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About this Book
Eugene Richter (1838-1906) was a member of a generation of classical
liberals who died between the turn of the 19th century and the First
World War. This generation included the French economist Gustave de
Molinari (1819-1912), the English sociologist Herbert Spencer
(1820-1903), the English historian Lord Acton (1834-1902), the English
radical individualist Auberon Herbert (1838-1906), the American
sociologist William Graham Sumner (1840-1910), and the English radical
liberal Thomas Mackay (1849-1912). What died with the passing of this
generation was a form of classical liberalism which was based on a
strong defence of individual liberty, property rights and
self-ownership, free trade and laissez-faire, and opposition to war and
imperialism. The "liberalism" which emerged after the catastrophe of the
First World War, if one can indeed call it "liberalism", turned its back
on this generation of classical liberals and all that it believed in--with dire consequences for liberty in the 20th century.
Richter was born in Duesseldorf and attended universities in Bonn,
Heidelberg and Berlin. In the late 1860s, when the German unified nation
state was being created by Prussia through a series of wars against
other German states and France, Richter first became a member of the
German national parliament (the Reichstag). Over several decades he used
Parliament as a platform to voice his unwavering opposition to
increasing state expenditure, increases in the size and power of the
army and the navy, government abuses of individual freedom, and colonial
policy. Richter was faced with two major sources of opposition to his
form of classical liberalism. On the one hand there were the
conservatives led by Otto von Bismarck who cleverly forged an alliance
between traditional conservatives, the military, and the working class
with his combination of warfare and welfare expenditure and tariff
protection. On the other hand, there were the socialists who wanted to
maintain the high level of government expenditure, but shift the balance
more towards welfare expenditure. As modern electoral politics emerged
in Germany in the late 19th century Richter's never-ending opposition to
all government expenditure increasingly came to be seen as mere
dogmatism and pig-headed "Manchesterism" (as free trade and free market
ideas were called).
Pictures of the Socialistic Future (freely adapted from Bebel) (1891), is Richter's satire of what
would happen to Germany if the socialism espoused by the trade
unionists, social democrats, and Marxists was actually put into
practice. It is thus a late 19th century version of Orwell's 1984, minus
the extreme totalitarianism which Orwell had witnessed in Nazi Germany
and Stalinist Russia but which was still inconceivable to 19th century
liberals. The main point of the book is to show that government
ownership of the means of production and centralised planning of the
economy would not lead to abundance as the socialists predicted would
happen when capitalist "inefficiency and waste" were "abolished". The
problem of incentives in the absence of profits, the free rider problem,
the public choice insight about the vested interests of bureaucrats and
politicians, the connection between economic liberty and political
liberty, were all wittily addressed by Richter, much to the annoyance of
his socialist opponents.
Richter's book is part of a series we are putting together online on
late 19th century free market criticism of socialism. It now joins those
by Mackay and Spencer.
Little has been written on Richter. There is a brief excerpt from one of
his books and a short bio in Western Liberalism: A History in Documents
from Locke to Croce, ed. E.K. Bramsted and K.J. Melhuish (London:
Longman, 1978). There is a long chapter on Richter in Ralph Raico, Die
Partei der Freiheit: Studien zur Geschichte des deutschen Liberalismus
(Stuttgart: Lucius, 1999). See also Ralph Raico, "Eugen Richter and Late German Manchester Liberalism: A Reevaluation," The Review of Austrian Economics, vol. 4, 1990, pp.
3-25. Online at http://www.qjae.org/journals/rae/pdf/R4_1.pdf.
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