Stiglitz's The Road to Freedom Under Scrutiny
Joseph Stiglitz thinks redistribution and regulation are the road to freedom—he’s wrong.

The Road to Freedom: Economics and the Good Society, by Joseph E. Stiglitz, W.W. Norton & Company, 384 pages, $29.99
Joseph Stiglitz, a former chief economist of the World Bank, thinks that taxation is a precondition for freedom, not a threat to it. The current political problem, he argues in The Road to Freedom, is that the right (which for Stiglitz includes libertarians as well as conservatives) rejects the Founding Fathers' idea of no taxation without representation in favor of opposing any taxation at all. This is a problem, he continues, because market failures are more extensive and severe than the "neoliberals"—people like Stiglitz's fellow Nobel laureates Friedrich Hayek and Milton Friedman—would admit. For Stiglitz, redistribution and regulation are the real road to freedom.
Much of the book is devoted to criticizing neoliberals, who Stiglitz defines as proponents of "unregulated, unfettered markets." In Stiglitz's view, "a free-market, competitive, neoliberal economy combined with a liberal democracy" isn't enough—for "a stable equilibrium," we need "strong guardrails and a broad societal consensus on the need to curb wealth inequality and money's role in politics."
This book is written as though the regulatory state has not expanded since the end of World War II and as though the welfare state was dismantled in the 1980s. It is written as if liberal democracies' economic policies were all written by someone with the worldview of President Javier Milei of Argentina or the Brazilian MMA fighter Renato Moicano, who at UFC 300 proclaimed that everyone who cares about freedom should be reading the libertarian economist Ludwig von Mises. It is written as though we were still in the Lochner era, when the Supreme Court regularly struck down economic regulations.
But that is not the era we live in. Instead, the state has kept growing because neoliberalism has never reached the level of influence its adherents wanted. A more coherent argument—though still not a good one—would be that the modern state is big but should be bigger.
Nor is this book a good guide to the views of "neoliberals" like Friedman, Hayek, and Mises. No reasonable reading of these writers would suggest that they do not believe in market failures, yet Stiglitz claims that neoliberals think "markets on their own were efficient and stable."
Stiglitz also claims that "Unfettered markets designed along neoliberal principles have effectively robbed [the U.S. and U.K.] of their political freedom." One would expect an economist of Stiglitz's stature to make an effort to support this claim, yet his book offers no evidence for it. The available empirical evidence suggests that Stiglitz has it backward: It is state control of the economy that suppresses democratic freedom. There are other inconvenient empirical studies, including ones showing that the neoliberal "Washington Consensus" works fairly well and that there is no clear evidence that economic freedom leads to more inequality. (There is, however, abundant evidence that economic freedom makes us richer.)
The book does contain many reasonable ideas. Stiglitz is certainly right that the challenges associated with global fisheries, pandemics, and climate change are a fertile opportunity for more economic analysis. And the notion that market failures are both more complex and more common in an increasingly interconnected world should be a starting point for economists and policy makers.
Unfortunately, Stiglitz is too comfortable claiming that the solution to these problems is "regulation," without adding much explanation of how regulation should address such issues. Here he should have engaged more deeply with the insights of another Nobel laureate in economics, Elinor Ostrom. Stiglitz does mention Ostrom's research on the regulation of the commons—that is, of shared resources that anyone can use (and overuse, in the absence of rules governing how people can draw on them). But he sees her work as a defense of "regulation" and a critique of private property.
That wasn't what Ostrom was arguing. Rather than rail against private property, Ostrom argued that it is an empirical question as to whether private property, communal arrangements outside the state, or government control is the most appropriate way to manage the commons. And nothing in Ostrom's work implies a wide-ranging critique of private property. Her work is fully within the same classical liberal tradition that includes Hayek and Friedman.
Public goods, Ostrom argued, are not provided solely by the government. She also stressed the importance of polycentricity—of multiple levels of governance that offer opportunities for citizens and nonprofits to provide public goods, with each level able to cooperate with the others and also to act independently. This is especially useful for thinking about how to address the kinds of complex externalities Stiglitz sees as pervasive. Ostrom even developed a polycentric approach to climate change.
