The Road to Served Him is definitely worth reading for the economics and incentives that are embedded in it. He was writing a political tract for his day at a time when he was very fearful of the direction of the world was going. England certainly went in a very extreme direction after the war. There were some English roots to the worst parts of the Nazi program, which is another... It's a little digate at the British, I think. Maybe because it's true.
Bryan Caplan of George Mason University and blogger at EconLog talks to EconTalk host Russ Roberts about two books: Eugene Richter's Pictures of the Socialistic Future and F. A. Hayek's The Road to Serfdom. Both books warn against the dangers of socialism. Pictures of a Socialistic Future, published in 1891 is a dystopian novel imagining what life would be like after a socialist revolution. The Road to Serfdom, published in 1944, explores the links between economic freedom and political freedom and the inherent similarities between communism and fascism. Both books look at the German roots of centralized planning and the nature of the people who rise to power when the State is powerful. The conversation includes discussion of the these topics as well as the rule of law and the amount of state control of the economy in Nazi Germany.