An Interview With Adam Smith (No, Not That One)
The so-called father of capitalism was not available for comment, so we talked to another economist, Adam C. Smith.

On the occasion of his 300th birthday, Adam Smith—the Scottish Enlightenment luminary and so-called father of capitalism—was not available for comment, despite attempts to contact him via Ouija board and seance. Smith was undeniably one of a kind, a pathbreaking thinker in his own time and a philosopher whose insights in The Theory of Moral Sentiments and Wealth of Nations still apply in ours.
But he is not the only Adam Smith. For this special anniversary issue of Reason, we spoke with another, less-deceased economist named Adam C. Smith, this one a professor at Johnson & Wales University who was reachable via Zoom.
Bearing the name of Adam Smith has had a profound impact on his life, he says. The name has its perks, says Smith. He's used it to his advantage professionally, striking up conversations with a wide array of economists from Paul Krugman to Vernon Smith (no relation).
In March, he spoke with Reason Editor in Chief Katherine Mangu-Ward on his namesake's uncancellable legacy, the influence the man he calls the "original Smith" has had on his work, and all the bad jokes he's been forced to endure through the years.
Reason: Adam Smith, tell me the story of your name.
Smith: My grandfather Bruce Yandle is an economist. He is a retired professor and former dean of the college of business at Clemson University. And he was working in Washington in 1982 when I was born. My mother, originally Kathryn Yandle, married a Smith—Leo Smith—and thought it would be cute and clever to name their firstborn child Adam in honor of him.
What's funny is when my mom called him in and said that, my grandfather said, "You're going to name him Bruce? That's a terrible name, don't name him that." And she said, "No, we're going to name him Adam." He thought that was just terrific. No one had any idea that I'd be foolish enough to actually follow through with the namesake, up to becoming a professional economist. But at least the original intention was to honor my grandfather.
What do you hate about being named Adam Smith?
I can't say I hate any of it. The original Adam Smith has been, thankfully, uncancellable. Smith's thoughts, even with an 18th century context, were very ahead of their time and have held up well. Thank God I'm not named Michael Jackson.
The only place that I find tension with the name is at professional conferences. Now, I will say that if I walk into an economics conference and introduce myself, people start getting out of hand very quickly. But I've learned to live with that.
What do you love about the name?
I've managed to find really great conversations with people who are very, very far ahead of me in their professional careers. It's a wonderful icebreaker. I would just say that sometimes too much ice gets broken in those conversations and people can be very lame about the name.
I love this observation that Adam Smith is oddly uncancellable. If you dig just below the surface of most writers of his era you're going to find trouble. Are there cancellable sentiments in his work that are as-yet undiscovered?
There are two things that have helped propel him through history. One is that even though Smith was very well-educated and lived among the elites of Edinburgh, he was cynical about elite institutions, not just with laws and legislative action but also with education. Smith has a very well-known chapter where he really takes educators to task, basically calling them a bunch of rent-seekers who try to keep their positions without actually educating students. So there's an anti-elitism thread in Smith's work that I think has been attractive to even people in his own time, but especially those afterward.
The other thing I should mention out of Theory of Moral Sentiments is it's less about what we should do and much more about what society deems appropriate and inappropriate. So instead of advocating for particular values that would ultimately have to be context-specific, and thus get him in trouble, he's talking about the larger game of conduct.
If Adam Smith were writing today, he's not writing about the pin factory. What is he writing about? Or does he produce the same books, essentially, because the truths captured in his work are timeless?
He's a moral philosopher. While he would recognize modern economics, I feel like Smith would feel like modern economics has missed the point in a lot of ways. It's become too much about optimization and achieving equilibrium levels as opposed to action, conduct going through markets—the reality of it all.
I think the other thing Smith would have a lot of problems with are some of the derivatives from economics that have spilled into philosophy. Here I'm specifically talking about effective altruism, which in my opinion makes many of the same mistakes as conventional economics—emphasizing optimal behavior too much as opposed to conduct.
Connect Adam Smith's work to your work for me, in particular your work with your grandfather on the concept of Baptists and bootleggers.
Bootleggers and Baptists, the theory that my grandfather proposed—while, ironically enough, he was at the Federal Trade Commission—comes out in '83. The innovation within theories of regulation and public choice is that my grandfather showed that there needs to be moral cover for self-interested action.
Bootleggers—or rent-seekers, as we normally call them—are pretty well-understood in the literature: people acting in politics using their self-interest in a similar way that they would with markets. The layer that I really appreciate is the Baptist layer. I think a lot of us in public choice areas of research or libertarianism dismissed moral justification for intervention as a silly veneer that is on top of a lot of self-interested political action. Whether that's true or not is almost irrelevant.
Here we can go back to the original Smith. Smith is again going back to the games we're playing, and what's viewed as appropriate or inappropriate. So we can view Baptist cover, let's say, as being inappropriate. But if that is not the way it is viewed by most people playing the game, then our opinions kind of go into the null set.
It doesn't really matter that we are cynical if most other folks are not. Baptists are going to continue to provide cover for bootleggers because there's both demand and supply for that. There's people who believe in those moral claims, and there's people who want those moral claims to be validated in the public sphere. As long as that's the case, you're going to have Baptists. If you're going to have Baptists, you're going to have bootleggers.
The insight that I think Smith provides in Theory of Moral Sentiments is that that's actually an expectation, because that is in itself a political process as opposed to a market process. It cannot be removed. It is part of the thing itself.
What are you working on now?
