Markets Not Capitalism: Individualist Anarchism Against Bosses, Inequality, Corporate Power, and Structural Poverty
Markets Not Capitalism: Individualist Anarchism Against Bosses, Inequality, Corporate Power, and Structural Poverty
Markets Not Capitalism: Individualist Anarchism Against Bosses, Inequality, Corporate Power, and Structural Poverty
Cleyre, and such contemporary innovators as Kevin Carson and Roderick Long. It
introduces an eye-opening approach to radical social thought, rooted equally in
libertarian socialism and market anarchism.
“We on the left need a good shake to get us thinking, and these arguments
for market anarchism do the job in lively and thoughtful fashion.”
– Alexander Cockburn, editor and publisher, Counterpunch
“Anarchy is not chaos; nor is it violence. This rich and provocative gathering
of essays by anarchists past and present imagines society unburdened by
state, markets un-warped by capitalism. Those whose preference is for an
economy that is humane, decentralized, and free will read this book with –
“It will be hard for any honest libertarian to read this book – or others like
and think tanks. In a world where libertarianism has mostly been deformed
into a defense of corporate privilege, it is worth being told or reminded
what a free market actually is. Our ideal society is not ‘Tesco/Wal-Mart
minus the State.’ It is a community of communities of free people. All thanks
to the authors and editors of this book.”
– Sean Gabb, director, UK Libertarian Alliance
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In memory of
Karl Hess
CoNteNts
acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ix
introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Part One . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
The Problem of Deformed Markets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
1. the Freed Market. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19
William Gillis
Part Two . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
Identities and Isms
5. Market anarchism as stigmergic socialism . . . . . . . . . . .85
Brad Spangler
24. regulation: the Cause, Not the Cure, of the Financial Crisis. . .241
Roderick T. Long
25. industrial economics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .247
Dyer D. Lum
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .289
Karl Hess
. . . . . . . . . .293
Murray N. Rothbard
Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .425
aCkNoWleDGeMeNts
This book has been a labor of love on the part of many people.
Our comrades at the Center for a Stateless Society – including Brad
Spangler, Roderick T. Long, Kevin Carson, Charles W. Johnson, Sheldon
Richman, Chris Lempa, Joseph R. Stromberg, James Tuttle, Roman Pearah,
Anna O. Morgenstern, Tom Knapp, Darian Worden, David S. D’Amato,
Tennyson McCalla, Mike Gogulski, Stacy Litz, Ross Kenyon, Matt Gold,
Mariana Evica, Rocco Stanzione, Wendy McElroy, and Stephan Kinsella –
deserve our ongoing thanks for, among other things, the stimulation they
have provided for this and other projects. We are particularly grateful to
Roderick for proposing an April 2010 Association of Private Enterprise
Education symposium with the title “Free Market Anti-Capitalism?” in
which a number of us participated along with our friend Steven Horwitz,
that provided the initial impetus for work on the project.
Alex Cockburn, Bill Kauffman, Sean Gabb, and Ken MacLeod deserve
our thanks for their willingness to endorse the book. We are also grateful
to Stevphen Shukaitis of Minor Compositions and Autonomedia for his
continued support. More broadly, we appreciate Autonomedia’s willing-
ness to release a potentially controversial project like this one. We are very
much aware of the ambivalence members of the Autonomedia collective
and some of Autonomedia’s constituents feel regarding arguments featured
in the book, and of course we understand that all those associated with the
press reserve the right to disagree profoundly with us. At the same time, we
appreciate and share their hope that the book will both prompt productive
conversation within the anarchist milieu and facilitate the redirection in a
more positive and liberatory direction of the “libertarian populism” cur-
rently attracting attention in the United States. We are very pleased by the
collective’s willingness to accept us as fellow leftists and fellow opponents
of corporate privilege, even as some if its members view our proposed so-
lutions with pronounced skepticism. Similarly, we are thankful for rapid,
appealing, eye-catching work to the book’s designer, who, deeply uncom-
fortable with some aspects of the book’s content, asked not to be identified
as associated with the project.
Charles would like to extend special thanks to Sheldon Richman, Ten-
nyson McCalla, and James Tuttle, for encouragement, helpful suggestions,
x | Markets Not Capitalism
and for immensely helpful support to the many disparate projects that
came together in this book; to his comrades and interlocutors – Abe, Kelly,
Kaleb, Mitch, Rachel, Nicole, Bobby, Irina and Joanna – from Vegas An-
archist Cafe and Living Without Borders; and for debts far too great to
account – in the making of this book, and for everything else besides – to
his teacher, Roderick T. Long; his father, Paul M. Johnson; and his beloved
companion, Laura Breitenbeck. Without them, none of this would have
been possible.
On Gary’s part, thanks are due to the usual suspects: Elenor Webb,
Jeffrey Cassidy, Annette Bryson, Aena Prakash, Alexander Lian, Andrew
Howe, Angela Keaton, Anne-Marie Pearson, Bart Willruth, Carole Pate-
man, Craig R. Kinzer, David B. Hoppe, David R. Larson, Deborah K.
Dunn, Donna Carlson, Ellen Hubbell, Eva Pascal, Fritz Guy, Heather
Ferguson, Jan M. Holden, Jesse Leamon, Joel Sandefur, John Elder, John
Thomas, Julio C. Muñoz, Kenneth A. Dickey, Lawrence T. Geraty, Less
Antman, Ligia Radoias, Maria Zlateva, Michael Orlando, Nabil Abu-Assal,
Patricia Cabrera, Robert E. Rustad, Jr., Ronel Harvey, Ruth E. E. Burke,
Sel J. Hwahng, W. Kent Rogers, and Wonil Kim. He especially appreci-
ates the moral and logistical support Elenor provided as work on the book
was completed. As usual, John Thomas ensured that La Sierra University’s
School of Business was a congenial place in which to work on a scholarly
project of this nature.
We’ve dedicated Markets Not Capitalism to Karl Hess – a gentle, insight-
ful, graceful, articulate, and passionate believer in freedom, decentraliza-
tion, and peaceful, voluntary cooperation. Karl bridged the gap between
the Old Right and the New Left, powerfully indicted the political status
quo, and provided a compelling and unsettling model of life outside the
state’s clutches. Flawed like everyone else, he was nonetheless good and
decent, embodying the commitment to human liberation we seek to foster
with this book.
We thank publishers of copyrighted material for reprint permission.
iNtroDuCtioN
M arket anarchists believe in Market exchange, not in econoMic privilege. they
believe in free markets, not in capitalism. What makes them anarchists
is their belief in a fully free and consensual society – a society in which order
is achieved not through legal force or political government, but through
free agreements and voluntary cooperation on a basis of equality. What
makes them market anarchists is their recognition of free market exchange
as a vital medium for peacefully anarchic social order. But the markets they
envision are not like the privilege-riddled “markets” we see around us to-
day. Markets laboring under government and capitalism are pervaded by
persistent poverty, ecological destruction, radical inequalities of wealth, and
concentrated power in the hands of corporations, bosses, and landlords.
The consensus view is that exploitation – whether of human beings or of
nature – is simply the natural result of markets left unleashed. The consen-
sus view holds that private property, competitive pressure, and the profit
motive must – whether for good or for ill – inevitably lead to capitalistic
wage labor, to the concentration of wealth and social power in the hands of
a select class, or to business practices based on growth at all costs and the
devil take the hindmost.
Market anarchists dissent. They argue that economic privilege is a real and
pervasive social problem, but that the problem is not a problem of private
property, competition, or profits per se. It is not a problem of the market
form but of markets deformed – deformed by the long shadow of historical
injustices and the ongoing, continuous exercise of legal privilege on behalf of
capital. The market anarchist tradition is radically pro-market and anticapi-
talist – reflecting its consistent concern with the deeply political character of
corporate power, the dependence of economic elites on the tolerance or active
support of the state, the permeable barriers between political and economic
elites, and the cultural embeddedness of hierarchies established and main-
tained by state-perpetrated and state-sanctioned violence.
belief – common to both the anti-market Left and the pro-capitalist Right
– that these five features of the market form must entail a social order of
bosses, landlords, centralized corporations, class exploitation, cut-throat
business dealings, immiserated workers, structural poverty, or large-scale
economic inequality. They insist, instead, on five distinctive claims about
markets, freedom, and privilege:
differences might be sketched between those who were most frequently called
“individualists,” such as Tucker or Yarros, and those who were most frequent-
ly called “mutualists,” such as Dyer Lum, Clarence Swartz, or the European
followers of Proudhon—in particular, that while both supported the eman-
cipation of workers and ensuring that all workers had access to capital, the
“mutualists” tended to emphasize the specific importance of worker-owned
co-operatives and direct worker ownership over the means of production,
while “individualists” tended to emphasize that under conditions of equal
freedom, workers would settle on whatever arrangements of ownership made
most sense under the circumstances.
Complicating matters, “mutualism” is now retrospectively used, in the
twenty-first century, to refer to most anti-capitalist market anarchists, or spe-
cifically to those (like Kevin Carson) who differ from the so-called “Lockean”
position on land ownership—who believe that land ownership can be based
only on personal occupancy and use, ruling out absentee landlordship as un-
desirable and unworthy of legal protection. “Mutualists” in this sense of the
term includes both those who were most frequently called “individualists”
during the first wave (such as Tucker) and those who were most frequently
called “mutualists” (such as Lum).
6 | Markets Not Capitalism
ing socialist movement. But he argued against Marx and other socialists
that market relationships could be fruitful and non-exploitative provided
that the market-distorting privileges conferred by the four monopolies were
eliminated.
The radicalism of Tucker and his compatriots and that of the strand of
anarchism they birthed was arguably less apparent after the breaking of the
first wave than it was to their contemporaries. Perhaps in part this is because
of their disputes with representatives of other anarchist tendencies, whose
criticisms of their views have influenced the perceptions of later anarchists.
It is also, unavoidably, a consequence of the identification of many of their
twentieth-century descendants with the right wing of the libertarian move-
ment and thus as apologists for the corporate elite and its social dominance.
Though there were honorable exceptions, twentieth-century market-
oriented libertarians frequently lionized corporate titans, ignored or ratio-
nalized the abuse of workers, and trivialized or embraced economic and
social hierarchy. While many endorsed the critique of the state and of state-
secured privilege offered by Tucker and his fellow individualists, they often
overlooked or rejected the radical implications of the earlier individualists’
class-based analysis of structural injustice. There were, in short, few vocal
enthusiasts for the individualists’ brand of anticapitalism in the early-to-
mid-twentieth century.
The most radical fringe of the market-oriented strand of the libertarian
movement – represented by thinkers like Murray Rothbard and Roy Childs
– generally embraced, not the anticapitalist economics of individualism
and mutualism, but a position its advocates described as “anarcho-capital-
ism.” The future free society they envisioned was a market society – but one
in which market relationships were little changed from business as usual
and the end of state control was imagined as freeing business to do much
what it had been doing before, rather than unleashing competing forms
of economic organization, which might radically transform market forms
from the bottom up.
