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Ludwig Von Mises Quotes

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What ranks above all else for economic and political reconstruction is a radical change of ideologies. Economic prosperity is not so much a material problem; it is, first of all, an intellectual, spiritual, and moral problem.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Anarcho Capitalism Anarchy Ancap Austrian School Of Economics Capitalism Coercion Collectivism Economics Ethics Evil Free Free Market Freedom Government Immorality Laissez Faire Libertarian Liberty Morality Morals Politics Socialism Statism Trade Voluntaryism

Common man does not speculate about the great problems. With regard to them he relies upon other people's authority, he behaves as every decent fellow must behave,'' he is like a sheep in the herd. It is precisely this intellectual inertia that characterizes a man as a common man. Yet the common man does choose. He chooses to adopt traditional patterns or patterns adopted by other people because he is convinced that this procedure is best fitted to achieve his own welfare. And he is ready to change his ideology and consequently his mode of action whenever he becomes convinced that this would better serve his own interests.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Action Ideology Man

It is illogical to say, as many etatists do, that liberalism is hostile to or hates the state, because it is opposed to the transfer of the ownership of railroads or cotton mills to the state. If a man says that sulphuric acid does not make a good hand lotion, he is not expressing hostility to sulphuric acid as such; he is simply giving his opinion concerning the limitations of its use.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Classical Liberalism Economics Etatism Government Liberalism Libertarianism State Statism

Every step which leads from capitalism toward planning is necessarily a step nearer to absolutism and dictatorship.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Anarchy Ancap Coercion Communism Fascism Free Free Markets Freedom Government Laissez Faire Libertarian Liberty Mafia Nazism Non Aggression Principle Omnipotent Politics Regime Slavery Socialism State Statism Totalitarian Trade Voluntaryism

Every socialist is a disguised dictator.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Anarcho Capitalism Anarchy Ancap Austrian School Of Economics Coercion Collectivism Communism Freedom Gangster Hero Government Libertarian Liberty Mafia Nap Nationalism Non Aggression Principle Politics Statism Taxation Theft Thieves Totalitarianism Violence Voluntaryism

The desire for an increase of wealth can be satisfied through exchange, which is the only method possible in a capitalist economy, or by violence and petition as in a militarist society, where the strong acquire by force, the weak by petitioning.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Aggression Anarcho Capitalism Anarchy Ancap Austrian School Of Economics Capitalism Economics Free Society Freedom Government Liberty Nap Non Aggression Principle Peaceful Politics Socialism Statism Trade Voluntaryism

No people and no part of a people shall be held against its will in a political association that it does not want.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Austrian School Of Economics Coercion Country Freedom Government Laissez Faire Libertarian Liberty Politics Secession State Statism Voluntaryism

The issue is always the same: the government or the market. There is no third solution.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Government Market Socialism Third Way

The struggle for freedom is ultimately not resistance to autocrats or oligarchs but resistance to the despotism of public opinion.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Austrian Economics Capitalism Classical Liberalism Freedom Government Libertarian Liberty Statism

If any of the socialist chiefs had tried to earn his living by selling hot dogs, he would have learned something about the sovereignty of the consumers.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Austrian Economics Austrian School Of Economics Freedom Government Libertarian Liberty State Statism Voluntaryism

Romanticism is man's revolt against reason, as well as against the condition under which nature has compelled him to live.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Economics Reason Romantic Romanticism Socialism

It opens the mind toward an understanding of humannature and destiny. It increases wisdom. It is the veryessence of that much misinterpreted concept, a liberaleducation. It is the foremost approach to humanism,the lore of the specifically human concerns that distinguishman from other living beings. . . . Personal cultureis more than mere familiarity with the presentstate of science, technology, and civic affairs. It ismore than acquaintance with books and paintings andthe experience of travel and of visits to museums. It isthe assimilation of the ideas that roused mankind fromthe inert routine of a merely animal existence to a lifeof reasoning and speculating. It is the individual’seffort to humanize himself by partaking in the traditionof all the best that earlier generations havebequeathed.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises History Humanism Individualism Reason Wisdom

Within a world of free trade and democracy there are no incentives for war and conquest. In such a world it is of no concern whether a nation’s sovereignty stretches over a larger or a smaller territory. Its citizens cannot derive any advantage from the annexation of a province. us territorial problems can be treated without bias and passion, it is not painful to be fair to other people’s claims for self-determination.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Freedom Liberty Trade

The valuations which result in determination of definite prices are different. Each party attaches a higher value to the good he receives than to that he gives away. The exchange ratio, the price, is not the product of equality of valuation, but on the contrary, the product of a discrepancy in valuation.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Anarcho Capitalism Ancap Austrian Economics Austrian School Of Economics Free Free Market Freedom Laissez Faire Libertarian Liberty Markets Nap Non Aggression Principle Preference Subjective Trade Voluntaryism

