Séminaire Cournot – Scott Scheall (Austin University)
Le 19/05/2026
De 14:00 à 15:30
Détails de l'événement :
Nous avons le plaisir d’accueillir pour la prochaine séance du séminaire Cournot du BETA organisé avec le soutien de la FSEG ce mardi 19/05 à 14h00 :
Scott Scheall (Austin University)
qui nous présentera son article intitulé
Liberalism’s Ouroboros: DOGE and the Liberal Transition Problem in Stark Relief
Abstract: In my F. A. Hayek and the Epistemology of Politics: The Curious Task of Economics (2020), I argue that Ludwig von Mises’s famous socialist calculation argument and F. A. Hayek’s various extensions of that argument all share the same general logical form. To wit,
- To deliberately realize goal G, policymakers must possess knowledge K.
- Policymakers lack knowledge K.
- Therefore, policymakers cannot deliberately realize goal G.
- Corollary: If goal G is to be realized despite policymakers’ lack of knowledge K, spontaneous forces must compensate for this lack of knowledge.In the third chapter of the book, I argue that Austrian economists (indeed, more generally, all classical liberals and libertarians who support small, if not minimal, government) have not established that policymakers possess the knowledge required to deliberately liberalize a relatively illiberal society. Defenses of liberalism, in general, and of liberalization policies, in particular, often assume that policymakers possess such knowledge as a matter of course. I argue, however, that there are many reasons to think and, moreover, much evidence that suggests, policymakers do not typically possess this knowledge. Complicating matters further, there is no argument, to my knowledge, that, when policymakers lack some of the knowledge required to deliberately liberalize, a more liberal society is likely to spontaneously emerge from comparatively illiberal circumstances. Those sympathetic to liberalization policies thus confront a knowledge problem, the knowledge problem of liberal transitions.
In the present paper, I develop this argument further and consider the (mis)adventures of Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) through its lens. The few successes and more numerous failures of DOGE illustrate the knowledge problem of liberal transitions in stark relief.
Si vous souhaitez rencontrer Scott Scheall, merci de contacter Philippe Gillig.
Lien visioconférence : https://visio.numerique.gouv.fr/zvz-psjg-nor
Agenda du séminaire : https://www.beta-economics.fr/seminaires-cournot-2025-2026/