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Vilfredo Pareto, pessimistic follower of Molinari*
by Murray Rothbard

 

One  prominent person  rarely associated  by scholars  with the Bastiat-Ferrara  laissez-faire school  was  the eminent
sociologist  and economic theorist,  Vilfredo Federico Damaso Pareto (1848-1923).  Pareto  was born  in Paris  into
a noble  Genoan family.  His father,  the Marchese  Raffaelle Pareto,  a hydraulic engineer,  had fled  Italy  as a
republican  and supporter  of Mazzini.  The senior  Pareto  returned  to Italy  in the mid-1850s  and gained  a high
rank  in the Italian  civil service.  The young  Pareto  studied  at the Turin  Polytechnic where  he earned  a graduate
engineering  degree  in 1869 ; his graduate  thesis  was  on the fundamental principle  of equilibrium  in solid bodies.
As we shall see  in a later volume,  Pareto's  thesis  led him  to the idea  that equilibrium  in mechanics  is the
proper  paradigm  for investigation  into economics  and the social sciences.[1]"  After graduation, Pareto  became
a director  of the Florence branch  of the Rome  Railway  Company,  and  in a few years  he became  managing director
of a Florence firm  manufacturing iron  and iron products.

Pareto  soon plunged  into political writing,  taking  a fiery stand  in favour  of laissez-faire  and  against all
forms  of government  intervention,  defending  personal  and economic freedom,  and attacking  plutocratic  subsidies
and privileges  to business  with equal fervour  to his denunciations  of social legislation  or proletarian  socialist
forms of intervention.  Pareto  was one  of the founders  of the Adam Smith Society  in Italy,  and also ran  unsuccessfully
for Parliament  twice  during  the early  1880s.

Heavily influenced  by Molinari,  Pareto's writings  came  to the latter's  attention  in 1887.  Molinari  then  invited
Pareto  to submit  articles  to the Journal des Economistes.  Pareto  met the French liberals,  and formed  a friendship
with Yves Guyot,  who was  to be  Molinari's successor  as editor  of the Journal  and who was  to write  Molinari's
obituary  in 1912.  Shortly  after  getting in touch  with Molinari,  Pareto's mother  died,  and he was able  to give
up  his manufacturing post,  become  a consulting  engineer,  get married,  and retire  to his villa  in 1890  to devote
the rest  of his life  to writing,  scholarship,  and the social sciences.  Freed  of his business duties,  Pareto 
plunged  into  a one-man crusade  against the state  and statism,  and formed  a close friendship  with the laissez-faire
neoclassical  marginalist  economist Maffeo Pantaleoni  (1857-1924),  who drew  Pareto  into technical economic theory.
Having become  a Walrasian  under  Pantaleoni's tutelage,  Pareto  succeeded  Léon Walras  as professor  of political
economy  at the University  of Lausanne.  Pareto  continued  at Lausanne,  also teaching sociology,  until 1907,  when
he fell ill,  and retired  to a villa  on Lake Geneva,  where  he continued  to study  and write  until his death.

Pareto's shift  into technical neoclassical  theory did not  for a moment  abate  his ardent battle  for freedom  and
against  all forms  of statism,  including militarism.  An idea  of his trenchant laissez-faire  liberalism  can be
gained  from his article  on "Socialism and Freedom" published  in 1891:

So  we can group  socialists  and protectionists  under the name  of restrictionists.  whilst those  who want to base
the distribution of wealth  solely  on free competition  can be called  liberationists...

Thus restrictionists  are divided  into two types: socialists,  who through  the intervention  of the state.  wish to
change  the distribution of wealth  in favour  of the less rich;  and the others,  who, even if they are sometimes 
not completely conscious  ot what they are doing,  favour the rich —these are  the supporters of commercial  protectionism
and social  organisation  of a military type.  We owe  to Spencer  the demonstration  of the close analogy  of these
two types  of protectionism.  This similarity  between protectionism  and socialism  was very well understood  by the
English liherals  of the school of Cobden  and that  of John Bright  and  was clarified  in the writings  of Bastiat.[2]
Pareto's writings, furthermore,  are studded  with appreciative  and often lengthy quotes  from Molinari.  Thus,  in
the same article  on "Socialism and Freedom",  Pareto  praises Molinari for advancing  a unique  and bold system  that
"proceed(s)  towards  the conquest  of freedom,  using  all the knowledge  that is offered  by modern science".

