Robert Higgs

This article is about the American economist. For the South African admiral, see Robert W. Higgs.
Robert Higgs
Born (1944-02-01) 1 February 1944
Nationality United States
Field Economic history, political economy, natural resource economics, health economics, military economics
School or
tradition
Austrian School
Influences Simon Kuznets, Douglass C. North, Ronald Coase, Joseph Schumpeter, Ludwig von Mises, F.A. Hayek, Murray Rothbard

Robert Higgs (born 1 February 1944) is an American economic historian and economist combining material from Public Choice, the New Institutional economics, and the Austrian school of economics; and a libertarian anarchist[1] in political and legal theory and public policy. His writings in economics and economic history have most often focused on the causes, means, and effects of government power and growth.

Academic career

Higgs earned a Ph.D. in Economics from the Johns Hopkins University and has held teaching positions at the University of Washington, Lafayette College, and Seattle University. He has also been a visiting scholar at Oxford University and Stanford University. He held a visiting professorship at the University of Economics, Prague in 2006,[2] and has supervised dissertations in the Ph.D. program at Universidad Francisco Marroquín,[3] where he is currently an honorary professor of economics and history.

Higgs has been a Senior Fellow in Political Economy at the Independent Institute since September 1994. He has served at Editor at Large of The Independent Review since 2013, after having been Editor from 1995 to 2013.[2] He is also a senior fellow at the Ludwig von Mises Institute[4] and an adjunct scholar at the Cato Institute.[5]

Writings

The Ratchet effect

Daniel McCarthy praised Higgs and summarized his ratchet effect theory in a review of Against Leviathan that appeared in The American Conservative. In the review, McCarthy remarked that

What made Crisis and Leviathan a milestone was the rigor with which it elaborated upon the logic of James Madison's 1794 warning against "the old trick of turning every contingency into a resource for accumulating force in government." Other political economists had studied the growth of state power during times of war, depression, and general upheaval before, but none had done so as thoughtfully and thoroughly as Higgs. He took special care in describing the "ratchet effect" – once a crisis has passed state power usually recedes again, but it rarely returns to its original levels; thus each emergency leaves the scope of government at least a little wider than before.[6]

Books

As author

As editor

Notes

  1. "What Is the Point of My Libertarian Anarchism?" LewRockwell.com. LewRockwell.com
  2. 1 2 "Senior Fellow Robert Higgs." Independent.org. Independent Institute.
  3. Cole, Julio. World Economic Growth, 1980–1999: A Growth-Regression Approach. p. 9. September 2003.
  4. "Faculty and Staff." Mises.org. Ludwig von Mises Institute
  5. "Robert Higgs." Cato.org. Cato Institute
  6. McCarthy, Daniel. "Enemy of the State." The American Conservative. 9 May 2005.
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