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How Liberty Made Progress Possible | Podcast Highlights

Blog Post | Economic Freedom

How Liberty Made Progress Possible | Podcast Highlights

Marian Tupy interviews Peter Boettke about the institutional foundations of the modern world.

Listen to the podcast or read the full transcript here.

Today, I’m speaking to Peter Boettke, a Professor of Economics at George Mason University, who has a new book out with Rosolino Candela called The Historical Path to Liberty and Human Progress.

Let’s start with the big picture. What’s the book about?

This book is based on work that Rosolino and I have been doing for about a decade on the institutional requirements for pursuing productive specialization and social cooperation under the division of labor.

This notion of social cooperation, which is at the core of what Ludwig von Mises wrote about in Human Action, is the foundation for modern economic growth. We’re trying to tell the story of how institutional frameworks throughout history have empowered individuals to pursue productive specialization and realize social cooperation through mutually beneficial exchange.

By institutions, we mean both the formal and informal institutions. So, it’s not only the formal institutions that you might read about in Acemoglu, but also those informal institutions that you would read about in McCloskey. Deirdre McCloskey likes to draw a line between her work and the institutionalist work, but we’re trying to see a joint program. We’re trying to see how all those things fit together.

When we think about economic progress, we often think about free markets and competition. But the free market is also about cooperation. Can you tell us a little more about that?

Yeah, especially among modern economists. Classical economists had a much better notion of the role that markets play in making us more cooperative.

Voltaire says that the Jew, the Gentile, and the Muslim can hate each other, but when they go into the market, the word heathen is left only to those who don’t honor their contracts. That thesis, called doux commerce, has been de-emphasized in modern economics in favor of the idea of competition and market discipline, that we’re going to be constantly seeking the highest rate of return so resources will be allocated in an efficient way, and that after we do that, and after we have exhausted all the gains from trade, we end up continually producing more with less.

All of that is true, but behind it is the idea that after two individuals meet in a market, both thank the other for the exchange. The term “catallaxy,” which Hayek used a lot, means not only exchange, but also turning a stranger into a friend. It’s symbolized by a handshake, meaning mutual agreement. That’s the core of what we are talking about with regard to social cooperation and the division of labor.

In chapter one, you put a lot of emphasis on economic development being a result of private property and the price mechanism. Can you describe briefly why private property and the price mechanism matter?

Prices guide our behavior, profits lure us, and losses discipline us. If we don’t have those signals, we end up engaging in activities that are wealth-destroying rather than wealth-creating. Private property creates those incentives through exchange, which produces prices. So, if you attenuate property rights, the rest of the system gets distorted, and if you try to abolish property rights, the system breaks down.

To make it more concrete for the listener, in somewhere like the Soviet Union, the state has property rights rather than individuals, and therefore prices are not properly generated. You have overproduction of stuff that people don’t want, and underproduction of stuff that people need.

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, a lot of people became unemployed, and there was a lot of suffering. Many blamed that suffering on capitalism, but it was socialism that had employed so many people in unproductive ventures that needed to be shut down because they were reducing national wealth.

Yeah. They had firms for which the value of the inputs was greater than the value of the outputs. They were wealth-destroying. So, they needed to shut those firms down and reallocate their capital and labor more productively.

So, you already summarized the importance of property rights and the price mechanism, but they exist within institutional frameworks. There are different institutional frameworks, such as socialism and capitalism, that create different levels of believable knowledge or information.

How does the information part of it—the knowledge problem—relate to these different institutional frameworks?

When Mises and Hayek asserted that private property and incentives matter, the response by the socialists was, “Oh, wait a minute, the base determines the superstructure. So when you transform the material base, you’re going to transform the superstructure and the attitudes of the individuals within it. All those greedy little things that need to be organized and capitalized are going to go away, and rather than homo economicus, we’re going to have homo sovieticus.”

Mises and Hayek then said that, even making that assumption, those individuals will not have the knowledge necessary to accomplish the task. It’s not only a matter of mobilizing information, but also generating that information.

So, economic information doesn’t just exist out there; it has to actually be produced. Private property and the freedom of contract give rise to prices. Those prices then help entrepreneurs form wishful conjectures about various enterprises. Profits tell them they’re doing the right thing, and losses tell them they’re doing the wrong thing. It’s their ex-ante expectations being defeated by their ex-post realizations that cause the market to constantly churn, agitate, and create new ideas. Without competitive markets, it’s not that the information is difficult to process; it doesn’t exist.