In his "Introduction to Marx's Capital" in a book on Marxism (Marxisme et économie pure, 1893),  Pareto  was clearly
influenced  by the French  libertarian  Dunoyer-Comte  concept  of the 'ruling class' as whatever group controls the
state. He ended the chapter with a lengthy and admiring quote  from Molinari,  who carried through  this libertarian
class doctrine.  Pareto  ended  the Molinari quote  with this sentence:  "Everywhere  the ruling classes have one thought
- their own selfish interests - and they use the government to satisfy them.[3]

Pareto's  first great treatise  on economics,  the Cours d'Economie Politique (1896),  was heavily influenced  by both
Molinari  and Herbert Spencer.  In every polity,  he points out,  there is  a minority  ruling class  exploiting  the
majority  who are  the ruled.  Tariffs  Pareto treats  as an example  of legal spoliation,  plunder  and theft.  Pareto
left no doubt  that his objective  was to eradicate  all  such legalized  plunder.  As Placido Bucolo  points out, 
Pareto  did not,  as some analysts claim,  adopt  a Marxian view  of class struggle  in his Cours.  Instead,  he adopted
the French  libertarian  class doctrine.  Thus, Pareto  says  in the Cours:

the class struggle assumes two forms at all times. One consists in economic competition which, when it is free,  produces
the greatest  ophelimity [utility]… [For]  every class  like  every  individual,  even if it only acts to its own
advantagc, is indirectly useful to the others... The other form of class struggle is the one whereby cvery class does
its utmost to seize power and make it an instrument to despoil the other classes.[4]

Laissez-faire liberalism  had been  a genuine  mass movement  in much  of the nineteenth century:  certainly  in the
United States  and Great Britain,  and partially  in France,  Italy.  Germany,  and throughout  western Europe.  Much
of the time  in the latter half  of the century,  the socialist idea  was considered  less  of a threat  to liberty,
by classical liberals  such as  Pareto  and Spencer,  than the existing  system  of militarist  and warlike  statism
dominated  by privileged  businessmen  and landlords,  the system  to which  Pareto  would give  the vivid  and contemptuous
name,  "pluto-democracy".  By the turn  of the century,  however,  it was becoming clear  to laissez-faire  liberals
that the masses  had been captivated  by socialism,  and that  socialism  would pose  an even greater threat  to freedom
and free markets  than had  the older,  neomercantilist,  plutodemocratic system.

Laissez-faire liberals  throughout Europe  had been  gloriously  optimistic  during  most of the nineteenth century.
It was obvious  that liberty  provided  the most rational,  the most prosperous, system,  the system  most attuned 
to human nature,  the system  that works  for the harmony  and peace  of all  peoples  and nations.  Surely,  the centuries-long
shift  from statism  to freedom,  from "status to contract"  and from  the "military to the industrial"  that had  brought
about  the Industrial Revolution  and immense improvement  for  the human race,  was destined  to continue  and expand,
ever onward  and upward.  Surely,  freedom  and the world market  were bound  to expand  forever,  and the state  gradually
to wither away.

The comeback,  first,  of aggressive  business statism  in the 1870s, followed  by expanding  mass support  for socialism
in the 1890s,  however,  put  a rude end  to the ingrained  optimism of laissez-faire liberals. The perceptive laissezfaire
thinkers saw that the twentieth century would bring the shades of night, and put an end to the great civilization —the
realm  of progress  and freedom  that had been  the product  of nineteenth century  liberalism.  Pessimism  and despair
began  to grip  the slowly vanishing  breed  of laissez-faire liberals,  and understandably so.  They foresaw  the growth
everywhere  of statism,  tyranny, collectivism,  massive wars,  and social  and economic decline.

Each of  the aging  laissez-faire  liberals  reacted  to this momentous  and fateful  new trend  in his own way.  Spencer
continued  to fight on  to the end,  placing  greater emphasis  on what he considered  the main threat  of socialism
as against  the business statism  that he had previously combated.  Pareto's path  was to change  radically  into a
stance  of bitter cynicism.  The world,  he concluded  as he saw  the inexorable decline  of libertarian ideas  and
movements,  is governed  not by reason  but by irrationality,  and it now became  Pareto's role  to analyse  and chronicle
those irrationalities.  Thus,  in an article  in 1901,  Pareto notes  that everywhere  in Europe,  both socialism  and
nationalism-imperialism  are on the increase,  and that classical liberalism  is being ground down  between them:  "all
over Europe  the Liberal party  is disappearing,  as are  the moderate parties... The extremists  stand  face to face:
on one side socialism,  the great  rising  religion  of our age;  on the other side,  the old religions,  nationalism
and imperialism."[5]

