This was asked in a conversational context, omitted here, that contained the entire contents of Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth, by Ludwig von Mises.
Try formalizing the argument in abstract terms to make the scope of the problem very precise, e.g., it seems that there is an economic calculation problem along these same lines with individual state-owned firms, as well as nonprofits, so I would like the common abstract description that is shared by Misesian economic calculation problem situations.
Yes. A useful way to sharpen Mises’s point is to strip away the historical socialism-vs-capitalism framing and state a more general organizational decision problem.
The common structure is not “state ownership” by itself. It is this:
An agent or organization must choose among many technically feasible, intertemporally linked uses of scarce, heterogeneous resources, but lacks a nonarbitrary way to impute the opportunity cost of those resources across competing uses.
That is the abstract Misesian calculation problem.
A compact formalization
Let:
-
$R = {r_1,\dots,r_n}$ be scarce resources or productive assets.
-
$A$ be the set of feasible production plans.
-
Each plan $a \in A$ specifies:
- inputs used over time: $x(a) \in \mathbb{R}^n_+$,
- outputs/outcomes over time: $y(a)$,
- timing, complementarities, and irreversibilities.
-
The planner or manager must choose $a^* \in A$.
To choose rationally, the decision-maker needs some way to rank feasible plans. In a market setting this is typically done by a value functional like
$$
\Pi(a) = \text{value of outputs} - \text{value of inputs}
$$
or, intertemporally,
$$
NPV(a)=\sum_t \frac{R_t(a)-C_t(a)}{(1+i)^t}.
$$
The key issue is not the formula. It is whether the terms in it are economically meaningful.
For them to be meaningful, the organization needs a mapping
$$
V: \text{resource uses and outcomes} \to \mathbb{R}
$$
that assigns comparable values to different input combinations and output streams in a way that tracks opportunity cost.
Mises’s claim can be generalized like this:
A Misesian calculation problem exists when an organization must choose among alternative plans $A$, but lacks a reliable value-imputation rule $V$ for some crucial inputs, outputs, or time-structured combinations of them.
Without such a $V$, it can know engineering facts and physical quantities, but not whether plan $a$ is economically preferable to plan $b$.
What makes the problem specifically “Misesian”
The distinctive feature is not mere uncertainty, ignorance, or bad management. It is the absence of a way to reduce alternative resource uses to a common denominator that reflects their forgone alternatives.
So the problem appears when all of the following are present:
-
Heterogeneous resources
The organization uses different kinds of labor, land, machines, buildings, materials, and time. -
Multiple feasible uses
Those resources can be recombined in many possible ways. -
Complementarity and substitutability
Inputs matter not only individually but in combinations, and one input’s value depends on what else is available. -
Intertemporal structure
Decisions today affect future options, often through long production chains. -
No market-generated opportunity-cost signals for some key margins
At least some relevant assets, outputs, or constraints are not priced by competitive exchange. -
No residual-claimant test strong enough to correct error
Decision-makers are not tightly disciplined by profit and loss tied to alienable ownership stakes.
That package is the common core.
The abstract mechanism
The mechanism can be stated very precisely.
A market with exchange in relevant assets does two things:
- it generates relative prices that compress dispersed tradeoffs into a usable metric;
- it subjects proposed plans to profit-and-loss tests, which compare ex ante appraisals to ex post realities.
The Misesian problem arises when an organization has to decide but lacks one or both of these:
- price formation for the relevant means of action, and
- a feedback mechanism that nonarbitrarily reveals whether the plan used resources well.
Then the organization can still act, but cannot know whether it has economized.
Why this is broader than “full socialism”
This is where your instinct is right.
Full socialism is just the limiting case where the missing valuation problem becomes system-wide, because nearly all higher-order goods are removed from exchange. But the same structure can appear at smaller scales.
The important distinction is between:
- global calculation failure, where the whole economy lacks prices for capital goods, and
- local calculation failure, where a particular organization lacks meaningful prices or meaningful output valuation at some decision margins.
Both are instances of the same abstract problem.
A general definition
Here is a concise abstract definition.
Misesian Economic Calculation Problem (MECP):
An agent faces a Misesian calculation problem when it must choose among alternative, resource-using, time-structured plans, but the institutional setting fails to generate a sufficiently informative and decision-relevant scalar ordering of those plans grounded in actual opportunity costs.
That scalar ordering need not literally be market profit in every case, but if it is not market-grounded, it tends to become arbitrary, politically assigned, donor-imposed, bureaucratically fixed, or otherwise detached from forgone alternatives.
State-owned firms
A state-owned firm can have the problem in stronger or weaker form depending on context.
Weak form: partial escape from the problem
A state-owned firm operating inside a broader market economy can often borrow market prices for many things:
- wage rates,
- fuel,
- steel,
- outside contractors,
- comparable products,
- interest rates.
So it is not in the same position as a fully socialist economy. It can often calculate using prices formed elsewhere.
That is why Mises emphasized that nationalized firms inside a market order can “parasitically” use the surrounding price system.
Stronger form: where the problem bites
The state-owned firm has a local Misesian problem when one or more of the following are true:
- its capital is not bought and sold on markets;
- its cost of capital is politically set or subsidized;
- losses are covered by a soft budget constraint;
- it has multiple noncommensurable goals;
- output prices are regulated or politically fixed;
- key inputs are internally allocated rather than competitively acquired;
- there is no transferable residual claimant.
Then apparent “costs” and “returns” stop reflecting opportunity cost.
So the common abstract point is:
A state firm’s problem is not just bad incentives; it is that some of the terms needed for genuine economic calculation are inherited administratively rather than discovered competitively.
Nonprofits
Nonprofits fit the same schema, but in a different place.
A nonprofit usually buys many inputs on markets, so it often has meaningful input prices. Its distinctive difficulty is usually on the output side.
If a charity feeds people, counsels families, preserves habitat, funds art, or advocates for policy change, the outputs are often not sold at market prices. Then the nonprofit can know:
- dollars spent,
- people served,
- measurable outcomes,
but not necessarily the opportunity-cost-ranked value of one program relative to another in the way a for-profit firm can compare revenues and profits.
So the nonprofit’s calculation problem is typically:
- input prices exist,
- output valuation is weak or plural,
- mission tradeoffs are not fully commensurable.
That still fits the same abstract structure: choice among rival plans without a decisive value-imputation rule.
But it is usually less severe than under socialism because the nonprofit still benefits from market prices for most inputs, and donor behavior can reveal some valuation signals.
A useful typology
It helps to distinguish four cases.
1. Full market calculation
Prices exist for most relevant inputs and outputs, and managers face hard profit-and-loss discipline.
Example: competitive for-profit firm.
2. Partial calculation with borrowed prices
The organization can use market prices formed elsewhere, but some key margins are insulated.
Example: state-owned airline in a market economy.
3. Input-side calculation only
Inputs are market-priced, but outputs are mission-based or nonmarket.
Example: nonprofit hospital, museum, foundation.
4. Systemic calculation failure
No genuine market for means of production, so the entire capital structure lacks meaningful prices.
Example: comprehensive socialism.
These are not different species of problem. They are degrees and locations of the same problem.
What is essential and what is not
A lot of discussion muddies this by mixing the calculation problem with incentive problems or knowledge problems.
Not essential
These can worsen the problem, but are not the core:
- corruption,
- bureaucracy,
- laziness,
- ignorance,
- lack of computational power,
- absence of altruism,
- weak managerial talent.
Essential
These are the core:
- no genuine opportunity-cost prices for relevant assets or outputs,
- no robust market test for alternative plans,
- no strong residual claimant structure to force correction.
That is why the problem can persist even with honest, brilliant, public-spirited managers.
Another way to state it
Here is a more stripped-down version:
A Misesian calculation problem exists whenever control rights over resources are separated from a process that competitively imputes those resources’ alternative-use value.
That gives you the common abstraction across socialism, state enterprise, nonprofits, and even some internal divisions of large private firms.
Internal divisions of private firms
This is worth noting because it shows how general the idea is.
Inside a large corporation, many transfers are internal, not market transactions. Headquarters must assign transfer prices, overhead allocations, internal hurdle rates, and shadow values. Those can be arbitrary.
Why does this not immediately collapse into full Misesian chaos?
Because the private firm is still nested inside external markets:
- capital markets value the firm,
- product markets price outputs,
- labor and supplier markets price many inputs,
- ownership is transferable,
- ultimate profit and loss discipline the whole structure.
So internal calculation problems are real, but bounded by the surrounding market order.
That is exactly the pattern Mises would predict.
The scope condition
The “scope” of the problem becomes precise if you say:
The severity of the calculation problem increases with the share of decision-relevant margins for which opportunity costs are not market-generated and not corrigible by profit-and-loss discipline.
That gives you a continuum rather than a binary.
At one end: full market firm.
At the other end: comprehensive socialism.
In between: regulated monopolies, public agencies, nonprofits, state-owned firms, internally bureaucratized corporations.
A clean formal criterion
A neat criterion would be:
Let $M \subseteq R$ be the set of decision-relevant resources and outputs for which the organization has market-grounded valuation signals.
Let $K \subseteq R$ be the set of decision-relevant resources and outputs for which valuation must be assigned administratively.
The organization faces a Misesian calculation problem to the extent that:
- $K$ is large relative to $M$, and
- choices in $A$ are highly sensitive to how $K$ is valued.
In words:
The problem becomes serious when many of the margins that matter most are precisely the ones that are not genuinely priced.
Final formulation
Here is the shortest common abstract description.
The shared structure in Misesian calculation-problem cases is this: an organization must allocate heterogeneous, multi-use, time-structured resources across rival plans, but lacks a nonarbitrary, institutionally grounded way to impute opportunity costs to those resources and outcomes. Where that happens, “rational planning” can at best be technical or administrative, not economic.
And the most important qualification is:
Full socialism is the universal case of this problem; state firms, nonprofits, and bureaucratic subunits exhibit local or partial cases of the same structure.
If you want, I can turn this into a more formal theorem-style statement with assumptions, propositions, and corollaries.