Freedom is indivisible. As soon as one starts to restrict it, one enters upon a decline on which it is difficult to stop.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Anarcho Capitalism Anarchy Ancap Austrian Economics Austrian School Of Economics Capitalism Coercion Communism Force Free Market Freedom Laissez Faire Libertarian Liberty Nap Non Aggression Principle Socialism Statism Totalitarianism Voluntaryism

He who is unfit to serve his fellow citizens wants to rule them.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Anarcho Capitalism Anarchy Ancap Austrian School Of Economics Free Market Freedom Laissez Faire Libertarian Liberty Statism Voluntaryism

The welfare of a people lies not in casting other peoples down but in peaceful collaboration.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Austrian Economics Austrian School Of Economics Freedom Liberty Voluntaryism

The law-abiding citizen by his labor serves both himself and his fellow man and thereby integrates himself peacefully into the social order. The robber, on the other hand, is intent, not on honest toil, but on the forcible appropriation of the fruits of others' labor.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Free Freedom Labor Liberalism Liberty Theft Virtue

These self-styled liberals and progressives are honestly convinced that they are true democrats. But their notion of democracy is just the opposite of that of the nineteenth century. They confuse democracy with socialism. They not only do not see that socialism and democracy are incompatible but they believe that socialism alone means real democracy. Entangled in this error, they consider the Soviet system a variety of popular government.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Communism Democracy Socialism

It is irrelevant to the entrepreneur, as the servant of the consumers, whether the wishes and wants of the consumers are wise or unwise, moral or immoral. He produces what the consumers want. In this sense he is amoral. He manufactures whiskey and guns just as he produces food and clothing. It is not his task to teach reason to the sovereign consumers. Should one entrepreneur, for ethical reasons of his own, refuse to manufacture whiskey, other entrepreneurs would do so as long as whiskey is wanted and bought. It is not because we have distilleries that people drink whiskey; it is because people like to drink whiskey that we have distilleries. One may deplore this. But it is not up to the entrepreneurs to improve mankind morally. And they are not to be blamed if those whose duty this is have failed to do so.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Vice

Nonetheless, many people, and especially intellectuals, passionately loathe capitalism. As they see it, this ghastly mode of society’s economic organization has brought about nothing but mischief and misery. Men were once happy and prosperous in the good old days preceding the Industrial Revolution. Now under capitalism the immense majority are starving paupers ruthlessly exploited by rugged individualists. For these scoundrels nothing counts but their moneyed interests. They do not produce good and really useful things, but only what will yield the highest profits. They poison bodies with alcoholic beverages and tobacco, and souls and minds with tabloids, lascivious books and silly moving pictures. The “ideological superstructure” of capitalism is a literature of decay and degradation, the burlesque show and the art of striptease, the Hollywood pictures and the detective stories.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Greed Vice

How little one is justified in speaking in this connection of optimism and pessimism and how much the characterization of liberalism as optimistic aims at surrounding it with an unfavorable aura by bringing in extrascientific, emotional considerations is best shown by the fact that one can, with as much justice, call those people optimists who are convinced that the construction of a socialist or of an interventionist commonwealth would be practicable. Most of the writers who concern themselves with economic questions never miss an opportunity to heap senseless and childish abuse on the capitalist system and to praise in enthusiastic terms either socialism or inter ventionism, or even agrarian socialism and syndicalism, as excellent institutions.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Classical Liberalism Economics Free Market

There has been much talk about the alleged exploitation of the debtor nations by the creditor nations. But if the concept of exploitation is to be applied to these relations, it is rather an exploitation of the investing by the receiving nations. These loans and investments were not intended as gifts. The loans were made upon solemn stipulation of payment of principal and interest. The investments were made in the expectation that property rights would be respected. With the exception of the bulk of the investments made in the United States, in some of the British dominions, and in some smaller countries, these expectations have been disappointed. Bonds have been defaulted or will be in the next few years. Direct investments have been confiscated or soon will be. The capital-exporting countries can do nothing but wipe off their balances.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Colonialism Creditor Nations Debtor Nations Economic Development International Capitalism Third World

To a naive observer, money made out of precious metal was 'sound money' because the piece of precious metal was an 'intrinsically' valuable object, while paper money was 'bad money' because its value was only 'artificial'. But even the layman who holds this opinion accepts the money in the course of business transactions, not for the sake of its industrial use-value, but for the sake of its objective exchange-value, which depends largely upon its monetary employment. He values a gold coin not merely for the sake of its industrial use-value, say because of the possibility of using it as jewellery, but chiefly on account of its monetary utility. But, of course, to do something, and to render an account to oneself of what one does and why one does it, are quite different things.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Freedom Money

The central element in the economic problem of money is the objective exchange-value of money, popularly called its purchasing power.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Freedom Money

In the case of money, subjective use-value and subjective exchange-value coincide. Both are derived from objective exchange-value, for money has no utility other than that arising from the possibility of obtaining other economic goods in exchange for it.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Freedom Money

The exchange-value of money is the anticipated use-value of the things that can be obtained with it.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Freedom Money