But in the “second wave” of the 1960s, the family of anarchist social
movements – revived by antiauthoritarian and countercultural strands of
the New Left – and the antiwar radicals among the libertarians began to re-
discover and republish the works of the mutualists and the other individu-
alists. “Anarcho-capitalists” such as Rothbard and Childs began to question
libertarianism’s historical alliance with the Right, and to abandon defenses
of big business and actually-existing capitalism in favor of a more consistent
left-wing market anarchism. Perhaps the most visible and dramatic example
was Karl Hess’s embrace of the New Left radicalism, and his abandonment
of “capitalist” economics in favor of small-scale, community-based, non-
introduction | 7
3 To be sure, while Hess’s social attitudes do not seem to have changed substan-
tially after he made these statements, he became less wedded to the language
of anti-capitalism; he published Capitalism for Kids: Growing Up to Be Your
Own Boss in 1986. But there is no reason to doubt that what Hess meant by
“capitalism” here was what contemporary left-wing market anarchists mean
when they talk about peaceful, voluntary exchange in a genuinely freed mar-
ket, rather than what he had rejected in 1975. Certainly, as the book’s sub-
title suggests, he had no intention of steering young readers into careers as
corporate drones.
8 | Markets Not Capitalism
WHat’s iN it
With these articles, we seek to help unearth a tradition of radical dissent
that arguably deserves greater attention. But we hope that they will prove
to be of more than historical interest. Our goal is to offer detailed analyses
of key issues related to power and resistance, provide a basis for conversa-
tion between individualist anarchists and representatives of other anarchist
tendencies, and clearly undermine the self-serving corporatist apologetics,
and the claim to the “libertarian” label, of defenders of conventionally pro-
capitalist “vulgar libertarianism.”
The book collects essays from the late nineteenth century to the present,
organized into eight parts.4
Part One, “The Problem of Deformed Markets,” introduces the central
theme of the text: the political deformation that distorts, obliterates, or per-
verts the naturally positive and mutual relationships characteristic of mar-
kets, and the naturally productive and harmonizing role of market forces
such as competition, trade, and the division of labor, into the alienating,
exploitative structure of state capitalism. In “The Freed Market,” William
Gillis shows how a simple change of tense can make all the difference in
clarifying the difference between market anarchy and statist capitalism. In
“State Socialism and Anarchism,” Benjamin Tucker explains why a market-
oriented variety of anarchism can be understood as part of the socialist
tradition, provided the role of privilege in bringing about the evils against
which socialists rightly protest is understood. In excerpts taken from his
General Idea of the Revolution in the Nineteenth Century, Proudhon argues
that competition, division of labor, commerce, contract, and property –
economic forces which are, today, forces driving exploitation, alienation
and poverty – can be transfigured by the revolutionary dissolution of po-
litical privilege, and the replacement of the authoritarian “system of laws”
by the mutual “system of contracts.”5 In “Markets Freed from Capitalism,”
from her book Healing Our World, and Charles Johnson’s “The Clean Water
Act versus Clean Water” continue developing this the theme by examining
ways in which capitalist privilege, rather than free-market profit motives,
encourage environmental destruction and the anti-environmental ethic of
limitless “growth” at all costs – and in which, in freed markets, community
activists would be far freer to use market pressure and direct action to pre-
serve the environment and heal the damage already inflicted by ecologically
unsustainable corporate capitalism. In “Context-Keeping and Community
Organizing,” Sheldon Richman provides a strong defense and synthetic
overview of the possibility of freed market grassroots social activism.
The individualist anarchist tendency is alive and well. Markets Not Capi-
talism offers a window onto this tendency’s history and highlights its po-
tential contribution to the global anticapitalist movement. We seek in this
book to stimulate a thriving conversation among libertarians of all varieties,
as well as those with other political commitments, about the most fruitful
path toward human liberation. We are confident that individualist anar-
chist insights into the liberatory potential of markets without capitalism
can enrich that conversation, and we encourage you to join it.
passively perpetuates the Red myth that Corporatism and wanton accu-
mulation of Kapital are the natural consequences of free association and
competition between individuals. (It is not.)
But “freed” has an element of distance and, whatsmore, a degree of ac-
tion to it. It becomes so much easier to state things like: Freed markets
don’t have corporations. A freed market naturally equalizes wealth. Social
hierarchy is by definition inefficient and this is particularly evident in freed
markets.
It moves us out of the present tense and into the theoretical realm of
“after the revolution,” where like the Reds we can still use present day ex-
amples to back theory, but we’re not tied into implicitly defending every
horror in today’s market. It’s easier to pick out separate mechanics in the
market and make distinctions. Also, have I mentioned that it makes an
implicit call to action?
I don’t know if anyone else has stumbled over this before, but it’s been
useful and I felt I should share.
2
Instead of a Book By A Man Too Busy to
Write One: A Fragmentary Exposition of
Philosophical Anarchism (New York. tucker
1897) 1-18.
p robably no agitation has ever attained the Magnitude, either in the nuMber of
its recruits or the area of its influence, which has been attained by Mod-
ern Socialism, and at the same time been so little understood and so mis-
understood, not only by the hostile and the indifferent, but by the friendly,
and even by the great mass of its adherents themselves. This unfortunate
and highly dangerous state of things is due partly to the fact that the hu-
man relationships which this movement – if anything so chaotic can be
called a movement – aims to transform, involve no special class or classes,
but literally all mankind; partly to the fact that these relationships are in-
finitely more varied and complex in their nature than those with which
any special reform has ever been called upon to deal; and partly to the fact
that the great moulding forces of society, the channels of information and
enlightenment, are well-nigh exclusively under the control of those whose
22 | Benjamin r. tucker
conflict will be still to come. In that case all the eight-hour men, all the
trades-unionists, all the Knights of Labor, all the land nationalizationists,
all the greenbackers, and, in short, all the members of the thousand and
one different battalions belonging to the great army of Labor, will have
deserted their old posts, and, these being arrayed on the one side and the
other, the great battle will begin. What a final victory for the State Socialists
will mean, and what a final victory for the Anarchists will mean, it is the
purpose of this paper to briefly state.
To do this intelligently, however, I must first describe the ground com-
mon to both, the features that make Socialists of each of them.
The economic principles of Modern Socialism are a logical deduction
from the principle laid down by Adam Smith in the early chapters of his
Wealth of Nations, namely, that labor is the true measure of price. But Adam
Smith, after stating this principle most clearly and concisely, immediately
abandoned all further consideration of it to devote himself to showing what
actually does measure price, and how, therefore, wealth is at present dis-
tributed. Since his day nearly all the political economists have followed his
example by confining their function to the description of society as it is, in
its industrial and commercial phases. Socialism, on the contrary, extends
its function to the description of society as it should be, and the discovery
of the means of making it what it should be. Half a century or more after
Smith enunciated the principle above stated, Socialism picked it up where
he had dropped it, and in following it to its logical conclusions, made it the
basis of a new economic philosophy.
This seems to have been done independently by three different men, of
three different nationalities, in three different languages: Josiah Warren, an
American; Pierre J. Proudhon, a Frenchman; Karl Marx, a German Jew.
That Warren and Proudhon arrived at their conclusions singly and unaided
is certain; but whether Marx was not largely indebted to Proudhon for his
economic ideas is questionable. However this may be, Marx’s presentation of
the ideas was in so many respects peculiarly his own that he is fairly entitled
to the credit of originality. That the work of this interesting trio should have
been done so nearly simultaneously would seem to indicate that Socialism
was in the air, and that the time was ripe and the conditions favorable for
the appearance of this new school of thought. So far as priority of time is
concerned, the credit seems to belong to Warren, the American – a fact which
should be noted by the stump orators who are so fond of declaiming against
Socialism as an imported article. Of the purest revolutionary blood, too, this
Warren, for he descended from the Warren who fell at Bunker Hill.
From Smith’s principle that labor is the true measure of price – or, as
Warren phrased it, that cost is the proper limit of price – these three men
24 | Benjamin r. tucker
made the following deductions: that the natural wage of labor is its prod-
uct; that this wage, or product, is the only just source of income (leaving
out, of course, gift, inheritance, etc.); that all who derive income from any
other source abstract it directly or indirectly from the natural and just wage
of labor; that this abstracting process generally takes one of three forms –
interest, rent, and profit; that these three constitute the trinity of usury, and
are simply different methods of levying tribute for the use of capital; that,
capital being simply stored-up labor which has already received its pay in
full, its use ought to be gratuitous, on the principle that labor is the only
basis of price; that the lender of capital is entitled to its return intact, and
nothing more; that the only reason why the banker, the stockholder, the
landlord, the manufacturer, and the merchant are able to exact usury from
labor lies in the fact that they are backed by legal privilege, or monopoly;
and that the only way to secure labor the enjoyment of its entire product,
or natural wage, is to strike down monopoly.
It must not be inferred that either Warren, Proudhon, or Marx used
exactly this phraseology, or followed exactly this line of thought, but it
indicates definitely enough the fundamental ground taken by all three, and
their substantial thought up to the limit to which they went in common.
And, lest I may be accused of stating the positions and arguments of these
men incorrectly, it may be well to say in advance that I have viewed them
broadly, and that, for the purpose of sharp, vivid, and emphatic compari-
son and contrast, I have taken considerable liberty with their thought by
rearranging it in an order, and often in a phraseology, of my own, but, I
am satisfied, without, in so doing, misrepresenting them in any essential
particular.
It was at this point – the necessity of striking down monopoly – that
came the parting of their ways. Here the road forked. They found that they
must turn either to the right or to the left – follow either the path of Au-
thority or the path of Liberty. Marx went one way; Warren and Proudhon
the other. Thus were born State Socialism and Anarchism.
First, then, State Socialism, which may be described as the doctrine that
all the affairs of men should be managed by the government, regardless of indi-
vidual choice.
Marx, its founder, concluded that the only way to abolish the class mo-
nopolies was to centralize and consolidate all industrial and commercial
interests, all productive and distributive agencies, in one vast monopoly
in the hands of the State. The government must become banker, manu-
facturer, farmer, carrier, and merchant, and in these capacities must suffer
no competition. Land, tools, and all instruments of production must be
wrested from individual hands, and made the property of the collectiv-
state socialism and anarchism | 25
ity. To the individual can belong only the products to be consumed, not
the means of producing them. A man may own his clothes and his food,
but not the sewing machine which makes his shirts or the spade which
digs his potatoes. Product and capital are essentially different things; the
former belongs to individuals, the latter to society. Society must seize the
capital which belongs to it, by the ballot if it can, by revolution if it must.
Once in possession of it, it must administer it on the majority principle,
though its organ, the State, utilize it in production and distribution, fix all
prices by the amount of labor involved, and employ the whole people in its
workshops, farms, stores, etc. The nation must be transformed into a vast
bureaucracy, and every individual into a State official. Everything must be
done on the cost principle, the people having no motive to make a profit
out of themselves. Individuals not being allowed to own capital, no one can
employ another, or even himself. Every man will be a wage-receiver, and the
State the only wage-payer. He who will not work for the State must starve,
or, more likely, go to prison. All freedom of trade must disappear. Competi-
tion must be utterly wiped out. All industrial and commercial activity must
be centered in one vast, enormous, all-inclusive monopoly. The remedy for
monopolies is MONOPOLY.
Such is the economic programme of State Socialism as adopted from
Karl Marx. The history of its growth and progress cannot be told here. In
this country the parties that uphold it are known as the Socialistic Labor
Party, which pretends to follow Karl Marx; the Nationalists, who follow
Karl Marx filtered through Edward Bellamy; and the Christian Socialists,
who follow Karl Marx filtered through Jesus Christ.