Faced  with the failure  of his hopes  and with  the looming  statist hell  of the twentieth century,  Vilfredo Pareto,
in the words  of his perceptive biographer  S.E. Finer,  decided  to "retreat to Galapogos",  a remote island  that,
in the argot  of Pareto's day,  served  as a metaphor  and a vantage point  for a totally detached analysis and critique
of  the folly looming around him.[6]  The final push  for Pareto  on the road  to "Galapogos"  came  in 1902,  when
the Italian  Socialist Party  abandoned  its opposition  to the protectionist  policy  of the "bourgeois"  statist 
government.  The two  long-standing  enemies  of laissez-faire  liberalism  had now  joined forces !  From that point
on,  Pareto's  retreat  to a detached  and aristocratic Olympian bitterness  was complete.[7]

The first book  of Pareto's  in which  the new  pessimistic stance  becomes  dominant is his Les Systèmes Socialistes
(2 vols, 1901-2).  But  his newly detached stance  did not at all  mean  that he had abandoned  his libertarian ideals
or his method  of social analysis.  Indeed,  Finer writes  of Pareto  that Molinari  was "a man  whom [he] admired 
till his dying day".[8] Thus Pareto writes bitterly of how in society, robbery through government is far easier, and
hence more attractive,  than hard work  for the acquisition of wealth.  As Pareto  mordantly wroteO  in a passage  that
anticipated  such  twentieth century  libertarian  theorists  as Franz Oppenheimer  and Albert Jay Nock:

Social movements  usually follow  the line  of least resistance.  While  the direct  production  of economic goods 
is often  very hard.  Taking possession of those goods  produccd by others  is very easy.  This facility  has greatly
increased   from the moment when deprivation became possible through the law and not contrary to it. [Italics Pareto's.]
To save,  a man must have certain control over himself.  Tilling  a field  to produce grain  is hard work.  Waiting
in the corner  of a wood  to rob  a passer-by  is dangerous.  On the other hand,  going to vote  is much easier  and
if it means  that  all those  who are unadaptable,  incapable  and idle  will be able  to obtain  board and lodging
by it,  they will hurry  to do so.[9]

Pareto unfortunately  championed  a positivist methodology  in keeping  with his reliance  on the model  of physics
and mechanics.  But this was more  than offset  by his supplying us  a deathless anecdote  in a brilliant defence  of
natural economic law  as against  the "anti-economists"  of the German historical school.  It is  an anecdote  that
Ludwig  von Mises liked  to relate  in his seminar:

Once,  during a speech  which he was making  at a statistical congress  in Bern,  Pareto spoke  of "natural economic
laws,"  whereupon  [Gustav] Schmoller,  who was present,  said that  there was  no such thing.  Pareto said nothing,
but smiled  and bowed.  Afterward  he asked Schmoller,  through one  of his neighbors,  whether he was  well-acquainted
with Bern.  When Schmoller said yes,  Pareto asked him again  whether he knew  of an inn  where one  could eat for nothing.
The elegant Schmoller is supposed to have looked half pityingly and half disdainfully at the modestly dressed Pareto
—although he was known to be well-off— and  to have answered  that there were  plenty of cheap restaurants,  but
that  one had  to pay  something  everywhere.  At which  Pareto said:  "So  there are  natural laws  of political economy
!"[10]


NOTES

* Murray Rothbard: Classical Economics, Aldershot: Edward Elgar co, ch. 14 : "After Mill: Bastiat and the French Laissez-faire
tradition", §5, pp. 455-459.

[1] Pareto's role in the development of mathematical neoclassical general equilibrium theory ill be treated in a later
volume ; the present section deals with his political economy. See however, on the Pareto-Croce debate on positivism
vs praxeology as the proper economic method, Murray Rothbard, Individualism and the Philosophy ofthe Social Sciences,
(San Francisco : Cato Institute, 1979), pp. 54-6.

[2] in P. Bucolo (ed.) The Other Pareto (London: Scolar Press, 1980), p. 44.

[3] From Molinari's Précis d'économie politique et de la morale (1893), in Bucolo, op. cit., note 27 p. 68.

[4] Quoted in ibid., p. 144.

[5] Ibid., p. 141.

[6] See the illuminating article by S.E. Finer, "Pareto and Pluto-Democracy: the Retreat to Galapogos", American political
scence Review, pp. 440-50. Even more important is Finer's introduction to Vilfredo Pareto, Sociological Writings, (ed.
S.E. Finer, London: Pall Mall Press, 1966).

[7] See Bucolo, op. cit., note 27, p. 166.

[8] Finer, in Pareto, op. cit., note 31, p. 18.

[9] Bucolo, op. cit., note 27, pp. 149-50.

[10] Theo Suranyi-Unger, Economics in the Twentieth Century, (New York: W.W. Norton, 1931), p. 128. My own translation
from Pareto's quoted sentence.