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Saturday, January 14, 2012

Hayek the Ethnic Bigot and the Perils of the Ad Hominem Fallacy

Hayek (1899–1992) was once asked what kind of people he disliked, and his response is not a pretty sight:
CHITESTER: …. Going back to the question I asked you about people you dislike or can’t deal with, can you make any additional comments in that regard, in terms of the characteristics of people that trouble you?

HAYEK: I don’t have many strong dislikes. I admit that as a teacher—I have no racial prejudices in general—but there were certain types, and conspicuous among them the Near Eastern populations, which I still dislike because they are fundamentally dishonest. And I must say dishonesty is a thing I intensely dislike. It was a type which, in my childhood in Austria, was described as Levantine, typical of the people of the eastern Mediterranean. But I encountered it later, and I have a profound dislike for the typical Indian students at the London School of Economics, which I admit are all one type—Bengali moneylender sons. They are to me a detestable type, I admit, but not with any racial feeling. I have found a little of the same amongst the Egyptians —basically a lack of honesty in them. (Nobel Prize-Winning Economist: Friedrich A. von Hayek, Regents of the University of California, 1983. p. 490).
So here we have Hayek asserting:
(1) Although he protested that he had no racial prejudices, Hayek admitted a dislike for a certain type of persons conspicuous among “Near Eastern populations” whom he found fundamentally dishonest, and who in the Austria of his youth could be described as “Levantine, typical of the people of the eastern Mediterranean.”

There is something shocking in these statements. Who on earth was Hayek talking about here? Some have charged that Hayek was showing latent anti-Semitism (Reder 2002: 263), and I find it difficult not to agree. Any person ranting about fundamentally “dishonest” Levantine people sounds like a cowardly anti-Semite to me. If not, who was the target? I don’t think there were many Syrians or Lebanese in the Austria of Hayek’s childhood and youth (which is the period from 1899–1918). Nor will the charge of ethnic slander and bigotry be dismissed if one chooses to deny that Hayek had in mind here human beings who happen to be of Jewish ethnicity: for now Hayek is open to the charge of even greater bigotry against Levantine people in general. Who seriously thinks that whole nations of people are all fundamentally “dishonest”? Anyone who thinks this is a bigot and an idiot.

(2) Hayek held a profound dislike for “the typical Indian students at the London School of Economics” supposedly of a particular detestable type, “Bengali moneylender sons.” Hayek showed himself guilty of a contemptible ethnic slur here, one which Anand Chandavarkar has described as Hayek’s “bizarre notion of Bengali students as sons of moneylenders, the one profession which the versatile Bengali has always scorned. The few postgraduate Indian pupils of Hayek – S. R. Sen, Said Ahmad Meenai and B. R. Shenoy – were all ‘honest’ high achievers who certainly did not answer to his image of Indian students” (Chandavarkar 2002: 224). I might add that I find it ridiculous and paradoxical that an inveterate apologist for Classical liberal, laissez faire capitalism like Hayek would have a prejudice against money-lenders’ sons. Isn’t money lending or banking a fundamentally important profession in modern capitalism?

(3) If this wasn’t enough, Hayek found time to use a similar ethnic slur of dishonesty (if not quite as pronounced) against Egyptians as well.
Now, to be fair to Hayek, I don’t see evidence of the kind of vile and shameful 19th-century racism in these opinions that holds that certain groups of human beings are inferior in terms of intelligence, morality or honesty owing to genetic or hereditary causes. But Hayek’s contemptible, irrational and disgraceful ethnic slurs and bigotry cannot be denied either.

If any apologist for Hayek contends that Hayek was kind and generous to his students and friends who happened to be Jewish or Indian, then the very same defence can be made of Keynes: just like Hayek, Keynes had Jewish friends and displayed great kindness toward them.

The lesson here is that Hayek, like Keynes, was also guilty of despicable ethnic slanders and prejudices (see Chandavarkar 2000 for Keynes’s anti-Semitism). Moreover, do these bigoted remarks provide us with any reason to reject the economic theories of Hayek?

Of course not. To do so would be to invoke the ad hominem fallacy. The shameful anti-Semitism of Keynes is irrelevant to the question of the truth of the economic theories in the General Theory and Keynes’s later work. The shameful (and arguably) latent anti-Semitism of Hayek is strictly irrelevant to the truth of Hayek’s economic theories.

Any modern Keynesian can condemn the bigotry of Keynes as an utterly disgraceful and immoral part of Keynes’s personality and character, while asserting the fundamental truth of many of the economic theories in the General Theory. The modern Austrian can condemn the bigotry of Hayek as an utterly disgraceful and immoral part of Hayek’s personality and character, while asserting the truth of the ideas in Hayek’s economics. The ad hominem fallacy and name calling abuse have no part in the debates on economic theory.


BIBLIOGRAPHY

Chandavarkar, A. 2000. “Was Keynes Anti-Semitic?,” Economic and Political Weekly 35.19 (6–12 May): 1619–1624.