What other applications this principle of Authority, once adopted in
the economic sphere, will develop is very evident. It means the absolute
control by the majority of all individual conduct. The right of such control
is already admitted by the State Socialists, though they maintain that, as a
matter of fact, the individual would be allowed a much larger liberty than
he now enjoys. But he would only be allowed it; he could not claim it as his
own. There would be no foundation of society upon a guaranteed equality
of the largest possible liberty. Such liberty as might exist would exist by suf-
ferance and could be taken away at any moment. Constitutional guarantees
would be of no avail. There would be but one article in the constitution of
a State Socialistic country: “The right of the majority is absolute.”
The claim of the State Socialists, however, that this right would not be
exercised in matters pertaining to the individual in the more intimate and
private relations of his life is not borne out by the history of governments. It
has ever been the tendency of power to add to itself, to enlarge its sphere, to
encroach beyond the limits set for it; and where the habit of resisting such
26 | Benjamin r. tucker
means of impoverishing the many to enrich the few. And when the light
burst in upon them, they saw that this could be done by subjecting capital
to the natural law of competition, thus bringing the price of its own use
down to cost – that is, to nothing beyond the expenses incidental to han-
dling and transferring it. So they raised the banner of Absolute Free Trade;
free trade at home, as well as with foreign countries; the logical carrying
out of the Manchester doctrine; laissez faire the universal rule. Under this
banner they began their fight upon monopolies, whether the all-inclusive
monopoly of the State Socialists, or the various class monopolies that now
prevail.
Of the latter they distinguished four of principal importance: the money
monopoly, the land monopoly, the tariff monopoly, and the patent mo-
nopoly.
First in the importance of its evil influence they considered the money
monopoly, which consists of the privilege given by the government to cer-
tain individuals, or to individuals holding certain kinds of property, of issu-
ing the circulating medium, a privilege which is now enforced in this coun-
try by a national tax of ten percent, upon all other persons who attempt to
furnish a circulating medium, and by State laws making it a criminal offense
to issue notes as currency. It is claimed that the holders of this privilege con-
trol the rate of interest, the rate of rent of houses and buildings, and the
prices of goods – the first directly, and the second and third indirectly. For,
say Proudhon and Warren, if the business of banking were made free to all,
more and more persons would enter into it until the competition should
become sharp enough to reduce the price of lending money to the labor
cost, which statistics show to be less than three-fourths of once per cent.
In that case the thousands of people who are now deterred from going into
business by the ruinously high rates which they must pay for capital with
which to start and carry on business will find their difficulties removed. If
they have property which they do not desire to convert into money by sale,
a bank will take it as collateral for a loan of a certain proportion of its mar-
ket value at less than one percent discount. If they have no property, but
are industrious, honest, and capable, they will generally be able to get their
individual notes endorsed by a sufficient number of known and solvent
parties; and on such business paper they will be able to get a loan at a bank
on similarly favorable terms. Thus interest will fall at a blow. The banks will
really not be lending capital at all, but will be doing business on the capital
of their customers, the business consisting in an exchange of the known and
widely available credits of the banks for the unknown and unavailable, but
equality good, credits of the customers and a charge therefor of less than
one percent, not as interest for the use of capital, but as pay for the labor
state socialism and anarchism | 29
of running the banks. This facility of acquiring capital will give an unheard
of impetus to business, and consequently create an unprecedented demand
for labor – a demand which will always be in excess of the supply, directly
to the contrary of the present condition of the labor market. Then will be
seen and exemplification of the worlds of Richard Cobden that, when two
laborers are after one employer, wages fall, but when two employers are
after one laborer, wages rise. Labor will then be in a position to dictate its
wages, and will thus secure its natural wage, its entire product. Thus the
same blow that strikes interest down will send wages up. But this is not all.
Down will go profits also. For merchants, instead of buying at high prices
on credit, will borrow money of the banks at less than one per cent, buy at
low prices for cash, and correspondingly reduce the prices of their goods to
their customers. And with the rest will go house-rent. For no one who can
borrow capital at one per cent. with which to build a house of his own will
consent to pay rent to a landlord at a higher rate than that. Such is the vast
claim made by Proudhon and Warren as to the results of the simple aboli-
tion of the money monopoly.
Second in importance comes the land monopoly, the evil effects of
which are seen principally in exclusively agricultural countries, like Ireland.
This monopoly consists in the enforcement by government of land titles
which do not rest upon personal occupancy and cultivation. It was obvious
to Warren and Proudhon that, as soon as individualists should no longer be
protected by their fellows in anything but personal occupancy and cultiva-
tion of land, ground rent would disappear, and so usury have one less leg to
stand on. Their followers of today are disposed to modify this claim to the
extent of admitting that the very small fraction of ground rent which rests,
not on monopoly, but on superiority of soil or site, will continue to exist
for a time and perhaps forever, though tending constantly to a minimum
under conditions of freedom. But the inequality of soils which gives rise to
the economic rent of land, like the inequality of human skill which gives
rise to the economic rent of ability, is not a cause for serious alarm even to
the most thorough opponent of usury, as its nature is not that of a germ
from which other and graver inequalities may spring, but rather that of a
decaying branch which may finally wither and fall.
Third, the tariff monopoly, which consists in fostering production at
high prices and under unfavorable conditions by visiting with the penalty
of taxation those who patronize production at low prices and under favor-
able conditions. The evil to which this monopoly gives rise might more
properly be called misusury than usury, because it compels labor to pay,
not exactly for the use of capital, but rather for the misuse of capital. The
abolition of this monopoly would result in a great reduction in the prices
30 | Benjamin r. tucker
of all articles taxed, and this saving to the laborers who consume these
articles would be another step toward securing to the laborer his natural
wage, his entire product. Proudhon admitted, however, that to abolish this
monopoly before abolishing the money monopoly would be a cruel and
disastrous police, first, because the evil of scarcity of money, created by
the money monopoly, would be intensified by the flow of money out of
the country which would be involved in an excess of imports over exports,
and, second, because that fraction of the laborers of the country which is
now employed in the protected industries would be turned adrift to face
starvation without the benefit of the insatiable demand for labor which
a competitive money system would create. Free trade in money at home,
making money and work abundant, was insisted upon by Proudhon as a
prior condition of free trade in goods with foreign countries.
Fourth, the patent monopoly, which consists in protecting inventors
and authors against competition for a period long enough to enable them
to extort from the people a reward enormously in excess of the labor mea-
sure of their services – in other words, in giving certain people a right of
property for a term of years in laws and facts of Nature, and the power to
exact tribute from others for the use of this natural wealth, which should be
open to all. The abolition of this monopoly would fill its beneficiaries with
a wholesome fear of competition which would cause them to be satisfied
with pay for their services equal to that which other laborers get for theirs,
and to secure it by placing their products and works on the market at the
outset at prices so low that their lines of business would be no more tempt-
ing to competitors than any other lines.
The development of the economic programme which consists in the
destruction of these monopolies and the substitution for them of the freest
competition led its authors to a perception of the fact that all their thought
rested upon a very fundamental principle, the freedom of the individual,
his right of sovereignty over himself, his products, and his affairs, and of
rebellion against the dictation of external authority. Just as the idea of tak-
ing capital away from individuals and giving it to the government started
Marx in a path which ends in making the government everything and the
individual nothing, so the idea of taking capital away from government-
protected monopolies and putting it within easy reach of all individuals
started Warren and Proudhon in a path which ends in making the indi-
vidual everything and the government nothing. If the individual has a right
to govern himself, all external government is tyranny. Hence the necessity
of abolishing the State. This was the logical conclusion to which Warren
and Proudhon were forced, and it became the fundamental article of their
political philosophy. It is the doctrine which Proudhon named Anarchism,
state socialism and anarchism | 31
a word derived from the Greek, and meaning, not necessarily absence of
order, as is generally supposed, but an absence of rule. The Anarchists are
simply unterrified Jeffersonian Democrats. They believe that “the best gov-
ernment is that which governs least,” and that that which governs least is
no government at all. Even the simple police function of protecting person
and property they deny to governments supported by compulsory taxa-
tion. Protection they look upon as a thing to be secured, as long as it is
necessary, by voluntary association and cooperation for self-defence, or as a
commodity to be purchased, like any other commodity, of those who offer
the best article at the lowest price. In their view it is in itself an invasion
of the individual to compel him to pay for or suffer a protection against
invasion that he has not asked for and does not desire. And they further
claim that protection will become a drug in the market, after poverty and
consequently crime have disappeared through the realization of their eco-
nomic programme. Compulsory taxation is to them the life-principle of all
the monopolies, and passive, but organized, resistance to the tax- collector
they contemplate, when the proper time comes, as one of the most effective
methods of accomplishing their purposes.
Their attitude on this is a key to their attitude on all other questions
of a political or social nature. In religion they are atheistic as far as their
own opinions are concerned, for they look upon divine authority and
the religious sanction of morality as the chief pretexts put forward by the
privileged classes for the exercise of human authority. “If God exists,” said
Proudhon, “he is man’s enemy.” And in contrast to Voltaire’s famous epi-
gram, “If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him,” the great
Russian Nihilist, Mikhail Bakunin, placed this antithetical proposition: “If
God existed, it would be necessary to abolish him.” But although, viewing
the divine hierarchy as a contradiction of Anarchy, they do not believe in
it, the Anarchists none the less firmly believe in the liberty to believe in it.
Any denial of religious freedom they squarely oppose.
Upholding thus the right of every individual to be or select his own
priest, they likewise uphold his right to be or select his own doctor. No mo-
nopoly in theology, no monopoly in medicine. Competition everywhere
and always; spiritual advice and medical advice alike to stand or fall on their
own merits. And not only in medicine, but in hygiene, must this principle
of liberty be followed. The individual may decide for himself not only what
to do to get well, but what to do to keep well. No external power must dic-
tate to him what he must and must not eat, drink, wear, or do.
Nor does the Anarchistic scheme furnish any code of morals to be im-
posed upon the individual. “Mind your own business” is its only moral law.
Interference with another’s business is a crime and the only crime, and as
32 | Benjamin r. tucker
such may properly be resisted. In accordance with this view the Anarchists
look upon attempts to arbitrarily suppress vice as in themselves crimes. They
believe liberty and the resultant social well-being to be a sure cure for all the
vices. But they recognize the right of the drunkard, the gambler, the rake, and
the harlot to live their lives until they shall freely choose to abandon them.
In the matter of the maintenance and rearing of children the Anarchists
would neither institute the communistic nursery which the State Socialists
favor nor keep the communistic school system which now prevails. The
nurse and the teacher, like the doctor and the preacher, must be selected
voluntarily, and their services must be paid for by those who patronize
them. Parental rights must not be taken away, and parental responsibilities
must not be foisted upon others.
Even in so delicate a matter as that of the relations of the sexes the Anar-
chists do not shrink from the application of their principle. They acknowl-
edge and defend the right of any man and woman, or any men and women,
to love each other for as long or as short a time as they can, will, or may.
To them legal marriage and legal divorce are equal absurdities. They look
forward to a time when every individual, whether man or woman, shall be
self-supporting, and when each shall have an independent home of his or
her own, whether it be a separate house or rooms in a house with others;
when the love relations between these independent individuals shall be as
varied as are individual inclinations and attractions; and when the children
born of these relations shall belong exclusively to the mothers until old
enough to belong to themselves.
