A.R.J. Turgot as Austrian Grandfather

by Ryan Safner

[This essay was originally written for ECON 3462 - History of Economic Thought]

Anne-Robert Jacques Turgot’s brief but brilliant writings on political economy portray him as a major intellectual precursor to the modern Austrian school of economics.  Many of his primitive yet revolutionary insights into the nature of a free market bear striking resemblance to major Austrian tenets.  None is so crucial and so well-developed, however, as his vision of a dynamic and emergent market order.  Turgot’s shining brilliance and foresight into this area illuminates the voids of the sycophantic mercantilists and the comparative statics of the classical school.  This grandiose vision would be lost for a century until it was recovered, quite independently, by the original Austrian, Carl Menger.  If Menger is the father of the Austrian school, Turgot would certainly qualify as the estranged grandfather.  Turgot’s prolific vision of market-based progress can be seen through a proto-Austrian lens based upon two key concepts he elucidated – the great role of the capitalist-entrepreneur and that of time.  Turgot observed that it is the entrepreneur, or “undertaker,” who forecasts future conditions and undertakes a profitable venture in the context of ubiquitous risk and uncertainty.  In particular, it is the capitalist-entrepreneur who forwards the money from his saved capital at a future profit to make such an undertaking possible.  Since entrepreneurial action necessitates present action based on future speculation, Turgot is one of the first to highlight the immensely important and often neglected role of time in production and investment.  Their combination makes for an economy where entrepreneurs act as the great equibrilators to the constant flux of market dynamics.  Their actions, as well as their accumulation of capital, allow for the optimistic possibility of an ever-progressing society.

Continue reading »

Tagged with:
 

In Defense of [Austrian] Economics

On 22 July 2009, in economics, by Ryan

“The habit of talking and writing about economic affairs without having probed relentlessly to the bottom of their problems has taken the zest out of public discussions on questions vital to human society and diverted politics into paths that lead directly to the destruction of all civilization…Our contemporaries consider that anything which comes under the heading of Economics…is fair game to the unqualified critic….[E]ven those whose activities have, notoriously, often led to failure and bankruptcy, enjoy a spurious prestige as economists which should at all costs be destroyed…It is time these amateurs were unmasked.” Ludwig von Mises[1]

First Impressions of Economics*

What do you think of when you hear “economics?”  Perhaps you imagine a middle-aged man with thick-rimmed glasses and a Ph.D pointing to graphs and a long list of financial equations.  Or maybe you think it’s just the wicked “science of money.”  Odds are, if you pictured something like that, you’ve got a lot of company.

Economics has a bad reputation – it is mind-numbingly boring, filled with incomprehensible jargon, graphs of a bunch of curved lines, a morass of equations, and it seems the only thing all economists are always concerned with are “the latest numbers.”  The average person is overwhelmed by the complexities, but in addition, they may also feel a hint of universal awe and wonder–The thought that “these things must be incredibly important!” may linger among your distaste.  Of course, we’re all aware that topics like unemployment, wages, and taxes certainly do affect all of us, and we all have some conception, however vague, of the forces of “supply” and “demand.”  We know that these things are important, but due to their seemingly complicated nature, it’s probably best left to those who can comprehend their complexities (and withstand their dullness!). Economics has become applied mathematics, and the economist is merely a glorified statistician.

But it is all a farce, a clever ruse! Economics is both tremendously fascinating and commonsensical so that the average layman can appreciate it!

Continue reading »

Tagged with: