Recently, the Independent Institute published a new collection of essays on relatively obscure economists. Both professionals and lay people alike will undoubtedly find that one of the pleasures of reading Unsung Heroes of the Market: The 24 Underrated Economists You Need to Know is in discovering how many important thinkers have quietly shaped modern economics without ever becoming household names. The volume ranges widely across traditions and schools of thought, and not every inclusion will equally persuade readers of the Austrian School, but the collection succeeds in its attempt at drawing attention to often-overlooked scholars.
For Austrians, however, one chapter stands above the rest: Rosolino Candela’s excellent treatment of Israel M. Kirzner.
It is difficult to overstate Kirzner’s importance to modern Austrian economics. For Kirzner
provided what is perhaps the school’s most influential account of entrepreneurship.
Candela’s chapter serves as both an introduction and an appreciation. Rather than presenting Kirzner simply as a student of Mises, Candela demonstrates, for example, how Kirzner developed insights implicit in Mises’s work into a distinctive theory of market coordination. As Candela explains, Kirzner’s central concern was understanding how markets move toward coordination despite pervasive ignorance and uncertainty. Conventional economic models often begin by assuming that individuals already possess the information necessary to make optimal decisions. Kirzner instead asked how such information comes to be discovered in the first place. The answer, for Kirzner, was entrepreneurship.
Unlike Joseph Schumpeter’s entrepreneur, whose role is primarily one of innovation and creative destruction, Kirzner’s entrepreneur is alert to previously-unnoticed opportunities. Entrepreneurial profit emerges not from technological breakthroughs alone but from discovering discrepancies between existing conditions and previously unrealized opportunities for mutually-beneficial exchange. The entrepreneur notices what others have overlooked and, in doing so, helps coordinate economic activity.
This insight is deceptive in its simplicity, but its implications are profound. Kirzner’s entrepreneur is not merely another factor of production. Entrepreneurship is a process of discovery through which markets generate and communicate knowledge that no central planner could possess in advance. Prices, profits, and losses are not merely accounting categories; they are signals that guide entrepreneurial action and coordinate plans across society.
Readers familiar with the work of Ludwig von Mises will immediately recognize the connection. Mises had long emphasized the uncertainty of human action and the indispensable role of entrepreneurship in a market economy. More recently, scholars such as Peter Klein and Per Bylund have expanded upon these themes, emphasizing the entrepreneur’s role in creating new avenues of production and identifying opportunities that did not previously exist. Kirzner occupies a crucial position in this intellectual lineage, explaining how entrepreneurial discovery transforms dispersed knowledge into coordinated market outcomes.
Initiated readers will find that Candela is particularly effective in highlighting how Kirzner’s work challenges the equilibrium fixation of mainstream economics. Too often economists evaluate markets against the benchmark of perfect competition and then conclude that deviations from this ideal justify intervention. Kirzner turned this framework on its head. Market imperfections are not necessarily evidence of failure. They are often the very conditions that create opportunities for entrepreneurial discovery. As Candela notes, profit opportunities emerge precisely because knowledge is imperfect and dispersed. If all information were already known, there would be no role for entrepreneurship at all.
This insight also carries important policy implications. One of the most valuable portions of the chapter is Candela’s discussion of Kirzner’s influence on debates surrounding regulation and antitrust policy. If entrepreneurial discovery is the mechanism through which markets correct errors, then government interventions aimed at correcting perceived market imperfections may inadvertently suppress the very process through which coordination occurs. This does not imply that every market outcome is optimal. It does suggest, however, that policymakers should restrain themselves, exercising that rarest of traits, humility, before considering interfering with processes they only partially understand.
The chapter also reminds readers that Kirzner’s contributions extend beyond entrepreneurship narrowly conceived. Candela shows how Kirzner’s work intersects with debates over distributive justice, market power, and the nature of competition itself. In each case, Kirzner’s focus on discovery, coordination, and human action provides an alternative to static models that dominate much of modern economics.
For all its laudable inclusions, such as fellow Austrian Don Lavoie, not every chapter in Unsung Heroes of the Market is equally appealing to Austrian readers. The inclusion of public choice theorists such as Robert Tollison are easy to defend, while the treatment of figures such as Veblen or Hamilton will likely strike many readers similarly minded to the author as frankly unworthy. However, for those interested, diversity is part of the volume’s value. Apart from learning about less well-known economists, it encourages critical engagement with a broad range of economic traditions.
And for Austrians, Candela’s chapter on Kirzner is likely reason enough to pick up the book. At a time when economics increasingly emphasizes mathematical formalism and econometric technique, Kirzner’s work serves as a reminder that markets are ultimately driven by human action, creativity, and discovery. Entrepreneurs do not merely allocate resources; they uncover opportunities that others have failed to see. In explaining this process, Kirzner helped restore a crucial element of economics that had largely disappeared from mainstream literature.
The chapter is therefore more than an appreciation of a single economist. It is a reminder of why Austrian economics remains relevant. Markets are not equilibrium states to be engineered. They are ongoing processes of discovery. Whatever complaints one may have, few economists did more to illuminate that truth than Israel Kirzner.














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