Such are the main features of the Anarchistic social ideal. There is wide
difference of opinion among those who hold it as to the best method of
obtaining it. Time forbids the treatment of that phase of the subject here.
I will simply call attention to the fact that it is an ideal utterly inconsistent
with that of those Communists who falsely call themselves Anarchists while
at the same time advocating a regime of Archism fully as despotic as that
of the State Socialists themselves. And it is an ideal that can be as little
advanced by Prince Kropotkin as retarded by the brooms of those Mrs.
Partingtons of the bench who sentence them to prison; an ideal which
the martyrs of Chicago did far more to help by their glorious death upon
the gallows for the common cause of Socialism than by their unfortunate
advocacy during their lives, in the name of Anarchism, of force as a revo-
lutionary agent and authority as a safeguard of the new social order. The
Anarchists believe in liberty both as an end and means, and are hostile to
anything that antagonizes it.
I should not undertake to summarize this altogether too summary ex-
position of Socialism from the standpoint of Anarchism, did I not find the
state socialism and anarchism | 33
i call certain principles of action economic forces, such as the division of la-
bor, Competition, Collective Force, Exchange, Credit, Property, etc.,
which are to Labor and to Wealth what the distinction of classes, the rep-
resentative system, monarchical heredity, administrative centralization, the
judicial hierarchy, etc., are to the State.
If these forces are held in equilibrium, subject to the laws which are
proper to them, and which do not depend in any way upon the arbitrary
will of man, Labor can be organized, and comfort for all guaranteed. If, on
the other hand, they are left without direction and without counterpoise,
38 | pierre-Joseph proudhon
nounce; and, if they do not insist upon it with the vehemence which they
habitually use in their polemics… it is because they cannot believe that this
perversion of the greatest of economic forces can be avoided.
So the greater the division of labor and the power of machines, the less
the intelligence and skill of hand of the worker. But the more the value of
the worker falls and the demand for labor diminishes, the lower are wages
and the greater is poverty. And it is not a few hundreds of men but millions,
who are the victims of this economic perturbation…
Philanthropic conservatives, admirers of ancient customs, charge the
industrial system with this anomaly. They want to go back to the feudal-
farming period. I say that it is not industry that is at fault, but economic
chaos: I maintain that the principle has been distorted, that there is disor-
ganization of forces, and that to this we must attribute the fatal tendency
with which society is carried away.
Another example.
Competition, next to the division of labor, is one of the most powerful
factors of industry; and at the same time one of the most valuable guaran-
ties. Partly for the sake of it, the first revolution was brought about. The
workmen’s unions, established at Paris some years since, have recently given
it a new sanction by establishing among themselves piece work, and aban-
doning, after their experience of it, the absurd idea of the equality of wages.
Competition is moreover the law of the market, the spice of the trade, the
salt of labor. To suppress competition is to suppress liberty itself; it is to
begin the restoration of the old order from below, in replacing labor by the
rule of favoritism and abuse, of which ’89 rid us.
Yet competition, lacking legal forms and superior regulating intelligence,
has been perverted in turn, like the division of labor. In it, as in the latter,
there is perversion of principle, chaos and a tendency toward evil. This will
appear beyond doubt if we remember that of the thirty-six million souls
who compose the French nation, at least ten millions are wage workers, to
whom competition is forbidden, for whom there is nothing but to struggle
among themselves for their meagre stipend.
Thus that competition, which, as thought in ’89, should be a general
right, is today a matter of exceptional privilege: only they whose capital
permits them to become heads of business concerns may exercise their
competitive rights.
The result is that competition… instead of democratizing industry, aid-
ing the workman, guaranteeing the honesty of trade, has ended in building
up a mercantile and land aristocracy, a thousand times more rapacious than
the old aristocracy of the nobility. Through competition all the profits of
production go to capital; the consumer, without suspecting the frauds of
40 | pierre-Joseph proudhon
and goes, all that is produced and consumed, on all the business of individu-
als, towns and provinces; it maintains the tendency of society toward the im-
poverishment of the masses, the subordinating of the laborers, and the always
growing preponderance of parasite offices. Through the police, it watches the
enemies of the system; through the courts, it condemns and represses them;
through the army it crushes them; through public institutions it distributes,
in such proportions as suit it, knowledge and ignorance; through the Church
it puts to sleep any protest in the hearts of men; through the finances it de-
frays the cost of this vast conspiracy at the expense of workers…
Liberty, equality, progress, with all their oratorical consequences, are
written in the text of the constitutions and the laws; there is no vestige
of them in the institutions… [T]he abuses have changed the face which
they bore before ’89, to assume a different form of organization; they have
diminished neither in number nor gravity. On account of our being en-
grossed with politics, we have lost sight of social economy… All minds
being bewitched with politics, Society turns in a circle of mistakes, driving
capital to a still more crushing agglomeration, the State to an extension of
its prerogatives that is more and more tyrannical, the laboring class to an
irreparable decline, physically, morally and intellectually…
In place of this governmental, feudal and military rule, imitated from
that of the former kings, the new edifice of industrial institutions must
be built; in place of this materialist centralization which absorbs all the
political power, we must create the intellectual and liberal centralization of
economic forces…
soCial liQuiDatioN.
To deduce the organizing principle of the Revolution, the idea at once
economic and legal of reciprocity and of contract, taking account of the dif-
ficulties and opposition which this deduction must encounter, whether on
the part of revolutionary sects, parties or societies, or from the reactionaries
and defenders of the statu quo; to expound the totality of these reforms
and new institutions, wherein labor finds its guaranty, property its limit,
commerce its balance, and government its farewell; that is to tell, from the
intellectual point of view, the story of the Revolution…
Two producers have the right to promise each other, and to guarantee
reciprocally for, the sale or exchange of their respective products, agreeing
upon the articles and the prices…
The same promise of reciprocal sale or exchange, under the same legal
conditions, may exist among an unlimited number of producers: it will be
the same contract, repeated an unlimited number of times.
General idea of the revolution in the Nineteenth Century | 43
French citizens have the right to agree, and, if desired, to club togeth-
er for the establishment of bakeries, butchery shops, grocery stores, etc.,
which will guarantee them the sale and exchange, at a reduced price, and
of good quality, of bread, meat, and all articles of consumption, which the
present mercantile chaos gives them of light weight, adulterated, and at an
exorbitant price. For this purpose the Housekeeper was founded, a society
for the mutual insurance of a just price and honest exchange of products.
By the same rule, citizens have the right to found, for their common
advantage, a Bank, with such capital as they choose, for the purpose of
obtaining at a low price the currency that is indispensable in their transac-
tions, and to compete with individual privileged banks. In agreeing among
themselves with this object, they will only be making use of the right which
is guaranteed to them by the principle of the freedom of commerce…
Thus a Bank of Discount may be a public establishment, and to found it
there is needed neither association, nor fraternity, nor obligation, nor State
intervention; only a reciprocal promise for sale or exchange is needed; in a
word, a simple contract.
This settled, I say that not only may a Bank of Discount be a public
establishment, but that such a bank is needed. Here is the proof:
The Bank of France was founded, with Governmental privilege, by a com-
pany of stockholders, with a capital of $18,000,000. The specie at present
buried in its vaults amounts to about $120,000,000. Thus five-sixths of this
specie which has accumulated in the vaults of the Bank, by the substitution
of paper for metal in general circulation, is the property of the citizens.
Therefore the Bank, by the nature of its mechanism, which consists in using
capital which does not belong to it, ought to be a public institution.
Another cause of this accumulation of specie is the GRATUITOUS
privilege which the Bank of France has obtained from the State of issuing
notes against the specie of which it is the depositary. So, as every privilege is
public property, the Bank of France, by its privilege alone, tends to become
a public institution.
The privilege of issuing bank notes, and of gradually displacing coin by
paper in the circulation, has for its immediate result, on the one hand, to
give to the stockholders of the Bank an amount of interest far in excess of
that due to their capital; on the other, to maintain the price of money at
a high rate, to the great profit of the class of bankers and money-lenders,
but to the great detriment of producers, manufacturers, merchants, con-
sumers of every kind who make use of currency. This excess of interest
paid to stockholders, and the rise in the rates for money, both the result
of the desire which Power has always had to make itself agreeable to the
rich, capitalistic class, are unjust, they cannot last forever; therefore the
44 | pierre-Joseph proudhon
The system of contracts, substituted for the system of laws, would consti-
tute the true government of the man and of the citizen; the true sovereignty
of the people, the REPUBLIC.
For the contract is Liberty, the first term of the republican motto: we
have demonstrated this superabundantly in our studies on the principle
of authority and on social liquidation. I am not free when I depend upon
another for my work, my wages, or the measure of my rights and duties;
whether that other be called the Majority or Society. No more am I free,
either in my sovereignty or in my action, when I am compelled by another
to revise my law, were that other the most skilful and most just of arbiters.
I am no more at all free when I am forced to give myself a representative to
govern me, even if he were my most devoted servant.
The Contract is Equality, in its profound and spiritual essence. Does this
man believe himself my equal; does he not take the attitude of my master
and exploiter, who demands from me more than it suits me to furnish, and
has no intention of returning it to me; who says that I am incapable of
making my own law, and expects me to submit to his?
The contract is Fraternity, because it identifies all interests, unifies all di-
vergences, resolves all contradictions, and in consequence, give wings to the
feelings of goodwill and kindness, which are crushed by economic chaos,
the government of representatives, alien law.
The contract, finally, is order, since it is the organization of economic
forces, instead of the alienation of liberties, the sacrifice of rights, the sub-
ordination of wills.
Let us give an idea of this organism; after liquidation, reconstruction;
after the thesis and antithesis, the synthesis.
Credit.
The organization of credit is three-quarters done by the winding up of
the privileged and usurious banks, and their conversion into a National
Bank of circulation and loan, at ½, ¼, or ⅛ percent. It remains only to
establish branches of the Bank, wherever necessary, and to gradually re-
tire specie from circulation, depriving gold and silver of their privilege as
money.
As for personal credit, it is not for the National Bank to have to do with
it; it is with the workingmen’s unions, and the farming and industrial soci-
eties, that personal credit should be exercised.
Property.
I have shown above how property, repurchased by the house rent or
ground rent, would come back to the tenant farmer and house tenant. It
48 | pierre-Joseph proudhon
ety for the cultivation of their fields; never will they be seen to do so. The
only relations of unity and solidarity which can exist among farm workers,
the only centralization of which rural industry is susceptible, is that which
we have pointed out which results from compensation for economic rent,
mutual insurance, and, most of all, from abolishing rent, which makes ac-
cumulation of land, parcelling out of the soil, serfdom of the peasant, dis-
sipation of inheritances, forever impossible.
It is otherwise with certain industries, which require the combined em-
ployment of a large number of workers, a vast array of machines and hands,
and, to make use of a technical expression, a great division of labor, and in
consequence a high concentration of power. In such cases, workman is nec-
essarily subordinate to workman, man dependent on man. The producer
is no longer, as in the fields, a sovereign and free father of a family; it is a
collectivity. Railroads, mines, factories, are examples.
