5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Paradox of success, July 7 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: The Road to Serfdom (Paperback)
Hayek distinguishes liberty, or true freedom, from license and "serfdom." In the tradition of Adam Smith, he analyzes economic and political questions from moral and practical perspectives, with emphasis on individual liberty. His central conceit, that increasing government activity in the economic sphere would devalue individual dignity and stifle human progress, might seen overblown to some readers; it could be that the influence of this book on conservative political leaders and thinkers in the latter half of the American century may have corrected some of the impending problems Hayek foresaw. The Road to Serfdom is a pleasurable, thought-provoking read, persuasively written.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
CHOOSE LIFE!, July 16 2006
This review is from: The Road to Serfdom (Paperback)
Even after six decades, The Road To Serfdom remains essential for understanding global economics and politics. Hayek's main point, that whatever the problem, human nature demands that government be the solution, and that this is the road to hell, remains more valid than ever. He pointed out how similar the situation was under Soviet communism and fascism in Germany and Italy.
The consensus in post-war Europe was for the welfare state and this has led to declining birth-rates, mass immigration from North Africa and the Middle East, and a tendency to exchange their ancient cultural values for the frauds of postmodernism and multiculturalism.
In this classic, Hayek discusses matters like planning and power, the fallacy of the utopian idea, planning versus the rule of law. He brilliantly explains how we are faced with two irreconcilable forms of social organization. Either choice and risk resides with the individual or he is relieved of both.
Complete economic security is inseparable from restrictions on liberty - it becomes the security of the barracks. When the striving for security becomes stronger than the love of freedom, a society is in deep, deep trouble. The way to prosperity for all is to remove the obstacles of bureaucracy in order to release the creative energy of individuals.
The government's job is not to plan for progress but to create the conditions favourable to progress. This has been proved by the awesome economic expansion under Reagan and Thatcher and by the amazing growth of the Asian Tiger economies, and most recently India as it implements sensible economic policies.
Nowhere is this more obvious than in the contrast between the phenomenal growth in formerly communist countries like Estonia or Poland against the stagnant situation in Germany and France where they never had a Thatcher.
One of the best books by one of Hayek's intellectual heirs is In Defence Of Global Capitalism by Johan Norberg. I also recommend Basic Economics by Thomas Sowell, Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal by Ayn Rand, Freedom: Alchemy For A Voluntary Society by Stephan Hoeller and The Mainspring Of Human Progress by Henry Grady Weaver.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Against the wind, Jan 20 2001
This review is from: The Road to Serfdom (Paperback)
When Hayek wrote "The Road to Serfdom" in 1944, the the economic portion of the political climate was steeped in Keynesian thought, and Hayek's work went almost unnoticed. Fifty-seven years later, there is little doubt as to who was right. The most prosperous nations on Earth are also the most free - socially AND economically.
Hayek is one of the fathers of the neo-classical school of economic thought, and modern libertarianism. In this book, Hayek demonstrates the inherent contradiction between freedom and a command economy, and the inevitable descent of socialism into totalitarianism. The accuracy of his predictions of the long-term results of communism were uncanny, and a dire warning against attempting this road yet again.
This is an absolutely essential book for a modern libertarian or student of economics, as well as any liberal or conservative with an open mind and a desire to understand the vastly differing economies and governments of the world. Written for the layman, it is lucid, clear, to-the-point, and, most importantly, has been backed up by world events during last half-century. A classic work in the field of economics.
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