That is very important for the current AI debate.

I’ve encountered arguments that once we have super quantum computers, they will be able to predict what needs to be produced and in what quantities: the ultimate socialist dream. But the problem is that decentralization is fundamental for the production of that information.

Yeah. They think of information as existing outside of the system. Imagine that you have a sand pile, and you’ve got to move it from one place to another. In the old days, we were trying to move the sand with a shovel, and now we’ve developed a backhoe. What Hayek and others argue is that without that generative process, you don’t even have that sand pile to play around with.

Of course, once we have knowledge, it does have to be mobilized. In a book that I wrote with Chris Coyne many years ago called Context Matters, we divide the entrepreneurial moment into three moments: serendipity, search, and seize. The most important moment is serendipity. That notion of actually being aware of a possibility that others hadn’t seen before is the essence of the entrepreneurial moment.

Is that why it’s so difficult for governments to identify and encourage entrepreneurs? Because you don’t know who, out of the 8 billion people, will have that serendipitous moment?

One hundred percent. This is a very Julian Simon point. In the beginning of The Ultimate Resource, he tells a story about the priest at Normandy looking at all the graves, whose eulogy is basically, “who among these could have been the next Mozart? Who among these could have been the next Einstein?” The ultimate resource is the human imagination. And economic thinking that pushes that to the wayside because we can’t model it misses out on understanding innovation and ends up being excessively pessimistic. And, again, there’s the key problem of identifying the institutional conditions most conducive to utilizing human creativity.

Let’s pursue that line of thought. In your book, you talk about “polycentric constitutional order” as leading to the best outcomes.

Can you briefly describe what a polycentric model is?

The best model is from Bruno Frey. He has papers on what he calls functioning, overlapping, and competing jurisdictions. Basically, you have lots of governments with overlapping jurisdictions that citizens can move freely between, depending on the bundle of goods and services they are offered. This puts checks on political actors so that they don’t engage in as much predation.

To put it in a very American sense, imagine American federalism on steroids. Take the basic structure of these United States, the American federalist system, and push it even further so that governance is at the most local level.

This seems close to Eric Jones’s emphasis on the geographical decentralization of preindustrial Europe. Basically, whereas most of the world was ruled by large land empires, Europe was divided into hundreds of different statelets. So there was a horizontal competition, as well as a vertical competition, where your feudal lord had to compete with the king and the clergy, and that competition created a mishmash of different liberties and responsibilities that people could choose from.

Does that qualify? 

One hundred percent. I have a very brilliant economic historian colleague named Mark Koyama, who wrote a book with Jared Rubin called How the World Became Rich. It’s a textbook. And I asked Mark, “When did the Eric Jones European miracle thesis get defeated?” And he thinks it’s never been defeated. People just got bored and moved on to other explanations because that’s what they thought they needed to do.

We’re trying to resurrect that idea again in this book: this notion that polycentric governance provides the infrastructure that allows us to pursue productive specialization and realize peaceful social cooperation among greater and greater numbers of people.

My biggest takeaway from your book is that the European miracle was really the result of a multi-century, perhaps even multi-millennial process of gradual liberalization. You write that the “accumulation of liberties leads to institutionalization of liberty, which leads to generalized increased returns, which leads to human progress.”

Thank you for finding that sentence and reading it. That is the heart of the book. Liberty is won through numerous hard-earned battles for particular liberties. Alfred Marshall, the great economist, said that “History doesn’t move in one giant leap. It moves in little marginal steps.” You see these small victories where various oppressed groups are able to push back the oppressor and gain some space for themselves.

In my book, The Struggle for a Better World, I describe this in terms of winning victories against the crown, the military or other forces of violence, the dogma of the church, the bondage of slavery, and the mercantilist interests. These various victories all accumulate until you reach a tipping point that creates an economic transformation.

This issue of transformation is important. If it were simply the case that every liberty we win improves us, we would have a straight line of increasing prosperity instead of a hockey stick. The great economist G. Warren Nutter used to ask his students, “Explain to me how a larva turns into a butterfly.” And then he would pause for a minute and say, “Now try to explain it to me in a Solow growth model.” In economics, we like to think about these things as Solow growth models, but Deirdre McCloskey’s work tells us that a Solow model cannot explain the Great Enrichment, but what can explain it is a transformation akin to a larva turning into a butterfly. That accumulation of liberties, and the moment they get institutionalized, creates a transformation.