The call for regulation is less fundamental than asking what political arrangements give rise to the most appropriate rules, be they public, private, or communal. Elinor Ostrom and her husband, Vincent Ostrom, highlighted federalism's value as a laboratory of democracy because, like Hayek, they recognized that we do not know how to solve many pressing problems. This book would have been more convincing if instead of devoting so much time to criticizing the neoliberals (and overstating their influence), Stiglitz had spent more time exploring such insights.
Stiglitz's polemics are unlikely to change anyone's mind, but they will probably find an audience among people already predisposed to agree with them. His ideological fellow-travelers will probably like his full-throated defense of "progressive capitalism" (basically contemporary Sweden, with its combination of a generous welfare state, pro-labor policies, and a market economy). But Stiglitz does not explain why the U.S. is not like Sweden, nor how to get to Sweden from where we are now. Nor does Stiglitz note that Sweden, which ranks highly in the Heritage Foundation's Index of Economic Freedom, is rather open to policies promoted by neoliberals.
If you're interested in understanding market liberalism, there are better recent books to read, such as Peter Boettke's The Struggle for a Better World or Deirdre McCloskey and Art Carden's Leave Me Alone and I'll Make You Rich, each of which explains what classical liberals mean by freedom. If you are tempted to accept the notion that neoliberals lack a moral sense, you would especially benefit from Humanomics—by Bart Wilson and another Nobel laureate, Vernon Smith—which articulates the rich moral framework of Adam Smith's tradition. And if you want a more compelling empirical critique of capitalism, Daniel Bromley's Possessive Individualism explains how modern capitalism differs from the capitalism of even half a century ago, let alone Adam Smith's time.
But even our current, heavily regulated variety of capitalism is better than countless real-world alternatives. After all, if the situation in the U.S. were as bad as Stiglitz suggests, one would not expect so many people to want to move here. The border "crisis," which is really a problem with excessive regulation, suggests that the U.S. has pretty good institutions. Or at the very least, that people think those institutions are better than what they are leaving. And what they are leaving is less economic and political freedom.
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tl;dr -- governments are the root of all problems. If you see "market failure", you aren't looking deep enough. The unseen is the government failure, the real failure, and the seen is the market working its magic to fix the government failure.
It’s almost like your tl;dr was just “dr” (didn’t read) and you made up a “summary” that contains your talking point. Because that isn’t what the article says at all.
Welcome to Reason's comment section
If my comment was so incompetent, then surely it's a trivial matter to actually rebut it, rather than just insult me. Thank you for your honesty in admitting you have nothing to argue.
Ok. Your “summary” bore no resemblance to the article. That’s enough of a rebuttal because it tells you all you need to know. If you need more specificity, try reading the article and then we can talk, but your comment shows no awareness of the article’s content, so any further rebuttal would be as pointless as it is every time you argue with someone who didn’t read whatever they are “responding” to. Since they are arguing with the phantoms of their mind, rational discourse is impossible.
"In Stiglitz's view, "a free-market, competitive, neoliberal economy combined with a liberal democracy" isn't enough—for "a stable equilibrium," we need "strong guardrails and a broad societal consensus on the need to curb wealth inequality and money's role in politics.""
Need we read more? It's just the same old shitty pig with a different color lipstick.
'The current political problem, he argues in The Road to Freedom, is that the right (which for Stiglitz includes libertarians as well as conservatives) rejects the Founding Fathers' idea of no taxation without representation in favor of opposing any taxation at all.'
Tell you what, Stiglitz, I will consider the implication of "no taxation without representation" on the same day that you embrace "no representation without taxation". Put up or shut up.
The right also rejected the Founding Fathers notion that 3/5ths of a liberty is equal liberty. So, the question to Stiglitz is, via taxation, to what degree does someone like Bernie Sanders own the labor of someone like Tim Scott or Clarence Thomas or any other tax payer? Moreover, via debt spending, does Bernie Sanders successors own the labor of Tim Scott or Clarence Thomas or anyone else’s children’s labor?
I think we should ask the commune that kicked out Sanders about whose labor he should own.
Just doctors' -- for the free health care.
