by Ludwig M. Lachmann
Everywhere today in the free world we find the opponents of the
market economy at a loss for plausible arguments. Of late the "case for
central planning" has shed much of its erstwhile luster. We have had too
much experience of it. The facts of the last 40 years are too eloquent.
Who can now doubt that, as Professor Mises pointed out 30 years ago,
every intervention by a political authority entails a further
intervention to prevent the inevitable economic repercussions of the
first step from taking place? Who will deny that a command economy
requires an atmosphere of inflation to operate at all, and who today
does not know the baneful effects of "controlled inflation?" Even though
some economists have now invented the eulogistic term "secular
inflation" in order to describe the permanent inflation we all know so
well, it is unlikely that anyone is deceived. It did not really require
the recent German example
to demonstrate to us that a market economy will create order out of
"administratively controlled" chaos even in the most unfavorable
circumstances.