You mentioned the Soviet context before, and in the Soviet culture, they had an issue that they called tall poppy syndrome. Which is that when anyone gets ahead, they are cut down rather than celebrated. This is McCloskey’s point: let me give it a go and I’ll make you rich. Well, for a lot of human history, we didn’t let people give it a go. We penalized them if they tried to do something different. So, we needed to get to the point where those accumulated liberties provided enough security that people could think differently and pursue things that no one had done before. That’s how you unleash the creative powers of civilization. 

It’s almost like a nuke going off. You have to have a critical mass of whatever it is that you’re trying to blow up, and then eventually you achieve ignition.

It seems to me that this process of liberalization you are describing takes place on two different levels. One is the philosophical or moral level, and the other is the political or economic level. There are these little liberties that get institutionalized into law. For example, you can now trade overseas, there is no longer a monopoly on salt, you can open a new factory without being a member of the guild, and so on. That’s the political-economic level. Then you have the moral level, which is where McCloskey comes in. She says that on top of the political and economic system, you need to have people who are comfortable with you exercising your freedom and doing with your life and with your property what you want.

McCloskey explains that the transaction costs of enforcing a rule are going to rise or fall depending on people’s value systems. So, for example, private property was introduced long before the economic takeoff, so you can’t explain the takeoff using just the formal right to private property. All our liberties rely on informal value systems that lower the costs of enforcing those rights.

Let me just tell you about two reformers in Russia whom I knew. One was Anatoly Chubais, who became the head of privatization in Russia, but at the time was a young academician just like me. Yegor Gaidar was another. In the late 1980s, all these people were reading Western thinkers like Milton Friedman and Hayek. Then, all of a sudden, they became the people in charge.

They were ridiculously young and given all this power, and, prior to them being in politics, they were as hardcore a Friedmanite or Hayekian as you’d meet at any Cato University event. And Gaidar, when he stepped down, what did he create? A giant scientific research center for himself. What did Chubais do? Chubais ended up getting a lucrative contract for a book he never wrote. And he ended up taking control of a state-run energy corporation.

Those guys became oligarchs. They violated the rule of law under the guise of privatization. How are you going to constrain that kind of behavior? You need to have the rules, but you also need to have morals that justify and legitimate those rules.

My last question is as follows: Steven Pinker says that progress is due to the Enlightenment. Deirdre McCloskey says it’s due to liberalism. But in your book, The Historical Path to Liberty and Human Progress, you call liberalism “the political philosophy of the Enlightenment.”

Could we say that those two explanations are really part of the same process of gradual liberalization?

That’s the argument we make.

I think that the Enlightenment project is critical to understanding the co-evolution of both liberal political and legal institutions and liberal economic institutions. And it’s the co-evolution of those two things that, over centuries, gets us to the tipping point, this combustible combination that leads to the world that we benefit from to this day. Despite the growing role of the state, we still have enough space—enough elbow room, as Thomas Sowell says—that ordinary people can do extraordinary things. That’s, I hope, the message that we get across.

Blog Post | Human Development

Discontent in the Age of Plenty | Podcast Highlights

Marian Tupy interviews Brink Lindsey about why unprecedented prosperity has failed to deliver widespread meaning.

Listen to the podcast or read the full transcript here.

Today, I’ll be speaking with Brink Lindsey, an American political writer and Senior Vice President at the Niskanen Center. Previously, he was Cato’s Vice President for Research and a dear colleague. Today, we’ll be discussing his latest book, The Permanent Problem: The Uncertain Transformation from Mass Plenty to Mass Flourishing.

I want to start by congratulating you on your excellent book. It is concise, thoughtful, and beautifully written. As a published author, I’m envious of your style, and I really recommend the book to our listeners.

Let’s start with the most obvious question. What is the permanent problem?

I stole that line from the British economist John Maynard Keynes, who wrote a fascinating essay called “Economic Possibilities for Our Grandchildren.”

That essay came out in 1930 in the depths of the Great Depression, but he was brave enough to argue that this global catastrophe was just a bump in the road in a much longer process of modern economic growth, which he believed would continue until his audience’s grandchildren were grown. By that point, he said that the economic problem, meaning serious material deprivation, would be more or less solved. With that done, he foresaw that humanity’s permanent problem would loom into view: how to live wisely and agreeably and well with the blessings that modern economic growth has bestowed upon us.

