[Originally published August 02, 2003.]
For today’s generation, Hitler is the most hated man in history, and his
regime the archetype of political evil. This view does not extend to his
economic policies, however. Far from it. They are embraced by governments all
around the world. The Glenview State Bank of Chicago, for example, recently
praised Hitler’s economics in its monthly newsletter. In doing so, the bank
discovered the hazards of praising Keynesian policies in the wrong context.
The issue of the newsletter (July 2003) is not online, but the content can
be discerned via the letter of protest from the Anti-Defamation League. “Regardless of
the economic arguments” the letter said, “Hitler’s economic policies cannot
be divorced from his great policies of virulent anti-Semitism, racism and
genocide.… Analyzing his actions through any other lens severely misses the
point.”
The same could be said about all forms of central planning. It is wrong to
attempt to examine the economic policies of any leviathan state apart from
the political violence that characterizes all central planning, whether in
Germany, the Soviet Union, or the United States. The controversy highlights
the ways in which the connection between violence and central planning is
still not understood, not even by the ADL. The tendency of economists to
admire Hitler’s economic program is a case in point.
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In
the 1930s, Hitler was widely viewed as just another protectionist central
planner who recognized the supposed failure of the free market and the need
for nationally guided economic development. Proto-Keynesian socialist
economist Joan Robinson wrote that “Hitler found a cure against unemployment
before Keynes was finished explaining it.”
What were those economic policies? He suspended the gold standard,
embarked on huge public-works programs like autobahns, protected industry
from foreign competition, expanded credit, instituted jobs programs, bullied
the private sector on prices and production decisions, vastly expanded the
military, enforced capital controls, instituted family planning, penalized
smoking, brought about national healthcare and unemployment insurance,
imposed education standards, and eventually ran huge deficits. The Nazi
interventionist program was essential to the regime’s rejection of the market
economy and its embrace of socialism in one country.
Such programs remain widely praised today, even given their failures. They
are features of every “capitalist” democracy. Keynes himself admired the Nazi
economic program, writing in the foreword to the German edition to the General
Theory: “[T]he theory of output as a whole, which is what the following
book purports to provide, is much more easily adapted to the conditions of a
totalitarian state, than is the theory of production and distribution of a
given output produced under the conditions of free competition and a large
measure of laissez-faire.”
Keynes’s comment, which may shock many, did not come out of the blue.
Hitler’s economists rejected laissez-faire, and admired Keynes, even
foreshadowing him in many ways. Similarly, the Keynesians admired Hitler (see
George Garvy, “Keynes and the Economic Activists of Pre-Hitler
Germany,” The Journal of Political Economy, Volume 83, Issue 2,
April 1975, pp. 391–405).
Even as late as 1962, in a report written for President Kennedy, Paul
Samuelson had implicit praise for Hitler: “History reminds us that even in
the worst days of the great depression there was never a shortage of experts
to warn against all curative public actions.… Had this counsel prevailed
here, as it did in the pre-Hitler Germany, the existence of our form of
government could be at stake. No modern government will make that mistake
again.”
On one level, this is not surprising. Hitler instituted a New Deal for
Germany, different from FDR and Mussolini only in the details. And it worked
only on paper in the sense that the GDP figures from the era reflect a growth
path. Unemployment stayed low because Hitler, though he intervened in labor
markets, never attempted to boost wages beyond their market level. But
underneath it all, grave distortions were taking place, just as they occur in
any non-market economy. They may boost GDP in the short run (see how
government spending boosted the US Q2 2003 growth rate from 0.7 to 2.4
percent), but they do not work in the long run.
“To write of Hitler without the context of the millions of innocents
brutally murdered and the tens of millions who died fighting against him is
an insult to all of their memories,” wrote the ADL in protest of the analysis
published by the Glenview State Bank. Indeed it is.
But being cavalier about the moral implications of economic policies is
the stock-in-trade of the profession. When economists call for boosting
“aggregate demand,” they do not spell out what this really means. It means
forcibly overriding the voluntary decisions of consumers and savers,
violating their property rights and their freedom of association in order to
realize the national government’s economic ambitions. Even if such programs
worked in some technical economic sense, they should be rejected on grounds
that they are incompatible with liberty.
So it is with protectionism. It was the major ambition of Hitler’s
economic program to expand the borders of Germany to make autarky viable,
which meant building huge protectionist barriers to imports. The goal was to
make Germany a self-sufficient producer so that it did not have to risk
foreign influence and would not have the fate of its economy bound up with
the goings-on in other countries. It was a classic case of economically
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And yet even in the United States today, protectionist policies are making
a tragic comeback. Under the Bush administration alone, a huge range of
products from lumber to microchips are being protected from low-priced
foreign competition. These policies are being combined with attempts to
stimulate supply and demand through large-scale military expenditure,
foreign-policy adventurism, welfare, deficits, and the promotion of
nationalist fervor. Such policies can create the illusion of growing
prosperity, but the reality is that they divert scarce resources away from
productive employment.
Perhaps the worst part of these policies is that they are inconceivable
without a leviathan state, exactly as Keynes said. A government big enough
and powerful enough to manipulate aggregate demand is big and powerful enough
to violate people’s civil liberties and attack their rights in every other
way. Keynesian (or Hitlerian) policies unleash the sword of the state on the
whole population. Central planning, even in its most petty variety, and
freedom are incompatible.
Ever
since 9/11 and the authoritarian, militarist response, the political left has
warned that Bush is the new Hitler, while the right decries this kind of
rhetoric as irresponsible hyperbole. The truth is that the left, in making
these claims, is more correct than it knows. Hitler, like FDR, left his mark
on Germany and the world by smashing the taboos against central planning and
making big government a seemingly permanent feature of Western economies.
David Raub, the author of the article for Glenview, was being naïve in
thinking he could look at the facts as the mainstream sees them and come up
with what he thought would be a conventional answer. The ADL is right in this
case: central planning should never be praised. We must always consider its
historical context and inevitable political results.
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