No Founding Father had that notion, you troll.
The founding fathers set up a government that got by for 130 years with no income tax.
'we need "strong guardrails and a broad societal consensus on the need to curb wealth inequality and money's role in politics."'
Like in Neo-feudal California?
Money has a big role in politics because our politicians have too much power, and people want to influence them.
Wealth inequality is a sign that there is still some level of economic freedom available to the productive class.
'A more coherent argument—though still not a good one—would be that the modern state is big but should be bigger.'
Duh. If the modern mega-state fails to deliver all progressive desires then obviously the state is not mega enough.
We've already tried that experiment, in the past 5 years. The federal government was big (like 4 trillion a year big) and we made it bigger (now 6 or 7 trillion a year), and found that it didn't solve all of our problems.
Meanwhile, a rare voice of reason in Colorado, in the Denver Post yesterday:
Coffman: Aurora and Denver have vastly different approaches to homelessness — work first and housing first
While the efforts to tackle these issues in the city and county of Denver tend to dominate headlines, I believe it is important to highlight and clarify the work we are doing in Aurora and provide a reminder that Aurora’s approach is distinctly different from Denver’s approach.
This contrasts with Denver’s “Housing First” strategy that simply gives hotel rooms or apartments to individuals experiencing homelessness with absolutely no requirements other than the belief that once they have stable housing, they will be inclined to voluntarily change their behavior and take advantage of the services offered to them.
We believe that the “work first” approach is both fair to the taxpayers, who get up every morning to go to work and who share in the adult responsibilities of life, and ultimately compassionate to those experiencing homelessness.
Right now, Denver’s “Housing First” approach is the only one recognized by the federal government, while Aurora’s “work first” one is not. Having two cities, side by side, could be the test case that our nation needs to determine the legitimacy of both approaches.
Mike Coffman is the mayor of Aurora.
–Perhaps still not a true libertarian approach but at least Coffman holds a more realistic view of the problem and promotes a solution grounded in personal responsibility and initiative.
BTW Coffman first impressed me a few years ago when he dressed down and went undercover, hanging out in homeless camps and learning about the people--but not preaching at them.
Well it seems obvious that homeless people will go to the city providing free housing, thus making the "work first" approach look like it is working better.
It also sort of begs the question of what metric they would use to determine 'success' in the first place. I'd wager both Aurora and Denver are using quite different measures.
If the measure is 'stopped being homeless' then it seems probable neither will have much effect since the cost of living in Denver or Aurora is hardly 'affordable' by most of the nations measuring stick. Even though you can hop on over to a McDonalds and get a shit job for $18 an hour, that still isn't going to pay your rent on a 2k a month apartment. Even if it did (before taxes, of course) there are little things like food, transportation, electric, gas, etc. that there is zero chance they'd be able to afford on top of that rent payment.
More “guardrails “ bs.
Freedom within normal parameters.
'Stiglitz also claims that "Unfettered markets designed along neoliberal principles have effectively robbed [the U.S. and U.K.] of their political freedom." One would expect an economist of Stiglitz's stature to make an effort to support this claim, yet his book offers no evidence for it.'
If you use the Progressive Dictionary to translate "political freedom" you can find plenty of evidence. Clearly most activists do not have the social and material lives they think they deserve as a human right, and they have to suffer seeing their ideological adversaries who have more stuff than they do. How un-free is that?
Where "political freedom" means the freedom to feed off the toil of others, if you can organize a sufficiently large group to threaten them.
More wealth redistribution just means fewer will contribute to the already heavily leveraged pot and more from abroad unable to support themselves will arrive for the freebies:
US federal debt $34.807T.
It’s only numbers on a piece of paper .
/jeff
Its only numbers on a scale. Also jeff.
And the interest to service that debt is approaching a trillion dollars per year.
Of course once the leftists realize that money goes to rich capitalists and colonizers, they will push to cancel the debt and interest payments.
#WeCanAllBeStudentLoanBums
Today, Saudi Arabia no longer bound by the petrodollar. That, along with the loss of the reserve currency monopoly, both under Biden, doesn’t bode well for holds of US debt or its currency. Weaponizing a currency then abusing that has resulted in a boomerang effect.