He got some specific things wrong. He imagined that by now we’d only be working 15 hours a week, which hasn’t panned out. However, he got the big picture profoundly right, which is that an abundant future was coming, and that moving from tackling the economic problem to the permanent problem would be traumatic for societies. That they would have to unlearn the habits of untold generations.

He imagined that this transition would be, in his words, something like a “general nervous breakdown throughout society.” That phrase struck me as a pretty good description for the predicament that the United States and other advanced democracies have found themselves in. We’re richer, healthier, better educated, and more humanely governed than any people have ever been before, yet economic growth has slowed to a crawl in most advanced economies, class divisions have sparked a global populist uprising against elites and established institutions, personal relationships are fraying, mental health problems are on the rise, faith in democracy is wavering, and widespread pessimism is one of the few things you can get people across the political spectrum to agree on.

So, the thesis of the book is that our predicament amounts to the fact that we are in this no man’s land between mass plenty and mass flourishing. That, having achieved mass plenty, we’ve moved the goalposts of what makes a successful life. It’s no longer just about having food, shelter, and clothing, but meaning, purpose, belonging, and status. While we are providing those conditions for a larger fraction of the population than ever before, for 70 or 80 percent of people, our current way of life is not providing the conditions for flourishing that one would imagine would go with our level of technological and organizational prowess.

So, in America today, things are so good that we are moving to the top of Maslow’s hierarchy, but on the other hand, we have a hysteria where people are saying basic necessities like food and shelter have never been more unaffordable.

Can both be true at the same time?

I think we are absolutely materially richer than any society before. People who are discontent with the status quo grope for something quantifiable that has gone wrong, and so they try to make an argument about material decline that just isn’t consistent with the facts. It is true that we are rich enough to take our basic material needs for granted. Nonetheless, we enjoy these blessings with a kind of asterisk, which is that we get them only by spending the bulk of our waking adult lives working 40-hour weeks.

The blessed 20 or 30 percent at the top have an arena for flourishing. They’ve got intellectually challenging jobs that offer a lot of autonomy and scope for creativity, and social status. The rest are in fairly low-autonomy jobs with a lot of scutwork, and they’re one stroke of bad luck away from losing their job and falling into a serious hole. They’re shadowed by both the precarity of their hold on mass plenty and also by the need to spend a lot of their lives in drudgery to pay the bills.

According to Gallup, life satisfaction in America remained pretty much the same between 1979 and 2025. Roughly 80 percent of Americans say they are either satisfied or very satisfied with their lives, while only 20 percent of Americans believe that America is going in the right direction.

So, how bad is it really, if 80 percent of Americans say that they are satisfied or very satisfied with their lives?

I don’t put much stock in self-assessments of life satisfaction. Psychologically healthy people make the best of things, whatever the circumstances. Plus, happiness and life satisfaction surveys have a lot of cultural variation. Latin Americans seem to report higher life satisfaction given their level of GDP than Scandinavians or Japanese.

What I look at instead is the conditions for a well-lived life. The chances to do work that is challenging, fulfilling, and interesting are very good for a considerable fraction of people, but they’re not so good for the majority. There’s a large divergence there between the well-off and well-educated and everybody else. That’s also translated into diverging odds of even being in the workforce: there’s been a small drop-off in male prime-age labor force participation for college-educated men from the mid-’60s to the present, and a big drop-off in labor force participation for non-college-educated men. There’s been a similar divergence in the odds of getting married and in the odds of growing up in a two-parent home. And finally, in recent years, we’ve seen a divergence in life expectancy. Rather than the poor catching up with the rich over time, they’re now pulling apart.

So, are we doing better than ever before? Sure. But I don’t think that exhausts the inquiry. In a society organized around progress, a purely backward-looking standard of evaluation isn’t dispositive. In some of the more intangible aspects of flourishing, there are warning signs that things are going in the wrong direction.

So, do you have in your mind a sense of what an agreeable life should be?

At least in broad outlines.