In such cases, it is one of two things; either the workman, necessarily
a piece-worker, will be simply the employee of the proprietor-capitalist-
promoter; or he will participate in the chances of loss or gain of the estab-
lishment, he will have a voice in the council, in a word, he will become an
associate.
In the first case the workman is subordinated, exploited: his permanent
condition is one of obedience and poverty. In the second case he resumes
his dignity as a man and citizen, he may aspire to comfort, he forms a part
of the producing organization, of which he was before but the slave; as, in
the town, he forms a part of the sovereign power, of which he was before
but the subject.
Thus we need not hesitate, for we have no choice. In cases in which
production requires great division of labor, and a considerable collective
force, it is necessary to form an ASSOCIATION among the workers in
this industry; because without that, they would remain related as sub-
ordinates and superiors, and there would ensue two industrial castes of
masters and wage-workers, which is repugnant to a free and democratic
society.
Such therefore is the rule that we must lay down, if we wish to conduct
the Revolution intelligently.
Every industry, operation or enterprise, which by its nature requires the
employment of a large number of workmen of different specialties, is des-
tined to become a society or a company of workers…
But where the product can be obtained by the action of an individual
or a family, without the co-operation of special abilities, there is no oppor-
tunity for association. Association not being called for by the nature of the
work, cannot be profitable nor of long continuance…
50 | pierre-Joseph proudhon
face of the sphere of trade, then Value, at once the most ideal and most
real of things, may be said to have been constituted, and will express at any
moment, for every kind of product, the true relation of Labor and Wealth,
while preserving its mobility through the eternal progress of industry.
The constitution of Value solves the problem of competition and that of
the rights of Invention; as the organization of workmen’s associations solves
that of collective force and of the division of labor. I can merely indicate at
this moment these consequences of the main theorem; their development
would take too much space in a philosophical review of the Revolution…
convince the mind to set alongside each other the fundamental ideas of,
on the one hand, the politico-religious system… on the other hand, the
economic system.
Government, then, that is to say, Church and State indivisibly united,
has for its dogmas:
1. The original perversity of human nature;
2. The inevitable inequality of fortunes;
3. The permanency of quarrels and wars;
4. The irremediability of poverty.
Whence it is deduced:
The necessity of government, of obedience, of resignation, and of faith.
These principles admitted, as they still are, almost universally, the forms
of authority are already settled. They are:
a) The division of the people into classes or castes, subordinate to one
another; graduated to form a pyramid, at the top of which appears,
like the Divinity upon his altar, like the king upon his throne, AU-
THORITY;
b) Administrative centralization;
c) Judicial hierarchy;
d) Police;
e) Worship.
… What is the aim of this organization?
To maintain order in society, by consecrating and sanctifying obedience
of the citizen to the State, subordination of the poor and to the rich, of the
common people to the upper class, of the worker to the idler, of the layman
to the priest, of the business man to the soldier…
Beneath the governmental machinery, in the shadow of political institu-
tions, out of the sight of statesmen and priests, society is producing its own
organism, slowly and silently; and constructing a new order, the expression
of its vitality and autonomy, and the denial of the old politics, as well as of
the old religion.
This organization, which is as essential to society as it is incompatible
with the present system, has the following principles:
1. The indefinite perfectibility of the individual and of the race;
2. The honorableness of work;
3. The equality of fortunes;
4. The identity of interests;
5. The end of antagonisms;
6. The universality of comfort;
7. The sovereignty of reason;
8. The absolute liberty of the man and of the citizen.
General idea of the revolution in the Nineteenth Century | 55
epiloGue
The fundamental, decisive idea of this Revolution is it not this: NO
MORE AUTHORITY, neither in the Church, nor in the State, nor in
land, nor in money?
No more Authority! That means something we have never seen, some-
thing we have never understood; the harmony of the interest of one with the
interest of all; the identity of collective sovereignty and individual sovereignty.
No more Authority! That means debts paid, servitude abolished, mort-
gages lifted, rents reimbursed, the expense of worship, justice, and the State
58 | pierre-Joseph proudhon
The need for this shift is pressing because – with apologies to Shulamith
Firestone2 – the political economy of state capitalism is so deep as to be
invisible. Or it may appear to be a superficial set of interventions, a prob-
lem that can be solved by a few legal reforms, or perhaps the elimination
of bail-outs and the occasional export subsidy, while preserving more or
less intact the basic recognizable patterns of capitalistic business as usual.
The free market anticapitalist holds there is something deeper, and more
pervasive, at stake than the sort of surface level policy debates to which
pro-capitalist libertarians too often limit their discussions. A fully freed
market means the liberation of vital command posts in the economy,
reclaiming them from points of state control to nexuses of market and
social entrepreneurship – transformations from which a market would
emerge that would look profoundly different from anything we have now.
That so profound a change cannot easily fit into traditional categories
of thought, e.g. “libertarian” or “left-wing,” “laissez-faire” or “socialist,”
“entrepreneurial” or “anticapitalist,” is not because these categories do not
apply but because they are not big enough: radically free markets burst
through them. If there were another word more all-embracing than revo-
lutionary, we would use it.
2 See Shulamith Firestone, The Dialectic of Sex: The Case for Feminist Revolution
(New York: Farrar 2003) 3.
Markets Freed from Capitalism | 61
out the sum of all voluntary exchanges3 – any economic order based,
to the extent that it is based, on principles of personal ownership of
property, consensual exchange, free association, and the freedom to
engage in peaceful competition and entrepreneurial discovery.
but we often also use the term in a
different sense – to refer to a particular form of acquiring and ex-
changing property – that is, to refer to commerce and quid pro quo
exchanges, relatively impersonal social relationships on a paying ba-
sis, typically mediated by currency or by financial instruments de-
nominated in units of currency.
These two senses are interrelated. When they take place within the con-
text of a system of free exchange, the social relationships based on the cash
nexus – producing, buying, and selling at market prices, saving money for
future use, investing money in productive enterprises, and the like have all
positive, even essential, role in a flourishing free society. I do not intend
to argue that these will disappear in a society of equal freedom; but I do
intend to argue that they may not look like what you expect them to look
like, if your picture of commercial relationships is taken from commerce
under the conditions of corporate capitalism. Commerce under capitalism
does have many of the exploitative and alienating features that critics on
the Left accuse “private enterprise” or “market society” of having. But not
because of the enterprise, or because of the market. The problem with com-
merce under capitalism is capitalism, and without it, both freed-market ex-
change and cash-nexus commerce will take on a wholly different character.
To see how they might come together, we must first attend to how
they come apart. However often they may be linked in fact, free exchange
and the cash nexus are distinguishable in concept. Markets in the first sense
(the sum of all voluntary exchanges) include the cash nexus – but also much
more than the cash nexus. If a “freed market” is the sum of all voluntary
exchanges, then family sharing takes place within a freed market; charity is
part of a freed market; gifts are part of a freed market; informal exchange
and barter are all part of a freed market. Similarly, while markets-as-free-
exchange may include “capitalistic” arrangements – so long as they are con-
sensual – they also encompass far more than that. There is nothing in a
freed market that prohibits wage labor, rent, corporate jobs, or corporate
insurance. But a freed market also encompasses alternative arrangements –
including many that clearly have nothing to do with employer-employee
relationships or corporate management, and which fit awkwardly, at best,
with any conventional meaning of the term “capitalism:” worker ownership
and consumer co-ops are part of the market; grassroots mutual aid associa-
tions and community free clinics are part of the market; so are voluntary la-
bor unions, consensual communes, narrower or broader experiments with
gift economies, and countless other alternatives to the prevailing corporate-
capitalist status quo. To focus on the specific act of exchange may even be a
bit misleading; it might be more suggestive, and less misleading, to describe
a fully freed market, in this sense, as the space of maximal consensually-
sustained social experimentation.
The question, then, is whether, when people are free to experiment with
any and every peaceful means of making a living, the sort of mutualis-
tic alternatives that I’ve mentioned might take on an increased role in the
economy, or whether the prevailing capitalistic forms would continue to
predominate as they currently do. To be sure, the capitalistic arrangements
predominate now – most of the viable ways to make a living are capitalist
jobs; most people either rent their home from a landlord or “own” it only
so long as they keep up with monthly bills to a bank; large, centralized
management predominates in companies and corporations predominate in
providing credit, insurance, health care, and virtually all capital and con-
sumer goods. Productive enterprises are almost all commercial enterprises,
commercial enterprises are predominantly large-scale, centralized corporate
enterprises, and corporate enterprises are controlled by a select, relatively
small, socially privileged class of managers and financiers. Inequalities in
wealth and income are vast, and the vast inequalities have profound social
effects.
But of course the fact that capitalistic arrangements predominate now
is no reason to conclude that “the market has spoken,” or that capitalistic
concentrations of wealth are a basic tendency of free-market exchange. It
might be a reason to think that if the predominance of capitalistic arrange-
ments were the product of revealed preferences in a free market; but since
Markets Freed from Capitalism | 63
we don’t at present have a free market, it will, at the very least, take some
further investigation – in order to determine whether those capitalistic al-
ternatives prevail in spite of the unfreedom of actually-existing markets, or
if they prevail, in part, because of that unfreedom.
First, let us take this lesson and apply it to the market as cash nexus. The
cash nexus does not exhaust the forms of voluntary exchange and econom-
ic experimentation that might emerge within a freed market. But, more
than that, a cash nexus may exist, and may be expansive and important
to economic life, whether or not it operates under conditions of genuine
individual freedom. Markets in our first, voluntary-exchange sense exist
where people really are free to produce and exchange – ”free market,” in
the voluntary-exchange sense of “market,” is really a tautology, and where
there is no free exchange, there is no market order. But a “market” in the
cash-nexus sense may be either free or unfree; cash exchanges are still cash
exchanges, whether they are regulated, restricted, subsidized, taxed, man-
dated, or otherwise constrained by government action.
Any discussion of the cash nexus in the real world – of the everyday
“market institutions,” economic relationships, and financial arrangements
that we have to deal with in this governmental economy – needs to take ac-
count not only of the ways in which government limits or prohibits market
activity, but also the ways in which government, rather than erasing mar-
kets, creates new rigged markets – points of exchange, cash nexuses which
would be smaller, or less important, or radically different in character, or
simply would not exist at all, but for the intervention of the state. Libertar-
ians often speak of market exchange and government allocation as cleanly
separate spheres, as if they were two balloons, set one next to the other, in a
closed box, so that when you blow one of them up, the other has to shrink
to the same extent. That’s true enough about markets as social experimenta-
tion – to the extent you put in political processes, you take out voluntary
relationships. But the relationship between cash-nexus exchange and govern-
ment allocation is really more like two plants growing next to each other.
When one gets bigger, it may overshadow the other, and stunt its growth.
But they also climb each other, shape each other, and each may even cause
some parts of the other plant to grow far more than if they had not had the
support.
