![]() ![]() Popular wisdom regards this book as a warning against socialism, which is true enough, but a closer look reveals something striking: its primary warning concerns not Soviet-style socialism but rather the fascist form that was then sweeping Europe. ![]() ![]() Hayek regarded this path as deeply dangerous, one that threatened to convert free nations into the very thing they were supposedly fighting. Even countries with relatively free economies turned to economic planning and political centralization for the duration. This argument shocked a generation of intellectuals who - very much like now - refuse to consider the integral relationship between liberty generally and freedom in the economic realm. The difference between the Reds and Browns, Hayek argued, matters in theory but not in practice: both paths lead to serfdom. With central control comes corruption, servitude, and relative impoverishment. ![]() Every step away from economic liberty takes us closer to authoritarian control over the whole of society. The book argued that there can be no political or civil liberty without economic liberty as a first principle. Hayek’s Road to Serfdom rocked the English-speaking world. ![]()
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