A naval equivalence is a fleet in being, as with the one or two US carriers in the Pacific after Pearl Harbor, or Tripitz in Norway threatening the Russian Arctic convoys. Sanctions are another; they work better as a threat than in reality, especially with profligate spenders like Biden.
Approaching? Interest rates are in the 4.5 to 5.5 percent range.
At 4.5 percent, 35 trillion in debt costs 1.575 trillion per year.
US Debt Clock indicates the interest is currently $848B.
yeah, but they are rolling it over all the time. short and long term rates are both high now. they can't get 2% now.
'Stiglitz's The Road to Freedom Under Scrutiny'
You know who else promised a Road to Freedom?
Just get on the train
The Von Trapp family?
Lenny Kravitz?
The Nightrider?
https://youtu.be/EDRU935EqAU?si=jhEdECxAzD3N0NYJ
Stiglitz summarized, "The road to freedom is all about having gov-guns show up at your door and STEAL 80% of your harvest ... and the only reason you aren't free is because they didn't STEAL 99%."
I seriously wonder how some humans can actually get so bloody-stupid.
These are the people who think government ended the Great Depression instead of causing it.
These are the people who once huddled in the cave and lashed out at anyone who dared venture outside.
And once people did venture outside and start trading with other tribes, they are the people who tried to figure out how to create more cowrie shells without producing anything of value first.
Cowrie shell printer go brrrr...?
why does anyone listen to this hugo chavez salad tosser?
Like Loki, he dreams of a world set free -- from freedom.
What's up Peanuts?
Stiglitz had particular disdain for that neoliberal bastard Bill Clinton if I recall correctly. Clinton's budget cuts and balanced budgets were oppressive. And repealing the merger section of Glass-Steagall was awful for some reason.
He is far more of a lefty than Krugman is.
"Bill Clinton was the best Republican president we have ever had" - Michael Moore.
You're deliberately conflating corporatism with neoliberalism again.
Bullshit.
It’s as obvious as the bloodstains on your white Klan robe.
Around the butt hole?
Texas Asks People to Avoid Using Their Cars
Texas officials are urging residents in some areas to use different modes of transportation other than their cars on Friday as ozone pollution in the state reach concerning levels.
....
The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) has declared an Ozone Action Day for the Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston, Galveston and Brazoria areas because of high levels of ozone, also known as smog. Officials suggested that to help reduce the pollution, people should minimize the use of their vehicles.
https://www.newsweek.com/texas-asks-people-avoid-using-their-cars-1909517
TEXAS GOING COMMUNITS!
Yes. They let too many California Democrats migrate in.
“Trump New Deal” – Big Government MAGA
To that end, the Trump campaign should pursue a bold economic vision, one that could transform the country for years to come. He should plot out an aggressive economic plan targeting communities in the highest need and combine them into his version of FDR’s “New Deal” to usher in a badly needed era of prosperity. The good news is, Trump doesn’t have to look very far for the plan: His campaign introduced three in 2020 which would make an excellent foundation for a Trump New Deal. In 2020, they were called Revitalizing Rural America, the American Dream Plan, and the Platinum Plan.
…
The Platinum Plan called for increasing access to capital in Black communities, to the tune of $500 billion, as well as benefits for local hires, and increasing the number of Black owned contracting businesses and private equity investment funds with $40 billion in government funding and traditional private investment. The plan also called for connecting HBCU’s with government research and development, potentially opening up billions to those institutions. It also called for allowing Black churches to compete for federal dollars for community and social programs, “examining alternative ways to build credit, including rent, utilities and phone bills” and other licensing reforms.
https://www.newsweek.com/win-trump-needs-trump-new-deal-luckily-he-created-one-2020-opinion-1909847
#FreeTrumpMoney2025
Nothing bothers Buttplug more than "increasing access to capital in Black communities... and increasing the number of Black owned contracting businesses and private equity investment funds".
Starch that cone and bleach your robes, King Kleagle Buttplug.
I knew you were the Woke hall monitor of H&R but did not know that you were all in on affirmative action too.
Is there any libertarian principle you support?