Market anarchists must be clear, when we speak about the growth of
“markets” and their role in social life, whether we are referring to markets as
free exchange, or markets as a cash nexus. Both have a valuable role to play,
but the kind of value they offer, and the conditions and context within
which they have that value, depends on which we mean. For a principled
anti-statist, the growth of “markets” as spaces for consensual social experimen-
64 | Charles W. Johnson
4 For the most famous recent case of such “eminent domain abuse,” see Kelo
Markets Freed from Capitalism | 65
v. New London, 545 U.S. 469 (2005). City government used eminent do-
main to condemn and seize the houses of Susette Kelo and many other small
homeowners in New London, Connecticut, to hand the real estate over to a
wealthy private developer. The developer intended to bulldoze the houses and
replace them with “developments” for his own profit and for the benefit of
the Fortune 500 drug company Pfizer Inc. The Court backed the city govern-
ment, holding they could take any home, and transfer it to any private party,
so long as a government-sponsored “economic development” plan indicated
that it would increase government’s tax revenues. Kelo drew widespread at-
tention to the issue, but similar seizures and transfers, mostly targeted against
the neighborhoods of racial minorities, immigrants, and the urban poor, had
been widely practiced for decades, under the heading of “Urban Renewal.”
Cf. Mindy Fullilove, Root Shock: How Tearing Up City Neighborhoods Hurts
America and What We Can Do About It (New York: Random 2005), and Dick
M. Carpenter and John K. Ross, Victimizing the Vulnerable: The Demograph-
ics of Eminent Domain Abuse (Arlington, VA: Institute for Justice 2007).
66 | Charles W. Johnson
6 Benjamin R. Tucker, “State Socialism and Anarchism: How Far They Agree
and herein They Differ,” ch. 2 (21-35) of this book.
68 | Charles W. Johnson
from mutual credit associations, labor notes, land banks, and other
means by which workers might be able to pool their own resources
and access credit on more advantageous terms than those offered by
commercial banks.
Tucker, in 1888, was writing about the Money Monopoly before
the Federal Reserve or the conversion to a pure fiat currency, before
the SEC, FDIC, TARP, Fannie, Freddie, IMF, World Bank, banking
holidays, bailouts, “Too Big To Fail,” and the myriad other means
by which government has insulated big bankers and financiers from
market consequences, often at direct taxpayer expense, and erected
regulatory barriers to entry which insulate politically-approved busi-
ness models from market competition. Perhaps just as importantly,
in light of recent political debates, is the extent to which regulation
and industry cartelization has also turned insurance, as well as credit,
savings and investment, into a new arm of the money monopoly,
with government-rigged markets directly mandating the purchase of
corporate car insurance and corporate health insurance, and crowd-
ing out or shutting down the non-corporate, grassroots forms of mu-
tual aid that could provide alternative means for securing against
catastrophic expenses.
3. The Patent Monopoly: government grants of monopoly privileges
to patent-holders and copyright holders. Tucker argued that patents
and copyrights did not represent a legitimate private property claim
for their holders, since it did not protect any tangible property that
the patent-holder could be deprived of, but rather prohibited other
market actors from peacefully using their own tangible property to
offer a good or service that imitated or duplicated the product being
offered by the holder of the so-called “Intellectual Property.”
These prohibitions, enforced with the explicit purpose of sup-
pressing market competition and ratcheting up prices, in order to
secure a long period of monopoly profits for the IP-holder, have
only dramatically escalated since Tucker’s day, as the growth in the
media industry, the technology industry, and scientific innovation
have made politically-granted control over the information economy
a linchpin of corporate power, with monopoly profits on “IP” now
constituting more or less the entire business model of Fortune 500
companies like General Electric, Pfizer, Microsoft, or Disney. These
IP monopolists have insisted on the need for nearly-unlimited gov-
ernment power, extending to every corner of the globe, to insulate
their privileged assets from peaceful free market competition, and
as a result of their legislative influence, typical copyright terms have
70 | Charles W. Johnson
9 These agreements do not actually represent “free trade;” they represent a shift
in coercive trade barriers, not a reduction in them. While they reduce tariff
rates in some industries, neoliberal “free trade” agreements typically include
massive, coordinated increases in patent and copyright monopolies. They also
are typically accompanied by the large-scale use of government-to-govern-
ment loans, government land seizures, government-financed infrastructure
“development” projects, and government-granted monopolies to privateer-
ing multinational corporations, carried out through multi-government al-
liances such as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. See
Joe Peacott, “Free Trade is Fair Trade,” ch. 29 (279-282), in this volume;
Kevin Carson, “Free Market Reforms and the Reduction of Statism,” ch. 28
(273-278), in this volume; and Charles Johnson, “‘Two Words on ‘Privatiza-
tion,’” ch. 30 (283-288), in this volume. See also Shawn Wilbur, “Whatever
Happened to (the Discourse on) Neoliberalism?,” Two Gun Mutualism &
the Golden Rule (n.p., Oct. 3, 2008) <http://libertarian-labyrinth.blogspot.
com/2008/10/what-ever-happened-to-discourse-on.html> (March 13,
2011).
Markets Freed from Capitalism | 71
nism of import tariffs was much less important, for Tucker’s pur-
poses, than the overarching aim of protecting connected incumbents
from foreign competition. In the 1880s, that meant the protectionist
tariff. In the 2010s, it means a vast and complicated network of im-
port tariffs on incoming foreign goods, export subsidies to outgoing
domestic goods, the political manipulation of fiat currency exchange
rates, and other methods for political control of the balance of inter-
national trade.
As I’ve tried to indicate, Tucker’s Big Four remain pervasive, and at least
three of those four have in fact dramatically expanded their scope and inva-
siveness since Tucker originally described them. But besides the expansion,
and intensification, of Tucker’s Four, the past century has seen the prolif-
eration and metastatic spread of government regulatory bodies intended to
re-structure markets and monitor and regiment economic transactions. If
we were to try to make a similar list of all the major ways in which local,
state, federal and foreign governments now intervene to protect incumbent
interests and place barriers to entry against potential competitors, there’s no
knowing how many monopolies we’d be dealing in; but I think that there
are at least five new major monopolies, in addition to Tucker’s original four,
and a sixth structural factor, which are worthy of special notice for their
pervasiveness and importance to the overall structure of the state-regulated
economy.
First, the agribusiness monopoly: since the New Deal, an extensive
system of government cartels, USDA regulatory burdens, subsidies to arti-
ficially increase prices for sale in American markets, more subsidies to artifi-
cally lower prices for export to foreign markets, surplus buy-up programs,10
irrigation projects, Farm-to-Market road building projects, government
technical support for more mechanized and capital-intensive forms of farm-
ing, along with many other similar measures, have all converged to ratchet
up food prices for consumers, to make importing and exporting produce
over tremendous distances artificially attractive, to distort agricultural pro-
duction towards the vegetable and animal products that can most success-
fully attract subsidies and government support projects, to favor large-scale
monocrop cultivation over smaller-scale farming, and generally to concen-
trate agriculture into factory farming and industrialized agribusiness.
Second, there is the security monopoly: government has always ex-
10 In particular, the USDA’s massive buy-up programs for school lunches and
the military, which keep prices high and profoundly skew the agricultural
markets, by encouraging the overproduction of, and providing a guaranteed
captive market-of-last-resort for, low-grade meat, potatoes, dairy, and other
factory-farmed commodity cash crops.
72 | Charles W. Johnson
ercised a monopoly on force within its territory, but since the 1880s,
government has massively expanded the size of standing military forces,
paramilitary police forces, and “security” and “intelligence” agencies. The
past century has, thus, seen the creation of a gigantic industry full of mon-
opsonistic rigged markets, catering to the needs of government “security”
forces and with an flourishing ecosystem of nominally “private” companies
that subsist largely or entirely on tax-funded government contracts – con-
tracts which, because they are tax funded, are coercively financed by captive
workers, but controlled by government legislators and agencies. In addi-
tion to companies like Lockheed-Martin, General Dynamics, Raytheon,
DynCorp, Blackwater/Xe Services, and the rest of the “military industrial
complex,” the security monopoly also includes the growing number of
companies, such as Taser,11 American Science & Engineering,12 or Wacken-
hut/GEO Group,13 which cater primarily to government police forces and
other “Homeland Security” agencies. War taxes, police taxes or prison taxes
represent a massive diversion of blood, sweat, tears and toil from peaceful
workers into a parallel, violent economy controlled by government con-
tracts and politically-connected corporations.
Third, we must account for the infrastructure monopoly: that is, fed-
eral, state, or local government monopolization, tax subsidies, and alloca-
tion of access to transportation infrastructure. Government builds roads
and rails and airports, with extensive tax subsidies and resources allocated
to government infrastructure on the basis of political pull. In addition,
government cartelizes and heavily regulates local mass transit and long-
distance travel, with policies tightly restricting competition and entry into
taxi, bus, rail, subway, shipping, and airline transportation. These subsidies
to particular forms of long-distance transportation and long-haul freight
shipping provide monopoly profits to the cartelized providers. They also
provide a tax-supported business opportunity for agribusiness and for big-
box retailers like Wal-Mart, whose business models are enabled by, and
dependent on, government subsidies to road-building and maintenance,
and the resulting artificially low costs of long-haul trucking.
Fourth, there is the communications monopoly: just as government
control of transportation and physical infrastructure has benefited incum-
bent, centralized corporations in retail and distribution, incumbent tele-
15 For more on the last point, see Charles Johnson, “Three Notes for the Crit-
ics of the Critics of Apologists for Wal-Mart,” Rad Geek People’s Daily (n.p.,
April 25, 2009) <http://radgeek.com/gt/2009/04/25/three_notes/> (June
16, 2010).
16 Gabriel Kolko, The Triumph of Conservatism: A Reinterpretation of American
Markets Freed from Capitalism | 75
20 Jackson Reeves, letter to Walter Block, qtd. Walter Block and Jackson Reeves,
“‘Capitalism’ Yesterday, ‘Capitalism’ Today, ‘Capitalism’ Tomorrow, ‘Capi-
talism’ Forever,” LewRockwell.Com (Center for Libertarian Studies, March
26, 2010) <http://www .lewrockwell.com/block/block154.html> (June 16,
2010). The letter was in response to some recent anticapitalist sentiments
aired by Sheldon Richman.
21 “Capitalism,” or “capitalisme,” first appears as a term used to describe a po-
litical-economy system of production in French radical literature of the mid-
19th century; prior to that the term was simply used to refer to the line of
work that capitalists were in—that is, making money by lending money at
interest, by investing in other people’s businesses, or by personally owning
capital and hiring labor to work it. The original uses of the term had noth-
ing in particular to do with free markets in the factors of production. Louis
78 | Charles W. Johnson
not always clear that that’s something that “we all” readily agree on. What
about when it’s not clear that the writer has really consistently held onto the
distinction between free markets and actually-existing capitalism?23 What
about when we’re not just talking about single positions on isolated policy
proposals, but talking about the bigger picture of how it all works – not just
the individual pieces but the gestalt picture that they form when fitted to-
gether? When, that is, it really starts to matter not only how a writer would
answer a list of questions if asked, but also which questions she thinks to ask
in the first place – which features of the situation immediately come to mind
for analysis and criticism, and which features are kept left as afterthoughts?
This raises the question of paradigm cases, of what sorts of examples we take
as typical, or characteristic, or especially illustrative of what freed markets
would be and how they would work.
When we’re looking at the broader picture, at how political and eco-
nomic structures play off of each other, we’re talking about a structure that
has a foreground and a background – more important and less important
features. And one of the important questions is not just what may be en-
compassed by the verbal definitions given for our terminology, but also what
sorts of paradigm cases for markets and voluntary society the terminology
might suggest, and whether the cases it suggests really are good paradigm
cases – whether they reveal something important about free societies, or
whether they conceal or obscure it. Identifying a free market position with
“capitalism” – even if you are absolutely clear that you just mean capital-
ism1, theoretically including all kinds of market exchange and voluntary
social experimentation outside the cash nexus – offers a particular picture of
what’s important about and characteristic of a free society, and that picture
tends to obscure a lot more than it reveals.
