Frédéric Bastiat on Communism

I was fortunate to spend a semester studying the work of Frédéric Bastiat, the great nineteenth-century French economic pamphleteer. Beloved by libertarians, he is unequalled in his ability to defend freedom and personal responsibility.

Even Frédéric Bastiat, an insightful libertarian thinker,  could not imagine communism of the twentieth-century kind.

Much can be said about Bastiat, but here I’d like to mention his discussion of communism, for two reasons. First, it illustrates the fluidity of the terms socialism and communism in the mid-nineteenth century—something historians should not forget. For another, it illustrates how brilliant people can be both unusually perceptive about what is around them, but still blind about the future.

Warning: Like most writers about Bastiat, I find it hard not to quote him at length. He says things much better than most of us can.

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