From red spirit to underperforming pyramids and coercive institutions: Michael Polanyi against economic planning

History of European Ideas 48 (6):811-847 (2022)
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Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper examines the evolution of Michael Polanyi’s critique of economic planning. It portrays how the focal point of his critique shifted from addressing the ‘spirit,’ ‘social consciousness,’ and ‘public emotion’ of the people supporting planned economies to addressing the administrative ‘unmanageability’ and the logical impossibility of economic planning. Polanyi developed thought experiments of imaginary economies, contrasted the ‘pyramid of authority’ with the polygons of liberty, and explained organic and inorganic ways of adjusting economic relations. He attempted to relax the Leviathan of Soviet economics, and drew the conclusion that mathematics is not sufficient in itself to properly address the economy. Eventually, Polanyi developed an institutionalist approach in order to be able to address both the variability of market economies and the failures of socialist ‘super-planners’ who claimed to eliminate the drift of individual economic adjustments.

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Null. Null - 2016 - Philosophy Study 6 (9).
Spontaneous order: Michael Polanyi and Friedrich Hayek.Struan Jacobs - 2000 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 3 (4):49-67.
Economics, Science, and Knowledge.Philip Mirowski - 1998 - Tradition and Discovery 25 (1):29-42.
Michael Polanyi and Spontaneous Order, 1941-1951.Struan Jacobs - 1997 - Tradition and Discovery 24 (2):14-28.

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