The Economist Next Door
In this episode of The Economist Next Door, host Paul Mueller joins scholars Pete Earle and Jeffery Degner to explore why socialism continues to hold intellectual and popular appeal despite a long record of practical failure. The conversation examines the emotional and moral narratives that sustain socialist ideas, from claims about fairness and control to dissatisfaction with perceived inequalities in modern market economies. It also revisits the historical economic debate over central planning versus market coordination, drawing on insights from the Austrian tradition and the calculation debate. The discussion then turns to the core mechanisms of market economies—prices, profits, and dispersed knowledge—and why these remain difficult to replicate through central planning or algorithmic systems, including modern claims about artificial intelligence. Along the way, Paul and his guests unpack how interventions, regulations, and political incentives shape economic outcomes in ways that often obscure the role of markets themselves. The result is a broad examination of socialism's enduring appeal and the persistent challenges it faces in practice.
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