In the agrarian age, to quote Hobbes, “Life was poor, nasty, brutish, and short,” but it was not solitary. People were miserable and poor, but they weren’t atomized or alienated. Now, I think it’s a real liberation that we’re not stuck in the same place that we were born, working the same trade as our parents. We can choose our own lives, and that’s a great opportunity. The next question is, “Are we going to develop cultural and institutional supports in these new conditions that will help us to have satisfying lives?

It’s beyond serious dispute that for most people, the most important determinant of the quality of their life is the quality of their personal relationships. And once upon a time, when the world was poor, your face-to-face relationships with other people filled vital practical functions. Your spouse was a partner in economic co-production. Your kids were economic assets. Your neighbors were an insurance policy. The main source of entertainment was hanging out with your friends and talking.

Over time, as we’ve gotten richer, we’ve outsourced a lot of those functions either to the marketplace or the welfare state. Personal relationships with people have become just one consumption option in a sea of expertly marketed alternatives. Learning to live wisely and agreeably and well amidst riches requires cultural and institutional supports that push us to spend our time on what really matters, which is the people who are close to us. We don’t have those, so we’re seeing fraying human connection.

This is cashing out most fatefully in the declining rate of people getting married and having babies. More than half of people now live in countries where the fertility rate is below replacement. That puts the whole demographic sustainability of liberal, democratic, capitalist, cosmopolitan, affluent civilization in doubt.

I want to ask you about the danger of presentism.

When we see a problem on the front pages of newspapers, we tend to extrapolate from it a broader crisis. In other words, we have trouble separating that which is fundamental to our civilization from that which is just a passing trend.

Let me give you a few examples. You write in the book that “we are getting fatter, dumber, and our mental health is deteriorating.” It certainly feels like it, right? But obesity is already declining in the United States because of Ozempic. Increasingly large numbers of young people are switching off social media. Apparently, Gen Z, the newest ones, are the best at that. Suicide rates are falling in rich countries outside of the United States, meaning this may be a particular American problem, or even simply a problem of measurement, rather than a general problem with modernity.

So, are we underestimating human adaptability and technological innovation?

That’s a very good point. We learn over time that some things that we thought were great turned out to be bad, and we put them behind us. Forty percent of American adults used to smoke, and we covered our walls with lead paint. And yes, we’ve got what looks like a deus ex machina for obesity, but the fact that the obesity wave happened at all is a good example of a more general challenge of being rich.

When we were poor, we developed a scarcity-based morality of self-discipline and self-control and resisting temptation out of necessity, but as those material constraints lessened, there was an inevitable and appropriate loosening. People could indulge their desires more. They could, to a greater extent than in the past, follow an “if it feels good, do it” kind of path. Well, it turns out that those qualities of self-discipline and self-mastery are still extremely helpful today, not for keeping you from falling into horrible poverty, but for keeping you focused on the things that really matter, rather than trivial, distracting desires.

Capitalism gives us what we want, and we don’t yet have the cultural supports that make sure it gives us what we want to want.

One set of problems that you identify has to do with the disintegration of personal bonds and the atomization of society.

Now, if I wanted to make grandparents more reliant on their children, to make neighbors more helpful to each other, and to increase church attendance, I would start by abolishing the welfare state, which I think has eroded the kind of mutual, voluntary reliance that people once had on each other.

This might irritate you, but I see the welfare state as an integral part of modern capitalism. Nowhere do we see a complex, technologically intensive, organizationally intensive division of labor without a strong welfare state. It’s possible to imagine such a thing, but it’s also possible to imagine a human being that’s 100 meters tall. If you actually had a human being that tall, he would collapse under his own weight. Plus, the libertarian movement in the United States has made zero headway in knocking back the welfare state, so I think libertarians need some kind of plan B.

The hopeful future I have in mind is more localistic and involves reimbuing our face-to-face relationships with family and neighbors with practical functions, which will allow people to live without the welfare state to a considerable degree. You can imagine a world of small modular nuclear reactors and 3D printing and vertical farming where small communities, with small divisions of labor, could have a degree of material affluence that today requires large-scale divisions of labor. But even in the here and now, if people are living together in communities, they can reassume duties of care that have been outsourced to private enterprise and the welfare state, such as taking care of little kids and elderly people and educating the young.

I wonder what is going to be more effective at driving culture change: appealing to people, or changing the incentives. When the government says, “We can pay for your child to go to a school,” you can opt out, but you will have to pay twice if you want to send your kids to a private school.

At the very least, I think we agree we will need to have competition. We could give the welfare state to the states and let them play around with it so that different jurisdictions can learn from each other.