When we picture freed-market activity, what does it look like? Is our
model something that looks a lot like business as usual, with a few changes
here and there around the edges? Or something radically different, or radi-
cally beyond anything that currently prevails in this rigidified, monopolized
market. Do we conceive of and explain markets on the model of a commer-
24 The images of the strip mall and the bazaar are taken from my concluding
paragraph in “Scratching By.” Those images were inspired by and modified
from Eric Raymond’s use of “The Cathedral and the Bazaar” to explain and
defend hacker culture and open-source software.
Markets Freed from Capitalism | 81
Market aNarCHisM
as stiGMerGiC
soCialisM
BRAD SPANGLER
(2006)
After thinking about this a great deal, I’ve come to the conclusion that
the above exaggerates the differences between anarcho-capitalism and
mutualism as ideologies, but not necessarily as movements – an important
distinction to make. As a result, I’d like to review why I believe anarcho-
capitalism is, in some ways, incorrectly named and why this, in turn, has
resulted in an anarcho-capitalist movement consisting of a large number of
deviationists insufficient in their adherence to their own stated principles.
Once again, we must explore the various definitions of capitalism and
socialism to see why. Why, for instance, is mutualism considered “social-
ism” while the Rothbardian strain of market anarchist thought is “capital-
ism”? To understand, let’s first examine the anarcho-capitalist movement as
a whole.
There are two sharply divided strands of thought within anarcho-cap-
italism, based on the stated rationale for a market anarchist society – the
natural law/natural rights thought of Murray Rothbard and the utilitarian-
ism of David Friedman. To understand the differences between the two and
why they matter, let’s look at Rothbard’s “Do You Hate The State?”1
The essay explains in Rothbards own words that genuine Rothbardians
are motivated by a passion for pure and simple justice. The state and its al-
lies are understood to be a criminal gang – an ongoing system of theft, op-
pression, slavery and murder. The thought of the Friedmanites, by contrast,
is a mere intellectual discourse upon what would maximise total prosperity
in a society. Utilitarianism is an academic exercise suitable for economics
textbooks. Such studies are to be welcomed to the extent that they make
justice (i.e. anarchy) more appealing to the amoral and boost our own
confidence in the workability – but to substitute utilitarianism for natural
rights theory within anarcho-capitalism is to quite literally sell out ethical
principle for a mess of pottage.
1 Murray N. Rothbard, “Do You Hate the State?,” Libertarian Forum 10.7
(July 1977): 1+.
Market anarchism as stigmergic socialism | 87
can and does shift with the wind, it will become easy for the
utilitarian in his cool calculus of cost and benefit to plump
for statism in ad hoc case after case, and thus to give principle
away.
Under a strictly utiliatrian view, then, one loses sight of who the enemy
is. Those who unfairly benefit from plunder, as an aggregate, will never
willingly give up on it.
As an aside, the Anarchist FAQ touches on this matter, while insuf-
ficiently illuminating it. In a criticism of Friedmanite utilitarianism, Roth-
bard explains the problem of utilitarianism lacking an anti-state theory of
property (unlike his own natural law approach). The FAQ offers an out
of context excerpt from a passage that appears to give the impression that
Rothbard was arguing in favor of tyranny, when in fact he was doing the ex-
act opposite (in highlighting the shortcomings of the utilitarian approach).
From the FAQ:
The passage mirrors a passage making the same point in For a New Lib-
erty:
So, that part of the Anarchist FAQ critique would appear to lead to
an inaccurate perception of what Rothbard was arguing for. It applies
to Friedman’s version of anarcho-capitalism, and Rothbard was the one
who first pointed it out – long before the Anarchist FAQ was even
around.
In fact, Rothbard’s natural law theory very much laid an alternative
foundation for understanding of why the distribution of property under
existing capitalism is unjust – because the so-called “property” of the plu-
tocracy is typically unjustly acquired. Natural law theory and the resulting
radically anti-state Rothbardian take on Lockean principles of property can
potentially be expanded upon to offer a framework for the revolutionary
Market anarchism as stigmergic socialism | 89
Congress except Ron Paul is a socialist? The point is that after the experi-
ences of the 19th century, any successful political doctrine has to address
the question of what was wrong with liberalism. Let me stress – this is one
important reason why a classical liberal political party will never succeed.
And the US Libertarian Party is a classical liberal political party despite
having anarchists in it, because the nature of electoral politics is such that
anarchists involved with electoral politics are operatively something else –
classical liberals, nominally “democratic” socialists or nominally “progres-
sive” social democrats.
6
Liberty 6.6 (March 8, 1890): 4.
o f late the TwenTieTh cenTury has been doing a good deal in the way of
definition. Now, definition is very particular business, and it seems to
me that it is not always performed with due care in the Twentieth Century
office.
Take this, for instance: A Socialist is one who believes that each industry
should be coordinated for the mutual benefit of all concerned under a gov-
ernment by physical force.
It is true that writers of reputation have given definitions of Socialism
not differing in any essential from the foregoing – among others, General
Walker. But it has been elaborately proven in these columns that General
Walker is utterly at sea when he talks about either Socialism or Anarchism.
As a matter of fact this definition is fundamentally faulty, and correctly
defines only State Socialism.
An analogous definition in another sphere would be this: Religion is
belief in the Messiahship of Jesus. Supposing this to be a correct definition
of the Christian religion, nonetheless it is manifestly incorrect as a defini-
tion of religion itself. The fact that Christianity has overshadowed all other
forms of religion in this part of the world gives it no right to a monopoly
of the religious idea. Similarly, the fact that State Socialism during the last
decade or two has overshadowed other forms of Socialism gives it no right
to a monopoly of the Socialistic idea.
94 | Benjamin r. tucker
Socialism, as such, implies neither liberty nor authority. The word itself
implies nothing more than harmonious relationship. In fact, it is so broad
a term that it is difficult of definition. I certainly lay claim to no special
authority or competence in the matter. I simply maintain that the word
Socialism having been applied for years, by common usage and consent,
as a generic term to various schools of thought and opinion, those who
try to define it are bound to seek the common element of all these schools
and make it stand for that, and have no business to make it represent the
specific nature of any one of them. The Twentieth Century definition will
not stand this test at all.
Perhaps here is one that satisfies it: Socialism is the belief that progress is
mainly to be effected by acting upon man through his environment rather
than through man upon his environemnt.
I fancy that this will be criticised as too general, and I am inclined to ac-
cept the criticism. It manifestly includes all who have any title to be called
Socialists, but possibly it does not exclude all who have no such title.
Let us narrow it a little: Socialism is the belief that the next important
step in progress is a change in man’s environment of an economic character
that shall include the abolition of every privilege whereby the holder of
wealth acquires an anti-social power to compel tribute.
I doubt not that this definition can be much improved, and suggestions
looking to that end will be interesting; but it is at least an attempt to cover all
the forms of protest against the existing usurious economic system. I have al-
ways considered myself a member of the great body of Socialists, and I object
to being read out of it or defined out of it by General Walker, Mr. Pentecost,
or anybody else, simply because I am not a follower of Karl Marx.
Take now another Twentieth Century definition – that of Anarchism. I
have not the number of the paper in which it was given, and cannot quote
it exactly. But it certainly made belief in co-operation an essential of An-
archism. This is as erroneous as the definition of Socialism. Co-operation
is no more an essential of Anarchism than force is of Socialism. The fact
that the majority of Anarchists believe in co-operation is not what makes
them Anarchists, just as the fact that the majority of Socialists believe in
force is not what makes them Socialists. Socialism is neither for nor against
liberty; Anarchism is for liberty, and neither for nor against anything else.
Anarchy is the mother of co-operation – yes, just as liberty is the mother of
order; but, as a matter of definition, liberty is not order nor is Anarchism
cooperation.
I define Anarchism as the belief in the greatest amount of liberty com-
patible with equality of liberty; or, in other words, as the belief in every
liberty except the liberty to invade.
armies that overlap | 95
i ndividualist:
“our host is engaged and requests that i introduce Myself to – i beg your
pardon, sir, but have I not the pleasure of meeting the Communist speaker who
addressed the meeting on Blank street last evening?”
Communist: “Your face seems familiar to me, too.”
Indv.: “Doubtless you may have seen me there, or at some kindred place.
I am glad at the opportunity to talk with you as your speech proved you to
be somewhat of a thinker. Perhaps – ”
Com.: “Ah, indeed, I recognize you now. You are the apostle of capital-
istic Anarchism!”
Indv.: “Capitalistic Anarchism? Oh, yes, if you choose to call it so.
Names are indifferent to me; I am not afraid of bugaboos. Let it be so,
then, capitalistic Anarchism.”
Com.: “Well, I will listen to you. I don’t think your arguments will have
much effect, however. With which member of your Holy Trinity will you
begin: free land, free money, or free competition?”
Indv.: “Whichever you prefer.”
98 | rosa slobodinsky and voltairine de Cleyre
Com.: “Then free competition. Why do you make that demand? Isn’t
competition free now ?”
Indv.: “No. But one of the three factors in production is free. Laborers
are free to compete among themselves, and so are capitalists to a certain
extent. But between laborers and capitalists there is no competition what-
ever, because through governmental privilege granted to capital, whence
the volume of the currency and the rate of interest is regulated, the owners
of it are enabled to keep the laborers dependent on them for employment,
so making the condition of wage-subjection perpetual. So long as one man,
or class of men, are able to prevent others from working for themselves
because they cannot obtain the means of production or capitalize their own
products, so long those others are not free to compete freely with those to
whom privilege gives the means. For instance, can you see any competition
between the farmer and his hired man? Don’t you think he would prefer to
work for himself? Why does the farmer employ him? Is it not to make some
profit from his labor? And does the hired man give him that profit out of
pure good nature? Would he not rather have the full product of his labor
at his own disposal?”
Com.: “And what of that? What does that prove?”
Indv.: “I am coming to that directly. Now, does this relation between the
farmer and his man in any way resemble a cooperative affair between equals,
free to compete, but choosing to work together for mutual benefit? You know
it does not. Can’t you see that since the hired man does not willingly resign a
large share of his product to his employer (and it is out of human nature to
say he does), there must be something which forces him to do it? Can’t you
see that the necessity of an employer is forced upon him by his lack of ability
to command the means of production? He cannot employ himself, therefore
he must sell his labor at a disadvantage to him who controls the land and
capital. Hence he is not free to compete with his employer any more than a
prisoner is free to compete with his jailer for fresh air.
Com.: “Well, I admit that much. Certainly the employee cannot com-
pete with his employer.”
Indv.: “Then you admit that there is not free competition in the present
state of society. In other words, you admit that the laboring class are not
free to compete with the holders of capital, because they have not, and can-
not get, the means of production. Now for your ‘what of that?’ It follows
that if they had access to land and opportunity to capitalize the product of
their labor they would either employ themselves, or, if employed by others,
their wages, or remuneration, would rise to the full product of their toil,
since no one would work for another for less than he could obtain by work-
ing for himself.”
the individualist and the Communist | 99
Com.: “But your object is identical with that of Communism! Why all
this to convince me that the means of production must be taken from the
hands of the few and given to all? Communists believe that; it is precisely
what we are fighting for.”