By 'the objective exchange-value of money' we are accordingly to understand the possibility of obtaining a certain quantity of other economic goods in exchange for a given quantity of money, and by 'the price of money' this actual quantity of other goods.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Freedom Money

For when the Law of Price declares that a good actually commands a particular price, and explains why it does so, it of course implies that the good is able to command this price, and explains why it is able to do so. The Law of Price comprehends the Law of Exchange-Value.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Freedom Money

It is impossible to say how far the present value of money depends on its monetary employment and how far on its industrial employment. When the institution of money was first established, the industrial basis of the value of the precious metals may have preponderated; but with progress in the monetary organization of economic life the monetary employment has become more and more important. It is certain that nowadays the value of gold is largely supported by its monetary employment, and that its demonetization would affect its price in an overwhelming fashion.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Freedom Money

Under bilateral competition, market-price is determined within a range whose upper limit is set by the valuations of the lowest bidder among the actual buyers and the highest offerer among the excluded would-be sellers, and whose lower limit is set by the valuations of the lowest offerer among the actual sellers and the highest bidder among the excluded would-be buyers.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Freedom Money

The first value of money was clearly the value which the goods used as money possessed (thanks to their suitability for satisfying human wants in other ways) at the moment when they were first used as common media of exchange.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Freedom Money

If the objective exchange-value of money must always be linked with a pre-existing market exchange-ratio between money and other economic goods (since otherwise individuals would not be in a position to estimate the value of the money), it follows that an object cannot be used as money unless, at the moment when its use as money begins, it already possesses an objective exchange-value based on some other use.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Freedom Money

If all the exchange-ratios of the past were erased from human memory, the process of market-price-determination might certainly become more difficult, because everybody would have to construct a new scale of valuations for himself; but it would not become impossible. In fact, people the whole world over are engaged daily and hourly in the operation from which all prices result: the decision as to the relative significance enjoyed by specific quantities of goods as conditions for the satisfaction of wants.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Freedom Money

The objective exchange-value of money which rules in the market to-day is derived from yesterday's under the influence of the subjective valuations of the individuals frequenting the market, just as yesterday's in its turn was derived under the influence of subjective valuations from the objective exchange-value possessed by the money the day before yesterday. If in this way we continually go farther and farther back we must eventually arrive at a point where we no longer find any component in the objectIve exchange-value of money that arises from valuations based on the function of money as a common medium of exchange; where the value of money is nothing other than the value of an object that is useful in some other way than as money.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Freedom Money

Before it was usual to acquire goods in the market, not for personal consumption, but simply in order to exchange them again for the goods that were really wanted, each individual commodity was only accredited with that value given by the subjective valuations based on its direct utility. It was not until it became customary to acquire certain goods merely in order to use them as media of exchange that people began to esteem them more highly than before, on account of this possibility of using them in indirect exchange. The individual valued them in the first place because they were useful in the ordinary sense, and then additionally because they could be used as media of exchange. Both sorts of valuation are subject to the law of marginal utility.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Freedom Money

The error in this conclusion may be most simply demonstrated by means of an actual example. Let us select for this purpose the monetary history of Austria, which Laughlin also uses as an illustration. From 1859 onwards the Austrian National Bank was released from the obligation to convert its notes on demand into silver, and nobody could tell when the State paper-money issued in 1866 would be redeemed, or even if it would be redeemed at all. It was not until the later 'nineties that the transition to metallic money was completed by the actual resumption of cash payments on the part of the Austro-Hungarian Bank.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Freedom Money

The core of the doctrine consists in the proposition that the supply of money and the demand for it both affect its value. This proposition is probably a sufficiently good hypothesis to explain big changes in prices; but it is far from containing a complete theory of the value of money. It describes one cause of changes in prices; it is nevertheless inadequate for dealing with the problem exhaustively. By itself it does not comprise a theory of the value of money; it needs the basis of a general value theory. One after another, the doctrine of supply and demand, the cost-of-production theory, and the subjective theory of value have had to provide the foundations for the Quantity Theory.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Freedom Money

The older theories, which started from an erroneous conception of the social demand for money, could never arrive at a solution of this problem. Their sole contribution is limited to paraphrases of the proposition that an increase in the stock of money at the disposal of the community while the demand for it rClnains the same decreases the objective exchange-value of money, and that an increase of the demand with a constant available stock has the contrary effect, and so on. By a flash of genius, the formulators of the Quantity Theory had already recognized this. We cannot by any means call it an advance when the formula giving the amount of the demand for money (Volume of Transactions + Velocity of Circulation) was reduced to its elements.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Freedom Money

a variation in the objective exchange-value of money can arise only when a force is exerted in one direction that is not cancelled by a counteracting force in the opposite direction. If the causes that alter the ratio between the stock of money and the demand for it from the point of view of an individual consist merely in accidental and personal factors that concern that particular individual only, then, according to the law of large numbers, it is likely that the forces arising from this cause, and acting in both directions in the market, will counterbalance each other.

~ Ludwig Von Mises

Ludwig Von Mises Capitalism Economics Freedom Money
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