Yeah. And, even more importantly, on the regulatory side. This is what I call capitalism’s crisis of inclusion, which is the weakening relationship between growth and widespread good conditions for the good life for people.

Meanwhile, though, we have a crisis of dynamism, a weakening capacity of the system to just keep delivering growth and pushing the technological frontier outward. Mancur Olson identified this problem a long time ago, which is that the richer you get, the more people you have with a stake in the status quo. For those people, the prospect of disruptive change is anxiety-provoking because it could knock them off their privileged perch, so they have an incentive to stop change. Also, the richer you get, the lower communication costs are, and the easier it is to band together with like-minded people and throw sand in the gears of creative destruction.

Meanwhile, the knowledge economy has created this large class of knowledge workers who desire to control and rationalize everything in their grasp. When something isn’t working, the solution is to add another layer of bureaucracy and process. Obviously, we’ve got lots of this kind of dysfunction in the public sector, but I think we also see it in the private sector, with the explosion of administrative staff on campus, the HR-ization of corporate life, and also in personal life, with helicopter parenting. These same professionals, on their off hours, deploy their managerial instincts to squeeze every drop of spontaneity out of childhood in the name of safety.

Those impulses are deep-seated, and they have contributed to an increasing drag on our dynamism.

One of the most effective ways to tackle this is inter-jurisdictional competition, allowing different groups to have different rules to limit the exposure of those different rules. Then, if that different set of rules really is producing better results, they can be emulated elsewhere. Beyond that, we’re just ineradicably culturally pluralistic people, especially under conditions of modernity. People are not going to agree with each other on what the good life is. They’re going to have different values. Having us all crammed together under one set of rules makes those value differences really high stakes and combustible and has produced a lot of the dysfunctional politics we’re experiencing now.

Last question.

My view of what living wisely, agreeably, and well may be very different from a guy who is perfectly satisfied living in his basement playing games and smoking a lot of pot. I would find such a life appalling, but who am I to tell this person that they are not living wisely, agreeably, and well?

In other words, aren’t you worried that even if all your hopes come to pass, the future may still contain a lot of people who will not be living wisely, agreeably, and well, just as they are today?

We can talk about flourishing at the individual level and then flourishing at the societal level.

In the book, I talk about projects, relationships, and experiences. Some people are really focused on projects and very light on relationships, and they do fine. Some people are great at cultivating amazing experiences, and they’re not very practical about anything else, but they live well that way. So there are a lot of different ways to have a good life.

At the social level, there’s a little bit less variety. To take one example, you can totally have a flourishing individual life without having children, but you can’t really have a flourishing society unless a certain number of people are having babies. So, I think you can’t have a flourishing society that isn’t a free society where people are the authors of their own lives, but a free society requires the freedom to fail. Some people are just not going to live wisely and agreeably and well.

I think we can create better conditions for people to choose well than we have at present. But that doesn’t mean we need to converge on one way of living well. That would be boring. Getting richer should mean a flowering of variety, not everybody converging on one way of life. And I think a more pluralistic, localistic institutional environment is most conducive to that end.

And it seems to me that living in a pluralistic society doesn’t mean that you are voiceless, that you don’t have a right to express your views about other people’s lives. Pluralism does not require total relativism. I can still say to little Jimmy, “Spend less time playing video games in your room and go out and explore the world.”

Ultimately, if we are going to be living in a pluralistic society where people can choose their values and how they want to live, it should be possible for people to persuade them that some ways of living, such as living up to their best potential, are better than wasting their lives.

This is the ultimate challenge for Homo sapiens: are we cut out for freedom? Are we cut out for being allowed to choose the good? Or are we just such a refractory species that we have to be lorded over?

The dystopian novel Brave New World, I think, is a much better fit with the predicament we’re in right now than 1984. The human spirit is being degraded, not by a regime of fear, but by a regime of cheap pleasures. At the end of that book, there’s this long monologue by the head of the society making this argument that human beings just don’t know what’s good for them and need to be taken care of. I don’t believe that. I have faith that there is a human nature that wants the good, that wants to connect to the outside world, and to other people, and figure things out. And we have the great privilege of living in a very rich, technologically advanced world that gives more people opportunities to do those things. We just need to structure things a little bit better to make it easier to make the right choices.

