Neoliberalism and Contemporary American Literature

Intro Note 13

The effect of the war is crucial for the history of German-speaking ordoliberal thought, as it stands as an important experience for its proponents. During the Hitler era, several left Germany, (Röpke and the Jewish Rüstow went to Turkey), but others remained in the economics section of the Akademie für Deutsches Recht. “Some of its outstanding members were Walter Eucken, Franz Böhm, Leonhard Miksch, and Alfred Müller-Armack, all of whom were to gain prominence in the Adenauer era,” and several taught as members of the “Freiburg School” (Lembruch, “The Institutional Embedding of Market Economies,” 78). After the war, though, the ordoliberal concern about pooled power took on a more reflective tone and motive due to the events of the Nazi era. Quinn Slobodian argues that Nazi-era jurist Carl Schmitt’s 1950 Nomos of the Earth in the International Law of Jus Publicum Europaeum was as significant a touchstone for the postwar German ordoliberals as was Keynes’ General Theory. Slobodian argues that the German neoliberal economists took Schmitt’s defense of nationalist economies in opposition to the global mobility of goods and labor as a conceptual framework to define themselves by a point-by-point rejection of Schmitt’s articulation of his theories. (Slobodian, Globalists, 9–11).

A similar contrast of emphasis between pre- and postwar ordoliberals can be seen in the response to them by German born, but American naturalized, Carl J. Friedrich, Professor of Government at Harvard. In his 1945 review of Hayek’s The Road to Serfdom, Friedrich wrote, “As far as one can make out, this ‘free society’ of Hayek’s is the bleak 1840’s in England when Manchester exploitation reigned supreme, when the enterpriser was wholly free to practice his ‘astuteness for ambushing the community’s loose change,’ as Veblen once so sardonically expressed it. Although ‘freedom’ is a key concept in Hayek’s thought pattern, it nowhere receives any careful analysis, and the intricate problems of who is to be free for what, which have troubled since men began to think about freedom, are left unattended.” Carl J. Friedrich, “The Road to Serfdom” in The American Political Science Review, 39:3 (Jun., 1945): 575–579.

Yet by 1955, Friedrich was more comfortable in arguing that the “central concern . . . of the entire neoliberal group” was a critique of “the totalitarian tendencies of our time,” a more favorable summary from a scholar who was considered to be one of the foremost authorities on totalitarianism in his time. Carl J. Friedrich, “The Political Thought of NeoLiberalism,” The American Political Science Review, 49:2 (Jun., 1955): 509–525.

Friedrich claimed that Rustow’s magnum opus Ortsbestimmung der Gegenwart (Determination of the Present Location) (1952–55) is “specifically a critique of German culture” and particularly the persistence and increasing autonomy of State bureaucracies that initially arose to place limits on the monarchy, but then continued to enable German totalitarianism. For Friedrich, Rustow’s critique of Germany is also “occasionally interspersed with suggestions that imply all is not well in the Anglo-Saxon world, that imperialism and colonialism, and the treatment of Negroes and Indians, fits into a pattern that is uncomfortably close to the [formerly Nazi] German one” (519–21).

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