Murray Rothbard - Austrian School Writings

Austrian School Writings

Part of a series on the
Austrian School
Principal works
  • Capital and Interest
  • Human Action
  • Individualism and Economic Order
  • Man, Economy, and State
  • Principles of Economics
Theory
  • Austrian business cycle theory
  • Bounded rationality
  • Catallactics
  • Creative destruction
  • Economic calculation problem
  • View of inflation
  • Malinvestment
  • Marginalism
  • Methodological individualism
  • Praxeology
  • Roundaboutness
  • Spontaneous order
  • Subjective theory of value
  • Theory of interest
Organizations
  • Cato Institute
  • Foundation for Economic Education
  • George Mason University
  • The Independent Institute
  • Liberty Fund
  • Ludwig von Mises Institute
  • Reason Foundation
People
  • Eugen Böhm von Bawerk
  • Walter Block
  • Thomas DiLorenzo
  • Frank Fetter
  • Roger Garrison
  • Friedrich Hayek
  • Henry Hazlitt
  • Robert Higgs
  • Hans-Hermann Hoppe
  • Steven Horwitz
  • Jesús Huerta de Soto
  • Israel Kirzner
  • Ludwig Lachmann
  • Fritz Machlup
  • Carl Menger
  • Ludwig von Mises
  • Robert Murphy
  • Lew Rockwell
  • Murray Rothbard
  • Joseph Salerno
  • Friedrich von Wieser
Related topics
  • Austrian School economists
  • Economic freedom
  • Perspectives on capitalism
  • Economics portal
Part of a series on
Libertarianism
Origins
  • Age of Enlightenment
  • Aristotelianism
  • Classical liberalism
Concepts
  • Anti-statism
  • Anti-war
  • Argumentation ethics
  • Counter-economics
  • Crypto-anarchism
  • Dispute resolution organization
  • Economic freedom
  • Egalitarianism
  • Free market
  • Free-market environmentalism
  • Free society
  • Free trade
  • Free will
  • Freedom of association
  • Freedom of contract
  • Homestead principle
  • Individual
  • Individualism
  • Laissez-faire
  • Liberty
  • Limited government
  • Localism
  • Natural and legal rights
  • Night-watchman state
  • Non-aggression principle
  • Non-interventionism
  • Non-politics
  • Non-voting
  • Participatory economics
  • Polycentric law
  • Private defense agency
  • Property
  • Self-governance
  • Self-ownership
  • Spontaneous order
  • Stateless society
  • Tax resistance
  • Title-transfer theory of contract
  • Voluntary association
  • Voluntary society
  • Workers' self-management
Schools
  • Agorism
  • Anarchism
  • Anarchist communism
  • Autarchism
  • Christian libertarianism
  • Consequentialist libertarianism
  • Free-market anarchism
  • Geolibertarianism
  • Green libertarianism
  • Individualist anarchism
  • Left-libertarianism
  • Libertarian Marxism
  • Libertarian socialism
  • Minarchism
  • Mutualism
  • Natural-rights libertarianism
  • Paleolibertarianism
  • Panarchism
  • Right-libertarianism
  • Social anarchism
  • Voluntaryism
People
  • Émile Armand
  • Mikhail Bakunin
  • Frédéric Bastiat
  • Walter Block
  • Murray Bookchin
  • Noam Chomsky
  • Voltairine de Cleyre
  • Joseph Déjacque
  • David D. Friedman
  • Milton Friedman
  • Henry George
  • William Godwin
  • Emma Goldman
  • Friedrich Hayek
  • Auberon Herbert
  • Karl Hess
  • Hans-Hermann Hoppe
  • Stephan Kinsella
  • Samuel Edward Konkin III
  • Peter Kropotkin
  • Étienne de La Boétie
  • Rose Wilder Lane
  • Roderick Long
  • Tibor R. Machan
  • Wendy McElroy
  • John Stuart Mill
  • Gustave de Molinari
  • Albert Jay Nock
  • Robert Nozick
  • Isabel Paterson
  • Pierre-Joseph Proudhon
  • Ayn Rand
  • Lew Rockwell
  • Murray Rothbard
  • Joseph Schumpeter
  • Herbert Spencer
  • Lysander Spooner
  • Max Stirner
  • Linda and Morris Tannehill
  • Henry David Thoreau
  • Leo Tolstoy
  • Benjamin Tucker
  • Josiah Warren
Topics
  • Anarcho-capitalism and minarchism
  • Criticisms
  • Intellectual property
  • Internal debates
  • LGBT rights
  • Objectivism
  • Political parties
  • Theories of law
Related topics
  • Civil libertarianism
  • Civil societarianism
  • Constitutionalism
  • Fusionism
  • Green libertarianism
  • Libertarian conservatism
  • Libertarian Democrat
  • Libertarian Republican
  • Libertarian science fiction
  • Libertarian transhumanism
  • Libertarianism in the United States
  • Market liberalism
  • Objectivism
  • Public choice theory
  • Small government
  • Liberalism portal
  • Libertarianism portal
  • Outline of libertarianism

