Yuri Maltsev (1950-2023)

Last week, economist, professor, and adventurer Yuri Maltsev passed away. Yuri’s passing is a gigantic loss for the economics profession, for the conservative and libertarian movements, and for me personally. He was a courageous advocate for truth, justice, and liberty—a champion for the rights of every member of the human race.

Someone ought to make a movie about Yuri’s life. Indeed, his life story is illuminating, informative, and inspiring. Born in Tatarstan, Soviet Union in 1950, Yuri’s life was impacted by Soviet cruelty from the start. When Yuri’s father was a boy, his own father (Yuri’s grandfather), a renowned architect, was summoned by none other than Josef Stalin himself to work on a building project.

The senior Maltsev was highly regarded in his field, and there was a lengthy waiting list for his services. Understanding Stalin’s great power, Yuri’s grandfather told Stalin that he would put his project at the top of his list and would commence work on it immediately upon completing the project he was then working on. Most people would respect the integrity shown by a builder who would not abandon a partially completed project, but not Stalin. The terrible dictator had Yuri’s grandfather summarily shot as a saboteur.

The trauma of his father being executed as an enemy of the state had a devastating psychological impact on Yuri’s father. Yuri told me that his father never got over it, and he died at a young age, leaving behind Yuri’s mother, sister, and Yuri.

From his youth, Yuri began to think about how to escape the world’s largest prison camp, the Soviet Union. One of the realities of life in the Soviet Union was that many privileges—including foreign travel—were generally reserved for members of the Communist Party. As a matter of expediency, not conviction, Yuri joined the party. This enabled him to earn three degrees in economics and opened the door to (relatively) good jobs and foreign travel on government business.

During his studies, Yuri encountered ideas that would change his life. One of his assignments was to become somewhat familiar with the writings of free-market economists—writings that were off-limits even to most members of the Communist Party—so that he could lie and propagandize against western ideas more effectively. This plan backfired spectacularly on the communists. As Yuri read the forbidden texts of the Austrian economists, the proverbial scales fell from his eyes. He knew he had found the truth about economics. So captivating was that truth that Yuri and a colleague, risking multiple years in prison, would smuggle forbidden manuscripts out of their depository, stay up all night reading them, and then smuggle them back the next morning before anyone could detect that they had been removed. That is how Yuri became an Austrian economist.

Yuri rose through the ranks of Soviet bureaucracy, patiently biding his time. At one point, he was one of 328 bureaucrats in charge of setting 23 million prices for every imaginable economic good in all parts of the USSR—a land mass that spanned 11 times zones. In a market economy, prices are free to adjust as needed to changing conditions of supply, demand, technological improvements, newly discovered efficiencies, etc. By contrast, Yuri and his colleagues set prices that often remained unchanged for years. They set prices based on woefully incomplete information about the myriad factors impacting supply and demand. Even if they had had comprehensive knowledge about any single market, how could they possibly obtain such information for 23 million prices? Even if each bureaucrat could somehow determine the “right” price for one good in one market in one hour’s time, the 328-person bureaucracy would only be able to set 2,624 prices per day. If they worked steadily at that pace, it would take them over 8,700 work days (about 29 years if working 300 days per year) before they could revisit and reset any given price. No wonder the Soviet economy was stagnant!

The Soviet economy was also wasteful. Econ 101 teaches that a price set too high above the market-clearing free-market price results in scarce resources being wasted in the production of things that people aren’t willing or able to pay for. Contrariwise, if prices are set too low (which was more common in the USSR because the communists figured that in a workers’ paradise, prices would be low) there are pronounced shortages. Shortages, of course, have been a glaring standard characteristic of socialized economies. Indeed, so severe were shortages of consumer goods in the USSR that, as Yuri told me, at the time the Soviet Union collapsed and dissolved in 1991, approximately 70 percent of consumer goods were produced in black markets. That was technically illegal, but tolerated because it was the only way to keep the economy afloat, even at such an anemic, impoverished level.

A bright individual and industrious worker, Yuri rose through the bureaucratic ranks, becoming a member of Mikhail Gorbachev’s economic advisory panel on perestroika (“restructuring”) in the mid-1980s. In 1989, while on a trip to Finland (a government-authorized trip, of course), Yuri made the boldest move of his life. He defected to the United States. He was 39 years old. Yuri had deliberately avoided marriage and children up to that point so that when an opportunity to defect finally presented itself to him, the Soviet authorities wouldn’t be able to use his wife and children as leverage over him. Yuri loved his adopted country wholeheartedly. One of his proudest moments was becoming a U.S. citizen in 1995.