It’s not “woke” when the good-ol-boy racist is being an actual racist.
Remember your greatest hits, Kleagle?
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 3 mins ago
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Uncle Clarence has had his hand out for over 20 years.
GIMME DAT WHITIE MONEY!
That fucking cop lover.
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 2 hours ago
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Taking on Katanji Brown Jackson for lowest IQ affirmative action hire
Uncle Clarence a candidate.
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 19 mins ago
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Sandy, I had a genuine fear that a Senator Walker would be shucking and jiving us good liberty-loving Georgians every day.
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 1 hour ago
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Many have asked for an update to the Buttplug Horse Race:
Tim Scott 400-1 Whuffo Bro? Whuffo is you in dis race fo, bro?
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 2 hours ago
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Dude, I am from the South. You can’t troll me on race.
Do you remember Spermin’ Herman Cain? He sounded like a slave extra from Song of the South.
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 1 hour ago
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No, you’re a fucking snowflake who only gets offended when one of your Lawn Jockeys is criticized.
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 28 mins ago
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Groveling like a shoe-shine boy, Tim Scott humiliates himself for Fatass Donnie.
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 38 mins ago
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SE Cupp is a conservative commentator who is ashamed of Tim Scott’s groveling ‘Happy slave” act concerning Donnie.
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 3 hours ago
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Tim Scott’s Vice Presidential Debasement Is Almost Complete
Debasement? Are you for real? This smacks of racism.
Tim Scott’s twerking and jiving is just him feeling that ole-timey religion.
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 7 hours ago
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Fact checking Tim Scott – Trump’s black friend/shine boy:
Sarah Palin’s Buttplug 2 1 hour ago
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How many little lawn jockeys are in your yard? I bet it looks like a scene from a Tarzan movie out there.
Have you tried not being a racist piece of shit?
Stiglitz defines as proponents of "unregulated, unfettered markets." In Stiglitz's view, "a free-market, competitive, neoliberal economy combined with a liberal democracy" isn't enough—for "a stable equilibrium,"
See, that's the thing. What this guy is really espousing is a communist utopia. The reference to 'equilibrium' gives it away, since the goal for these types is for everyone to be at about the same socio-economic level...outside of the noble leaders like Stiglitz of course.
After all, some animals are always more equal than others.
What baffles me is how he seems to think we can arrive at that mystical land through regulation rather than diktat. That never actually works, so I'd assume somewhere in his fantasy novel there's some noble strongman that will make it all work or perhaps some noble priesthood class. That's always the same answer from these types.
In fact, from reading the article, it sounds like he argues that the regulators are indeed the priest class that will save us from ourselves. One wonders if he's a religious man, or if this is his religion.
The 2008 Financial Collapse broke a lot of prevailing notions.
Neoliberalism had a great run from Carter to Bush the Lesser and then imploded in 2008. Greenspan famously maintained that "markets always self-correct". Well, yes, after $30 trillion of wealth vanished just in the USA. But we are richer now than ever.
But now Big Government is back in style - even Brexit is perceived as a mistake. So the pertinent question is - do you want MAGA Big Government or Biden Big Government?
MAGA thanks. It's not even close.
Critiquing someone like Stiglitz is like picking on a flat-earther.
“…the right (which for Stiglitz includes libertarians as well as conservatives) rejects…”
It always does for leftist. It’s why I don’t understand the insistence that we can play nice with them.
A key concept here is "former" chief economist at the World Bank. This is clearly a potboiler - perhaps his income took a hit when he dragged his lazy carcass into retirement. No intellectual support is needed for an opinion piece even when it takes the form of a book. It is a little sad and disconcerting that such an intellectually lazy "expert" was influential in such a far-reaching financial institution, though!
Sigh.
Hayek and Friedman aren't Neoliberals. The neoliberals start between the world wars with two fundamental (and connected) motivating ideas: that classic liberalism's laissez-faire economics didn't work, and that government regulation of the economy was the answer. Stiglitz, ironically, is the neoliberal here.
Of course whether laissez-faire economics worked or not depends on what your goal for it was. It also kind of depends on whether you agree that laissez-faire economics ever actually happened or not so we could tell whether it worked or not.