Thursday, 23 October 2008

It's not a failure of capitalism

Actually, this is important:

The news media are in the process of creating a great new historical myth. This is the myth that our present financial crisis is the result of economic freedom and laissez-faire capitalism.


And boy, does that grate!

The mentality displayed in these statements is so completely and utterly at odds with the actual meaning of laissez faire that it would be capable of describing the economic policy of the old Soviet Union as one of laissez faire in its last decades. By its logic, that is how it would have to describe the policy of Brezhnev and his successors of allowing workers on collective farms to cultivate plots of land of up to one acre in size on their own account and sell the produce in farmers' markets in Soviet cities. According to the logic of the media, that too would be "laissez faire" — at least compared to the time of Stalin.

Laissez-faire capitalism has a definite meaning, which is totally ignored, contradicted, and downright defiled by such statements as those quoted above. Laissez-faire capitalism is a politico-economic system based on private ownership of the means of production and in which the powers of the state are limited to the protection of the individual's rights against the initiation of physical force. This protection applies to the initiation of physical force by other private individuals, by foreign governments, and, most importantly, by the individual's own government. This last is accomplished by such means as a written constitution, a system of division of powers and checks and balances, an explicit bill of rights, and eternal vigilance on the part of a citizenry with the right to keep and bear arms. Under laissez-faire capitalism, the state consists essentially just of a police force, law courts, and a national defense establishment, which deter and combat those who initiate the use of physical force. And nothing more.


And if we look around the world, we can see for sure that in neither the EU or the UK is this remotely true. But what about the USA?

The utter absurdity of statements claiming that the present political-economic environment of the United States in some sense represents laissez-faire capitalism becomes as glaringly obvious as anything can be when one keeps in mind the extremely limited role of government under laissez-faire and then considers the following facts about the present-day United States:

1. Government spending in the United States currently equals more than forty percent of national income, i.e., the sum of all wages and salaries and profits and interest earned in the country. This is without counting any of the massive off-budget spending such as that on account of the government enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Nor does it count any of the recent spending on assorted "bailouts." What this means is that substantially more than forty dollars of every one hundred dollars of output are appropriated by the government against the will of the individual citizens who produce that output. The money and the goods involved are turned over to the government only because the individual citizens wish to stay out of jail. Their freedom to dispose of their own incomes and output is thus violated on a colossal scale. In contrast, under laissez-faire capitalism, government spending would be on such a modest scale that a mere revenue tariff might be sufficient to support it. The corporate and individual income taxes, inheritance and capital gains taxes, and social security and Medicare taxes would not exist.

2. There are presently fifteen federal cabinet departments, nine of which exist for the very purpose of respectively interfering with housing, transportation, healthcare, education, energy, mining, agriculture, labor, and commerce, and virtually all of which nowadays routinely ride roughshod over one or more important aspects of the economic freedom of the individual. Under laissez-faire capitalism, eleven of the fifteen cabinet departments would cease to exist and only the departments of justice, defense, state, and treasury would remain. Within those departments, moreover, further reductions would be made, such as the abolition of the IRS in the Treasury Department and the Antitrust Division in the Department of Justice.

3. The economic interference of today's cabinet departments is reinforced and amplified by more than one hundred federal agencies and commissions, the most well known of which include, besides the IRS, the FRB and FDIC, the FBI and CIA, the EPA, FDA, SEC, CFTC, NLRB, FTC, FCC, FERC, FEMA, FAA, CAA, INS, OHSA, CPSC, NHTSA, EEOC, BATF, DEA, NIH, and NASA. Under laissez-faire capitalism, all such agencies and commissions would be done away with, with the exception of the FBI, which would be reduced to the legitimate functions of counterespionage and combating crimes against person or property that take place across state lines.

4. To complete this catalog of government interference and its trampling of any vestige of laissez faire, as of the end of 2007, the last full year for which data are available, the Federal Register contained fully seventy-three thousand pages of detailed government regulations. This is an increase of more than ten thousand pages since 1978, the very years during which our system, according to one of The New York Times articles quoted above, has been "tilted in favor of business deregulation and against new rules." Under laissez-faire capitalism, there would be no Federal Register. The activities of the remaining government departments and their subdivisions would be controlled exclusively by duly enacted legislation, not the rule-making of unelected government officials.

5. And, of course, to all of this must be added the further massive apparatus of laws, departments, agencies, and regulations at the state and local level. Under laissez-faire capitalism, these too for the most part would be completely abolished and what remained would reflect the same kind of radical reductions in the size and scope of government activity as those carried out on the federal level.



So I guess there's no laissez-faire in the US either!

But wait, there's more:

Beyond all this is the further fact that the actual responsibility for our financial crisis lies precisely with massive government intervention, above all the intervention of the Federal Reserve System in attempting to create capital out of thin air, in the belief that the mere creation of money and its being made available in the loan market is a substitute for capital created by producing and saving. This is a policy it has pursued since its founding, but with exceptional vigor since 2001, in its efforts to overcome the collapse of the stock market bubble whose creation it had previously inspired.


And of course, our central banks here and in the EU have been doing exactly the same thing. Regulation, interference and bad policy -- fuck all to do with capitalism.

4 comments:

Mark Wadsworth said...

'Capitalism' is a vague term.

What this all illustrates is that gummints deliberately stoked a house price boom, primarily via lax lending, supply restrictions and light taxation of home ownership.

Where the government could have intervened (banking supervision, liberalising planning laws and taxing land values not incomes) it deliberately did not.

So it's not a failure of capitalism; it's not a failure of free markets (as land is far from a free market) and it's not even a failure of government intervention in free markets. It's actually a triumphant success of deliberate gummint policy.

Except for that bit at the end where we have a house price crash, a credit crunch, and a recession. But even then, gummint can at least massively enlarge its powers at taxpayers' expense by nationalising banks, so it's still a win-win as far as gummints are concerned.

Anonymous said...

Does that mean that "Joined-Up-Government" is dangerous? That is to say, the integration of different units with "powers", so that there is then one "over-arching" power - to use their own word?

Nick von Mises said...

Here here.

I've spent the last 12 months arguing with the full gamut of keynesian/chicago/trot/guardianista fools precisely this point.

Of course the first 9 months I had to persuade them the crisis was coming at all cos they hadn't discovered it yet, being keynesian/chicago/trot/guardianista fools.

Amazing how everyone is a Marxist now, and how popular this meme is. But of course it would be, right, because it gives them a chance to blame their betters.

Simon Cooke said...

Capitalism is EVIL. Capitalism is BAD. Capitalism "condemns millions to poverty". Capitalism creates WAR. Capitalism oppresses the workers.

...or would you prefer that Capitalism is a term invented by Marx as a straw man to justify his arguments for a dictatorship of the workers. And Karl was of course the greatest of all economists and the most important philosopher.