Blog Post | Wealth & Poverty

Dinner With Dickens Was Slim Pickins

Claims that characters in "A Christmas Carol" were better off than modern Americans are pure humbug.

Summary: There have recently been widespread claims that Dickens’s working poor were better off than modern minimum-wage workers. Such comparisons rely on misleading inflation math and selective reading. The severe material deprivation of Victorian life—crowded housing, scarce possessions, and basic sanitation problems—dwarfs today’s standards. Modern Americans, even at the lower end of the income scale, enjoy far greater material comfort than the Cratchits ever did.


Christmas is often a time for nostalgia. We look back on our own childhood holidays. Songs and traditions from the past dominate the culture.

Nostalgia is not without its purposes. But it can also be misleading. Take those who view the material circumstances of Charles Dickens’s “A Christmas Carol” as superior to our own.

Claims that an American today earning the minimum wage is worse off than the working poor of the 19th century have been popular since at least 2021. A recent post with thousands of likes reads:

Time for your annual reminder that, according to A Christmas Carol, Bob Cratchit makes 15 shillings a week. Adjusted for inflation, that’s $530.27/wk, $27,574/yr, or $13.50/ hr. Most Americans on minimum wage earn less than a Dickensian allegory for destitution.

This is humbug.

Consider how harsh living conditions were for a Victorian earning 15 shillings a week.

Dickens writes that Mr. Cratchit lives with his wife and six children in a four-room house. It is rare for modern residents of developed nations to crowd eight people into four rooms.

It was common in the Victorian era. According to Britain’s National Archives, a typical home had no more than four rooms. Worse yet, it lacked running water and a toilet. Entire streets (or more) would share a few toilets and a pump with water that was often polluted.

The Cratchit household has few possessions. Their glassware consists of merely “two tumblers, and a custard-cup without a handle.” For Christmas dinner, Mr. Cratchit wears “threadbare clothes” while his wife is “dressed out but poorly in a twice-turned gown.”

People used to turn clothing inside-out and alter the stitching to extend its lifespan. The practice predated the Victorian era, but continued into it. Eventually, clothes would become “napless, threadbare and tattered,” as the historian Emily Cockayne noted.

The Cratchits didn’t out-earn a modern American earning the minimum wage. Mr. Cratchit’s weekly salary of 15 shillings in 1843, the year “A Christmas Carol” was published, is equivalent to almost £122 in 2025. Converted to U.S. dollars, that’s about $160 a week, for an annual salary of $8,320.

The U.S. federal minimum wage is $7.25 per hour or $15,080 per year for a full-time worker. That’s about half of what the meme claims Mr. Cratchit earned. Only 1% of U.S. workers earned the federal minimum wage or less last year. Most states set a higher minimum wage. The average worker earns considerably more. Clerks like Mr. Cratchit now earn an average annual salary of $49,210.

Mr. Cratchit couldn’t have purchased much of the modern “basket of goods” used in inflation calculations. Many of the basket’s items weren’t available in 1843. The U.K.’s Office of National Statistics recently added virtual reality headsets to it.

Another way to compare the relative situation of Mr. Cratchit and a minimum-wage worker today is to see how long it would take each of them to earn enough to buy something comparable. A BBC article notes that, according to an 1844 theatrical adaptation of “A Christmas Carol,” it would have taken Mr. Cratchit a week’s wages to purchase the trappings of a Christmas feast: “seven shillings for the goose, five for the pudding, and three for the onions, sage and oranges.” Mr. Cratchit opts for a goose for the family’s Christmas meal. A turkey—then a costlier option—was too expensive.

The American Farm Bureau Federation found that the ingredients for a turkey-centered holiday meal serving 10 people cost $55.18 in 2025. At the federal minimum wage, someone would need to work seven hours and 37 minutes to afford that feast.

A minimum-wage worker could earn more than enough in a single workday to purchase a meal far more lavish than the modest Christmas dinner that cost Mr. Cratchit an entire week’s pay. And the amount of time a person needs to work to afford a holiday meal has fallen dramatically for the average blue-collar worker in recent years despite inflation. Wages have grown faster than food prices.

There has been substantial progress in living conditions since the 1840s. We’re much better off than the Cratchits were. In fact, most people today enjoy far greater material comfort than did even Dickens’s rich miser Ebenezer Scrooge.

This article was originally published in the Wall Street Journal on 12/23/2025.