Reinventing liberalism: the politics, philosophy and economics of early neoliberalism (1920-1947)
In: Springer Studies in the History of Economic Thought Series
Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- List of Figures -- 1 Introduction -- Neoliberalism -- Methodology -- The Mont Pelerin Society -- Reinventing Liberalism -- Social Liberalism Versus Laissez-Faire -- The Dual Argument -- Secondary Litterature -- I The Dual Argument (1920-1947) -- 2 The Socialist Calculation Debates -- Red Vienna -- Mises' Argument -- The Emergence of Hayek -- From Socialism to Business Cycles -- Collectivist Economic Planning -- The Challenge of Market Socialism -- The Knowledge Argument -- Differing Accounts -- A New Vision of Markets -- Primary Sources -- Secondary Literature -- 3 The Lippmann Colloquium -- The Rise of Fascism -- The Popularity of Economic Planning -- The Totalitarian Enemy -- The Good Society -- The Importance of Hayek -- The Colloquium -- The Price Mechanism -- Ordoliberalism -- The Myth of Laissez-Faire -- Primary Sources -- Secondary Literature -- 4 The Economic Consequences of the War -- Hayek in the Blitz -- The Road to Serfdom -- The Contested Definition of Economic Planning -- Other Versions of the Dual Argument -- Against "Scientism" -- War and Planning -- Neoliberals in Wartime -- Individualism True and False -- The Acton-Tocqueville Army -- Primary Sources -- Secondary Literature -- II The First Meeting (1947) -- 5 An Army of Fighters for Freedom -- Previous Scholarship -- Introducing Neoliberalism -- The Attendees -- List of Attendees -- Demographics -- Liberalism, Economics and Science -- Primary Sources -- Secondary Literature -- 6 Using the State -- Hayek's Welcome -- Hayek Peeling Oranges -- "Free" Enterprise or Competitive Order -- Support from Freiburg and Chicago -- Primary Sources -- Secondary Literature -- 7 A New Europe -- Post-war -- The Beginning of the Cold War -- The Post-war Right -- The Future of Germany -- Discussion -- The Problems and Chances of European Federation -- Discussion.