Chandavarkar, A. 2002. “Did Hayek Deserve the Nobel Prize? Friedrich Hayek (A Biography) by Alan Ebenstein,” Economic and Political Weekly 37.3 (Jan. 19–25): 223–224.

Hamowy, R. 2002. “A Note on Hayek and Anti-Semitism,” History of Political Economy 34.1: 255–260.

Hamowy, R. 2005. The Political Sociology of Freedom: Adam Ferguson and F. A. Hayek, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham.

Nobel Prize-Winning Economist: Friedrich A. von Hayek. Interviewed by Earlene Graver, Axel Leijonhufvud, Leo Rosten, Jack High, James Buchanan, Robert Bork, Thomas Hazlett, Armen A. Alchian, Robert Chitester, Regents of the University of California, 1983.

Reder, M. W. 2000. “The Anti-Semitism of Some Eminent Economists,” History of Political Economy 32: 834–856.

Reder, M. W. 2002. “Reply to Hamowy’s Note on Hayek and Anti-Semitism,” History of Political Economy 34.1: 261–272.

10 comments:

  1. You're saying that Hayek was an anti-semite, which I find kinda puzzling since Mises, his mentor, was a Jew.

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  2. And Keynes expressed numerous anti-Semitic remarks, yet also had close Jewish friends.

    The mere fact that Hayek had a Jewish mentor like Mises does not mean that Hayek never had anti-Semitic opinions.

    The phenomenon of "cognitive dissonance" and racism is well known. Bigoted people make exceptions for people that they know well.

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  3. Of course a racist will not have anything against friends of a disliked race.

    Just consider what being a racist means.

    It means dismissing those whom you do not personally know in great depth as having certain characteristics based on what their race is.

    If a racist personally does know someone, then the racist need not extrapolate his characteristics from race. He knows his friend well enough.

    I don't know why Ivan Foo Foo did not notice the obvious. Of course one can never have preconceived opinions of a friend, but one can always have preconceived opinions of people one has never met.

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  4. "And Keynes expressed numerous anti-Semitic remarks, yet also had close Jewish friends."

    What "close Jewish friends" did Keynes have?

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  5. "What "close Jewish friends" did Keynes have?"

    Leonard Woolf

    Piero Sraffa

    Carl Melchior (in Germany)
    ("subjected to anti-semitic attack, [sc. Melchior] died in December 1933. When the Mayor of Hamburg visited King’s College in 1934 and invited Keynes over, he replied, ‘After the death of my friend . . . there is nothing left that could attract me to Hamburg.’” (Skidelsky 1992: 486)).

    Isaiah Berlin

    Ludwig Wittgenstein
    ("Keynes several times used his influence to help his Jewish friends, most notably when he successfully lobbied for Wittgenstein to be allowed residency in Great Britain explicitly in order to rescue him from being deported to Nazi-occupied Austria"
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Maynard_Keynes#Allegations_of_racism

    Other less close friends/acquaintances:
    Felix Frankfurter
    Einstein

    ReplyDelete
  6. Add Richard Kahn among his Jewish friends. Keynes used to call him "my little Rabbi" or something like that.
    You should look for a text of Michael Ambrosi about Keynes relationship with Jewish and specially with the Zionist movement. You might find a surprise.
    Pablo

    ReplyDelete
  7. Wow I had never heard this before. That's pretty amazing that he would say something so blatant like that!

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    Replies
    1. He was a man born in the 19th century, so I suppose it is not that surprising.

      E.g., Bertrand Russell - despite being one of the most open minded and liberal people of his day - had some quite bigoted opinions on race, at least early in his life.

      You will note how I say that none of this gives us a reason for dismissing Hayek's economics, of course.

      Delete
    2. For my point of view it is hard to tell at which point it is just sorting method and at which point real bigotry begins.

      I also saw an Hungarian claim ones quite generally that where he lives it is hard to do business because the people (his own people!) are very dishonest and only try to rip people off. Is he therefor a bigot against his own race?

      Is a German who leaves Germany for another country because he doesn't like that Germans are so unfriendly compared to other people also a bigot?

      I mean if I said Germans are unfriendly, that would be seen as bigotry by many people today, if a German himself says it, it’s not...

      For me real racism/bigotry start where people really think other races/ethnic groups are worth less, do not deserve the same rights as you and so on.

      Everything else might be misunderstanding pure sorting mechanism, which expresses a like or dislike for cultural differences based on past experience for real racism/bigotry. Or aren't we allowed to have any preferences any more, and try to use past experience to be more efficient in our decision making?

      So far as neither Keynes nor Hayek or anyone else doesn't demand different rights or states that there is an inherent different value among different races/ethnic groups, it is not racist/bigotry for me.

      I am not saying it is impossible that Hayek or Keynes were closet bigots. I am just saying that those lines do not prove it (at least for me), and for my experience real bigots/racist show their thinking often and with much more clarity.

      Delete
  8. Ludwig Wittgenstein was a extended cousin of Hayek's -- Hayek's mother grew up playing with Wiggenstein's sister ...

    ReplyDelete