenditures II. Interference by Price Control 1. The Statutory Law Versus Economic Law 2. The Reaction of the Market 3. Minimum Wages and Unemployment 4. The Political Consequences of Unemployment III. Inflation and Credit Expansion 1. Inflation 2. Credit Expansion 3. Foreign Exchange Control 4. (pb)
The contents of this volume
Introduction 1. The Problem 2. Capitalism or Market Economy 3. The Socialist Economy 4. The Capitalist State and the Socialist State 5. the Interventionist State 6. The Plea for Moral Reform I. Interference by Restriction 1. The Nature of Restrictive Measures 2. Costs and Benefits of Restrictive Measures 3. The Restrictive Measure as a Privilege 4. Restrictive Measures as Expenditures II. Interference by Price Control 1. The Statutory Law Versus Economic Law 2. The Reaction of the Market 3. Minimum Wages and Unemployment 4. The Political Consequences of Unemployment III. Inflation and Credit Expansion 1. Inflation 2. Credit Expansion 3. Foreign Exchange Control 4. (pb)