
The Road to Serfdom by F. A. Hayek
by F. A. Hayek
4.2/5
1 book reviewed · 4.2 avg
A intellectually rigorous and historically grounded critique of central planning that remains remarkably relevant, though some arguments require updating for contemporary mixed economies.
What works
• Accessible yet rigorous prose that avoids dense mathematical formulas and is written to persuade ordinary citizens, not just academics
• Definitive edition includes valuable supplementary documents that reveal Hayek's thought process and intellectual debates with contemporaries like Keynes
• Methodical construction of arguments with strong historical grounding, drawing from real examples of totalitarian movements in Germany and Soviet Union
• Remains remarkably prescient and relevant to contemporary debates about government programs and individual versus collective responsibility
What doesn't
• The review appears incomplete, cutting off mid-sentence while explaining core arguments about socialism and fascism
• May seem "heretical" or challenging to readers who support economic planning or government intervention