Comparative political theorists and historians occasionally describe the early Ming dynasty (1368-1644) as one of the least intrusive periods of governance in Chinese history since the Han. Tax burdens were relatively light, bureaucratic penetration into village life was shallow, and much social regulation was left to families and local elites. These features have led some observers to characterize early Ming rule as “restrained,” or even proto-liberal, especially when contrasted with the later fiscal and administrative expansion of the Ming state.
This interpretation, however, confuses state weakness with ideological restraint. A closer examination of early Ming governance reveals not a principled commitment to limited rule, but the temporary incapacity of a post-collapse regime whose coercive authority remained absolute in theory, even when constrained in practice. Far from undermining a Rothbardian theory of state growth, the early Ming case confirms it: states govern lightly when they must, not when they believe they should.
To show this, let us first look at the empirical observations underlying the “early Ming restraint” thesis, which are largely correct. In the late fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries, the Ming state:
- Extracted comparatively modest levels of tax revenue;
- Lacked consistent census accuracy;
- Had limited administrative reach below the county level;
- Relied heavily on village self-regulation and family responsibility
In these respects, early Ming governance resembles the early Han period, particularly before Emperor Wu’s expansion of fiscal and military capacity—culminating eventually in the vast examination-based bureaucracy of the Song (960–1279). As with the Han, later Ming rulers dramatically increased taxation, monetization, and bureaucratic penetration as population recovered and administrative techniques improved.
The reason for this is clear enough: the early Ming state emerged from catastrophe. The collapse of the Yuan dynasty left China demographically depleted, economically dislocated, and administratively fractured. Transport infrastructure was damaged, local records were unreliable, and revenue systems were rudimentary. Under these conditions, the state simply lacked the capacity to govern intrusively, even if it had wished to do so.
This distinction between ideological commitment and practical capacity is central to a Rothbardian analysis of political power. In Power and Market, Murray Rothbard argues that state intervention expands not because rulers become more ambitious or more corrupt, but because the tools of extraction and control improve. When states acquire better information, communication, and enforcement mechanisms, they invariably use them—as the entire history of the modern nation-state shows.
From this perspective, early Ming restraint is not evidence of limited government, but of limited ability. The state’s claims to authority were expansive; its means were not.
The tone of early Ming governance was shaped decisively by the dynasty’s founder, the Hongwu Emperor. Hongwu distrusted scholar-officials, purged the bureaucracy repeatedly, and attempted to rule through personal authority rather than institutional delegation. He emphasized moral exhortation, collective responsibility, and hereditary occupational categories.
These measures have sometimes been mistaken for decentralization. In reality, they reflected personalist autocracy combined with administrative weakness. Hongwu did not seek to limit sovereign power; he sought to exercise it directly, without intermediaries. His suspicion of bureaucrats was not a theory of limited government, but a fear of rivals.
Rothbard was acutely sensitive to this distinction. In “Anatomy of the State,” he emphasizes that hostility toward bureaucracy does not imply hostility toward power. Autocrats may resist administrative constraints while maintaining absolute authority over subjects. The early Ming state exemplifies this pattern.
Claims of proto-liberalism also obscure the ideological foundations of Ming governance. While Confucian rhetoric dominated official discourse, the institutional structure of the state remained thoroughly Legalist. The Ming legal code was harsh, punishments severe, and collective responsibility widely enforced. Families and villages were held accountable for individual misconduct, reinforcing state authority rather than limiting it.
This fusion of Confucian moral language with Legalist enforcement mechanisms was not unique to the Ming, but it became especially pronounced during the dynasty. Confucianism functioned as a legitimating ideology, sanctifying hierarchy and obedience, while Legalist tools supplied the coercive apparatus.
Rothbard repeatedly emphasized the role of ideology in sustaining state power. In The Ethics of Liberty, he argues that moral frameworks often serve to internalize obedience, making coercion appear natural or virtuous. The early Ming state relied on Confucian ethics to justify obedience even when its administrative reach was shallow.
The absence of intrusion, therefore, did not reflect limits on authority, it reflected limits on enforcement.
The frequent comparison between early Ming and early Han governance is instructive. In both cases, light administration followed periods of collapse. In both cases, rulers relied heavily on local elites and customary norms. And, in both cases, increased state capacity eventually produced greater extraction and control.
The Han dynasty illustrates the point clearly. Early Han rulers governed lightly not because they believed in limited rule, but because the state was recovering from war and consolidation. As fiscal capacity expanded under Emperor Wu, intervention followed—taxation increased, monopolies were established, and administrative penetration deepened.
The Ming followed the same trajectory. What changed was not ideology, but capacity.
The early Ming case exposes a recurring error in comparative political theory: equating low extraction with respect for liberty. Rothbard rejected this equation categorically. Liberty, for Rothbard, requires principled limits on authority, grounded in rights, not the temporary inability of rulers to act.
In For a New Liberty, Rothbard stresses that a state restrained only by circumstance remains a threat. Once conditions change, so will behavior. The Ming state’s later expansion was not a betrayal of early principles; it was the fulfillment of long-standing claims to sovereignty once means allowed. For it is a fact that early Ming China had:
- No doctrine of individual rights;
- No constitutional constraints;
- No concept of law binding rulers;
- No recognized right of resistance
In such a context, describing governance as “limited” is misleading. Authority was absolute in theory, even when muted in practice.
Some scholars have attributed early Ming non-intrusiveness to residual Daoist influence. While Daoist cultural norms may have shaped social expectations, they did not structure governance. Daoism survived alongside the state, not within it. Administrative institutions, legal codes, and fiscal practices remained Legalist in substance, and overwhelmingly Confucian in moral rhetoric.
This reinforces a central Rothbardian insight: ideas hostile to power do not restrain states unless institutionalized. Daoism eroded legitimacy culturally but did not impose constraints politically.
It should be clear, then, that the early Ming dynasty does not represent a proto-liberal order. It represents a weak state recovering from collapse, exercising authority unevenly while claiming it fully. Its relative non-intrusiveness was contingent, fragile, and temporary—disappearing as soon as administrative capacity expanded.
From a Rothbardian perspective, the lesson is clear. Liberty that depends on weakness is not liberty at all. Without rights, constraints, and resistance, quiet governance is merely power waiting for tools.
Early Ming China was not a model of restraint, but a reminder that states grow not when they discover worse ideas, but when they acquire better means.
