Yuri enjoyed his new-found freedom in the United States with an intensity that few of us born here have. For example, he bought and sold cars with an amazing frequency. Yuri bought and sold over 80 automobiles by the end of his first decade here. That might not seem practical to us, but remember: private ownership of autos was forbidden in the USSR. For Yuri, the seemingly compulsive and unnecessary buying and selling of autos was done for the sheer joy of finally being free to do so. And even though some of the used cars that Yuri bought were lemons by our standards, they still compared favorably to the shoddy automobiles produced in the USSR.

Besides having owned more cars than anyone else I have ever known, Yuri also used his freedom to travel to more countries than anyone else I have known. Indeed, he had passports from multiple countries, and their pages were jam-packed with stamps from well over 100 countries. Wanting to open the eyes of his American college students, for years he organized two-week visits to various foreign countries, including, most memorably for Yuri, to Cuba. I accompanied him on his 2005 trip to central Europe, where the differences between countries that had been trapped behind the Iron Curtain and those not so trapped were vivid. You could see the visible scars of abandoned collective farms with shoddy equipment abandoned and rusting in the fields. The drive of those formerly oppressed peoples to catch up economically to their western neighbors was palpable. And then there were the former prisons and torture centers that had been operated by secret police ruthlessly carrying out Moscow’s bidding—still intact lest anyone forget, and now rechristened as “Museums of Communism.”

More Americans need to see such things.

My wife and I met Yuri in 1991 at a Mises Institute conference at the College of William and Mary in Virginia. Finding that he had joined the faculty of Carthage College, my wife’s alma mater, we hit it off from the start. Yuri visited us in Pennsylvania at least a dozen times over the years, first alone, then with wife, then wife and children, and once we even had the treat of hosting Yuri’s mother and sister who were permitted to emigrate from Russia during the Yeltsin years. We, in turn, visited Yuri and family in Wisconsin several times, too. Our daughter loved hearing Yuri’s stories, which he generously shared with her over the years. He also shared his special perspective on the world with students at Grove City College, both in a public speech and in the privacy of our home. What a treat!

I should add that there is a significant parallel between Yuri and Grove City College legend, the late Hans F. Sennholz. Hans (a pure Austrian economist who was the first of four to earn his Ph.D. in economics under the mentorship of Ludwig von Mises) was, like Yuri, born into a country that was both a foe of the U.S. and featured heavy government control over the economy. Hans reached adolescence and spent his teen years in Germany during Adolf Hitler’s rule. Having become a Luftwaffe pilot as a means of improving his social standing, Hans was fortuitously shot down in Africa and then transported to the United States where he lived in safety in a POW camp in Arkansas. Later, fully comprehending what a miserable lie central economic planning is (whether the fascist or socialist variant) after being repatriated to Germany after the war, he returned a few years later. For over 30 years, Dr. Sennholz taught classes, wrote articles and books, and gave lectures far and wide in defense of the free-market principles that had made the United States the most prosperous country on Earth.

Yuri’s path was similar: For over 30 years, Dr. Maltsev taught classes, wrote books and articles, and gave lectures far and wide, reminding Americans of their own heritage, rousing Americans from their dormant understanding of the economic principles upon which our prosperity is based. Indeed, it is an amazing world in which a pilot in the Nazi air force and a Soviet bureaucrat emigrated to the USA and became stronger and more eloquent defenders of free enterprise than all but a tiny minority of home-grown Americans. Like Hans, Yuri was often vilified by leftists, and like Hans, he had the strength to withstand the meanness and persist in his defense of American freedoms.

Now my larger-than-life friend Yuri is gone. He is survived by his wife, Rita, four children, and his mother and sister. Thank you, Yuri, for all you did for our country by constantly reminding us what a wonderful blessing liberty is. Thank you for teaching sound economics. Thank you for the courage to withstand the taunts, barbs, and persecutions of leftists—Americans too blind to see the dangers and evils of central planning from which you were trying to save us.

Mostly, thank you for being my friend. God bless you, and rest in peace.

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