Hayek was the philosopher-king of the movement. Writing in the shadow of World War II, his seminal work, The Road to Serfdom , offered a haunting warning: any step toward government planning was a step toward totalitarianism. To Hayek, the market wasn't just a place to trade goods; it was a sophisticated . He argued that no central planner could ever match the "spontaneous order" created by millions of individuals making local decisions. The Strategist: Milton Friedman
Today, their victory is absolute yet contested. While their theories lifted millions out of poverty by unleashing global trade, critics point to the resulting wealth inequality and the erosion of the social safety net as the price of their "purity." They remain the "Masters of the Universe" because we still live in the world they built—a world where the market is the ultimate arbiter of value. Masters of the Universe: Hayek, Friedman and th...
For decades, these ideas were dismissed as fringe. But when the stagflation of the 1970s broke the back of Keynesian economics, the world turned to the Mont Pelerin Society's veterans. From the revolution in Britain to Reaganomics in the U.S., the Hayek-Friedman blueprint became the global standard: Deregulation of industry. Privatization of state assets. Austerity in public spending. The Legacy Hayek was the philosopher-king of the movement
If Hayek provided the philosophy, Friedman provided the weaponry. A master communicator with a penchant for "pencil-and-paper" clarity, Friedman moved the battle into the realm of . He famously argued that "inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon," effectively stripping the state of its excuse to micro-manage the economy through spending. His vision was a "flat" world where the individual was the primary unit of sovereignty, and the state’s only job was to keep the money supply steady and the rules fair. The Triumph of the "Masters" He argued that no central planner could ever
The ideological revolution that reshaped the 20th century wasn't born in the halls of parliament, but in a small, smoke-filled room at a Swiss resort in 1947. There, and Milton Friedman —the architects of what we now call neoliberalism—met to wage a war of ideas against the rising tide of collectivism. The Prophet: Friedrich Hayek