The Austrian School attempts to discover axioms of human action (called "praxeology" in the Austrian tradition). It supports free market economics and criticizes command economies. Influential advocates were Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk, Friedrich Hayek, and Ludwig von Mises. Rothbard argued that the entire Austrian economic theory is the working out of the logical implications of the fact that humans engage in purposeful action. In working out these axioms he came to the position that a monopoly price could not exist on the free market. He also anticipated much of the “rational expectations” viewpoint in economics.

In accordance with his free-market views, Rothbard argued that individual protection and national defense also should be offered on the market, rather than supplied by government’s coercive monopoly. Rothbard was an ardent critic of Keynesian economic thought as well as the utilitarian theory of philosopher Jeremy Bentham.

In Man, Economy, and State Rothbard divides the various kinds of state intervention in three categories: "autistic intervention", which is interference with private non-exchange activities; "binary intervention", which is forced exchange between individuals and the state; and "triangular intervention", which is state-mandated exchange between individuals. According to Sanford Ikeda, Rothbard's typology "eliminates the gaps and inconsistencies that appear in Mises's original formulation."

Rothbard also was knowledgeable in history and political philosophy. Rothbard's books, such as Man, Economy, and State, Power and Market, The Ethics of Liberty, and For a New Liberty, are considered by some to be classics of natural law and libertarian thought, combining libertarian natural rights philosophy, anti-government anarchism and a free market perspective in analyzing a range of contemporary social and economic issues. He also possessed extensive knowledge of the history of economic thought, studying the pre-Adam Smith free market economic schools, such as the Scholastics and the Physiocrats and discussed them in his unfinished, multi-volume work, An Austrian Perspective on the History of Economic Thought.

Rothbard writes in Power and Market that the role of the economist in a free market is limited but the role and power of the economist in a government that continually intervenes in the market expands, as the interventions trigger problems which require further diagnosis and the need for further policy recommendations. Rothbard argues that this simple self-interest prejudices the views of many economists in favor of increased government intervention.

Rothbard also created "Rothbard's law" that "people tend to specialize in what they are worst at. Henry George, for example, is great on everything but land, so therefore he writes about land 90% of the time. Friedman is great except on money, so he concentrates on money."

Read more about this topic:  Murray Rothbard

Famous quotes containing the words austrian, school and/or writings:

    The war shook down the Tsardom, an unspeakable abomination, and made an end of the new German Empire and the old Apostolic Austrian one. It ... gave votes and seats in Parliament to women.... But if society can be reformed only by the accidental results of horrible catastrophes ... what hope is there for mankind in them? The war was a horror and everybody is the worse for it.
    George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950)

    I wish to speak a word for Nature, for absolute freedom and wildness, as contrasted with a freedom and culture merely civil,—to regard man as an inhabitant, or a part and parcel of Nature, rather than as a member of society. I wish to make an extreme statement, if so I may make an emphatic one, for there are enough champions of civilization: the minister and the school committee and every one of you will take care of that.
    Henry David David (1817–1862)

    If someday I make a dictionary of definitions wanting single words to head them, a cherished entry will be “To abridge, expand, or otherwise alter or cause to be altered for the sake of belated improvement, one’s own writings in translation.”
    Vladimir Nabokov (1899–1977)