One of them is a Substack that is directed by my mother, Kathryn Smith. I write for it and my grandfather also writes for it. It's called Bootleggers, Baptists, and Everything in Between. What we wanted to do was capture all of the bootlegger-and-Baptist conversations that are going on out there and bring them into a central hub. When my grandfather and I wrote the Bootleggers & Baptists book that came out through Cato in 2014, that was mainly just a popular treatment of the theory. It was mainly about getting out what the theory is and having some easy examples to follow.
I think where this Substack might go is perhaps a sequel to that book that maybe will even be written with my grandfather. It would be kind of like what's happened with bootleggers and Baptists since the original proposition. Because it's still a very popular term. I've seen it anywhere from public choice articles to Wall Street Journal op-eds. The theory is kind of going viral, not quite in the way that "the invisible hand" has, but in a way that I think is meaningful and needs to be captured.
The other passion project I have is that I've been working on economic mobility for a number of years. I think mobility is one of the things where, if we believe in markets and the power of markets in getting people to where they want to go, then economic mobility should be something that we're very excited about.
Tell me the best joke that you've heard about your name.
At an Institute for Humane Studies conference, I introduced myself to a fellow graduate student and he immediately said, "Well, I'd shake your hand, but it's invisible."
This interview has been edited for style and clarity.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
What a hard hitting interview....
Yeah, KMW should have ripped him a new one.
Great article, Mike. I appreciate your work, I’m now creating over $35,100 dollars each month simply by doing a simple job online! I do know You currently making a lot of greenbacks online from $28,100 dollars, its simple online operating jobs.
.
.
Just open the link————————————————>>> http://Www.OnlineCash1.Com
How Woodrow Wilson and FDR, with the help of conservative stalwarts, boned us all.
First, draft and pass legislation to require a universal sunset for all agency regulations. As it stands, agencies enact regulations frequently but rarely take any down (and, as the experience of the Trump Administration shows, taking down regulations is fraught with legal challenges and is not guaranteed to succeed). Yet many good reasons exist for revisiting regulations at some point after their enactment. When regulations are enacted, predictions about their costs, benefits, and effectiveness are speculative at best. Fifteen years on, more can be said about whether a particular regulation has been justified. Mandatory sunsets also require Congress to act if a regulation is to be retained, which restores at least some measure of democratic accountability to a bureaucracy that has been allowed to otherwise run amok.
Second, repeal and reverse large portions of the Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act of 1883 and the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978, with the imposition of term limits for bureaucrats. These acts standardized federal government hiring and required that bureaucrats be primarily hired as nonpolitical positions of expertise. This has had the effect of stultifying the bureaucracy, turning hiring into a quota system and exacerbating the problem of unaccountable bureaucrats remaining in their posts for a lifetime. These reforms could have the advantage of surprise, an advantage already squandered for the Schedule F reforms, which the Trump Administration pursued by executive order and the Biden Administration immediately rescinded. Much attention has been paid to Schedule F reforms, allowing the Left to mount a public relations counterattack. But finding new ways to control the bureaucracy could allow for the element of surprise once again.
Third, Republicans should ban or restrict public-private partnerships in governance. The idea is a radical one because, at present, both the Left and the Right support these kinds of arrangements. Because government is perpetually behind the private sector in terms of technology, sophistication, innovation, and general capabilities—so the thinking goes—partnering with the private sector to provide government services allows the government to compensate for its inadequacies. But this compensation means that government remains able to grow its mandate despite its ineptitude, fanning into an ever-more-expansive oversight of Americans’ lives, and it does so at the cost of sharing data with private sector businesses that desperately seek to own and profit from it.
"Mandatory sunsets also require Congress to act if a regulation is to be retained, which restores at least some measure of democratic accountability to a bureaucracy that has been allowed to otherwise run amok."
At the very least, this would give Congress something to do and might distract them from dreaming up increasingly broad and intrusive policies and laws.
I have made $18625 last month by w0rking 0nline from home in my part time only. Everybody can now get this j0b and start making dollars 0nline just by follow details here..
🙂 AND GOOD LUCK.:)
HERE====)> https://www.Salarybiz.com
If Adam Smith were writing today, he's not writing about the pin factory. What is he writing about?
He'd be an assistant editor at Reason.
For sound economic perspective please go to https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
Wonderful interview. I now have some research to do! Thanks!
Make money online from home extra cash more than 18000 to 21000 Dollars. Start getting paid every month Thousands Dollars online. I have received 26000 Dollars in this month by just working online from home in my vvc part time. every person easily do this job by.
.
.
HERE====)> Click see information
I am making a good salary from home $6580-$7065/week , which is amazing under a year ago I was jobless in a horrible economy. I thank God every day I was blessed with these instructions and now it’s my duty to pay it forward and share it with Everyone,
🙂 AND GOOD LUCK.:)
Here is I started.……......>> http://WWW.RICHEPAY.COM
oogle is by and by paying $27485 to $29658 consistently for taking a shot at the web from home. I have joined this action 2 months back and I have earned $31547 in my first month from this action. I can say my life is improved completely! Take a gander at it what I do.....
For more detail visit the given link..........>>> http://Www.SalaryApp1.com
I quit my job and that’s it. I make $120 an hour doing these simple online tasks from home. Also, I make $30,000 a month by working online three hours a day. Also, I recommended q1 for you to try…You won’t lose anything, try the site below and make money everyday…
.
.
.
Further information:>>>>>>>>>>> https://Www.Coins71.Com