Indv.: “You misunderstand me if you think we wish to take from or give
to any one. We have no scheme for regulating distribution. We substitute
nothing, make no plans. We trust to the unfailing balance of supply and
demand. We say that with equal opportunity to produce, the division of
product will necessarily approach equitable distribution, but we have no
method of ‘enacting’ such equalization.”
Com.: ‘‘But will not some be strong and skillful, others weak and un-
skillful? Will not one-deprive the other because he is more shrewd?”
Indv.: “Impossible! Have I not just shown you that the reason one man
controls another’s manner of living is because he controls the opportuni-
ties to produce? He does this through a special governmental privilege.
Now, if this privilege is abolished, land becomes free, and ability to capi-
talize products removing interest, and one man is stronger or shrewder
than another, he nevertheless can make no profit from that other’s labor,
because he cannot stop him from employing himself. The cause of subjec-
tion is removed.”
Com.: “You call that equality! That one man shall have more than others
simply because he is stronger or smarter? Your system is no better than the
present. What are we struggling against but that very inequality in people’s
possessions?”
Indv.: “But what is equality? Does equality mean that I shall enjoy what
you have produced? By no means. Equality simply means the freedom of
every individual to develop all his being, without hindrance from another,
be he stronger or weaker.”
Com.: “What! You will have the weak person suffer because he is weak?
He may need as much, or more, than a strong one, but if he is not able to
produce it what becomes of his equality?”
Indv.: “I have nothing against your dividing your product with the
weaker man if you desire to do so.”
Com.: “There you are with charity again. Communism wants no char-
ity.”
Indv.: I have often marveled on the singularity of Communistic math-
ematics. My act you call charity, our act is not charity. If one person does
a kind act you stigmatize it; if one plus one, summed up and called a com-
mune, does the same thing, you laud it. By some species of alchemy akin
to the transmutation of metals, the arsenic of charity becomes the gold of
justice! Strange calculation! Can you not see that you are running from a
100 | rosa slobodinsky and voltairine de Cleyre
bugaboo again? You change the name, but the character of an action is not
altered by the number of people participating in it.”
Com.: “But it is not the same action. For me to assist you out of pity is
the charity of superior possession to the inferior. But to base society upon
the principle: ‘From each according to his capacity, and to each according
to his needs’ is not charity in any sense.”
Indv.: “That is a finer discrimination than logic can find any basis for.
But suppose that, for the present, we drop the discussion of charity, which
is really a minor point, as a further discussion will show.”
Com.: “But I say it is very important. See! Here are two workmen. One
can make five pair of shoes a day; the other, perhaps, not more than three.
According to you, the less rapid workmen will be deprived of the enjoy-
ments of life, or at any rate will not be able to get as much as the other,
because of a natural inability, a thing not his fault, to produce as much as
his competitor.”
Indv.: “It is true that under our present conditions, there are such differ-
ences in productive power. But these, to a large extent, would be annihilat-
ed by the development of machinery and the ability to use it in the absence
of privilege. Today the majority of trade-people are working at uncongenial
occupations. Why? Because they have neither the chance for finding out for
what they are adapted, nor the opportunity of devoting themselves to it if
they had. They would starve to death while searching; or, finding it, would
only bear the disappointment of being kept outside the ranks of an already
overcrowded pathway of life. Trades are, by force of circumstances, what
formerly they were by law, matters of inheritance. I am a tailor because by
father was a tailor, and it was easier for him to introduce me to that mode of
making a living than any other, although I have no special adaptation for it.
But postulating equal chances, that is free access and non-interest bearing
capital, when a man finds himself unable to make shoes as well or as rapidly
as his co-worker, he would speedily seek a more congenial occupation.”
Com.: “And he will be traveling from one trade to another like a tramp
after lodgings!”
Indv.: “Oh no; his lodgings will be secure! When you admitted that
competition is not now free, did I not say to you that when it becomes so,
one of two things must happen: either the laborer will employ himself, or
the contractor must pay him the full value of his product. The result would
be increased demand for labor. Able to employ himself, the producer will
get the full measure of his production, whether working independently, by
contract, or cooperatively, since the competition of opportunities, if I may
so present it, would destroy the possibility of profits. With the reward of
labor raised to its entire result, a higher standard of living will necessarily
the individualist and the Communist | 101
a GlaNCe at
CoMMuNisM
VOLTAIRINE DE CLEyRE
(1893)
1 See Voltairine de Cleyre and Rosa Slobodinsky, “The Individualist and the
Communist: A Dialogue,” ch. 7 (97-102), in this volume.
104 | voltairine de Cleyre
is set, how many times I wash myself, how many books I have, whether my
pictures are “moral” or “immoral,” what I waste, etc., ad nauseam, after the
manner of ancient Peru and Egypt, I had rather a few thousand cabbages
should rot, even if they happened to be my cabbages.
It is possible I might learn something from that.
Philadelphia, Pa.
9
(tulsa, ok. tulsa alliance of the libertar-
ian left 2011).
aDvoCates oF FreeD
Markets sHoulD
oppose CapitalisM
GARy CHARTIER
(2010)
i. iNtroDuCtioN
d efenders of freed Markets have good reason to identify their position as a
species of “anticapitalism.”1 To explain why, I distinguish three poten-
tial meanings of “capitalism” before suggesting that people committed to
freed markets should oppose capitalism in my second and third senses.
Then, I offer reasons for using “capitalism” to tag some of the social ar-
rangements to which freed-market advocates should object.
1 For “freed markets,” see William Gillis, “The Freed Market,” ch. 1 (19-20), in
this volume; for “free market anticapitalism,” see Kevin A. Carson, Mutual-
ist Blog: Free Market Anticapitalism (n.p.) <http://mutualist .blogspot.com>
(Dec. 31, 2009).
108 | Gary Chartier
2 Cp. Charles Johnson, “Anarquistas por La Causa,” Rad Geek People’s Daily
(n.p., March 31, 2005) <http://radgeek.com/gt/2005/03/31/anarquistas_
por/> (Dec. 31, 2009); Roderick T. Long, “POOTMOP Redux,” Austro-
Athenian Empire (n.p., June 22, 2009) <http://aaeblog.com/2009/06/22/
pootmop-redux/> (Dec. 31, 2009); Fred Foldvary, “When Will Michael
Moore Nail Land Speculators?,” The Progress Report (n.p., Oct. 19, 2009)
<http://www.progress.org/2009/fold635.htm> (Jan. 18, 2010). “Capital-
ism” in Johnson’s third sense refers to “boss-directed labor,” while Long’s par-
allel expression, “capitalism-2,” denotes “control of the means of production
by someone other than the workers—i.e., by capitalist owners.” Foldvary’s
parallel proposal is “exploitation of labor by the big owners of capital.” I am
inclined to think that many of those who employ “capitalism” in the pejora-
tive sense intend it to encompass the dominance by capitalists of all social in-
stitutions, and not just workplaces, though they doubtless see societal domi-
nance and workplace dominance as connected. At any rate, supposing that
they do may provide a slender justification for distinguishing my typology
from the ones offered by Johnson, Long, and Foldvary. For an earlier discus-
sion by a libertarian of the inherently ambiguous character of “capitalism,”
see Clarence B. Carson, “Capitalism: Yes and No,” The Freeman: Ideas on Lib-
erty 35.2 (Feb. 1985): 75-82 (Foundation for Economic Education) <http://
www.thefreemanonline.org/columns/capitalism-yes-and-no> (March 12,
2010); thanks to Sheldon Richman for bringing this article to my attention.
3 While capitalism2 obtains whenever business and the state are in bed to-
gether, under capitalism3 business is clearly on top.
advocates of Freed Markets should oppose Capitalism | 109
A. Introduction
Capitalism2 and capitalism3 are both inconsistent with freed-market
principles: capitalism2 because it involves direct interference with mar-
ket freedom, capitalism3 because it depends on such interference – both
past and ongoing – and because it flies in the face of the general com-
mitment to freedom that underlies support for market freedom in par-
ticular.
4 It is unclear when “capitalism” was first employed (the Oxford English Dic-
tionary identifies William Makepeace Thackeray as the earliest user of the
term: see The Newcomes: Memoirs of a Most Respectable Family, 2 vols. [Lon-
don: Bradbury 1854–5] 2:75). By contrast, “capitalist” as a pejorative has
an older history, appearing at least as early as 1792, and figuring repeatedly
in the work of the free-market socialist Thomas Hodgskin: see, e.g., Popular
Political Economy: Four Lectures Delivered at the London Mechanics Institution
(London: Tait 1827) 5, 51-2, 120, 121, 126, 138, 171 (“greedy capitalists”!),
238-40, 243, 245-9, 253-7, 265; The Natural and Artificial Right of Property
Contrasted: A Series of Letters, Addressed without Permission to H. Brougham,
Esq. M.P. F.R.S. (London: Steil 1832) 15, 44, 53, 54, 67, 87, 97-101, 134-5,
150, 155, 180. The pejorative use occurs nearly eighty times throughout the
thirty-odd pages of Hodgskin’s Labour Defended against the Claims of Capital,
or, The Unproductiveness of Capital Proved (London: Knight 1825). It is also
possible to find “capitalist” employed in less-than-flattering ways by another
noted classical liberal: see John Taylor, Tyranny Unmasked (Washington: Da-
vis 1822).
110 | Gary Chartier
property rights and voluntary exchanges, those who occupy the top of the
social ladder in capitalism3 wouldn’t be able to manipulate politicians to
gain and maintain wealth and power in a freed market, so the ownership of
the means of production wouldn’t be concentrated in a few hands.
In addition to ongoing interference with market freedom, MUP sug-
gests that capitalism3 would not be possible without past acts of injustice
on a grand scale. And there is extensive evidence of massive interference
with property rights and market freedom, interference that has led to the
impoverishment of huge numbers of people, in England, the United States,
and elsewhere.6 Freed-market advocates should thus object to capitalism3
because capitalists are able to rule only in virtue of large-scale, state-sanc-
tioned violations of legitimate property rights.
6 Cp. Albert Jay Nock, Our Enemy the State (New York: Morrow 1935); Kevin
A. Carson, “The Subsidy of History,” The Freeman: Ideas on Liberty 58.5
(June 2008): 33-8 (Foundation for Economic Education) <http://www.the-
freemanonline.org/featured/the-subsidy-of-history> (Dec. 31, 2009); Joseph
R. Stromberg, “The American Land Question,” The Freeman: Ideas on Liberty
59.6 (July-Aug. 2009): 33-8 (Foundation for Economic Education) <http://
www.thefreemanonline.org/featured/the-american-land-question> (Dec. 31,
2009).
112 | Gary Chartier
E. Conclusion
Capitalism2 and capitalism3 are both inconsistent with freed-market
principles: capitalism2 because it involves direct interference with market
freedom, capitalism3 because it depends on such interference – both past
and ongoing – and because it flies in the face of the general commitment to
freedom that underlies support for market freedom in particular.
7 Cp. Charles Johnson, “Libertarianism through Thick and Thin,” Rad Geek
People’s Daily (n.p., Oct. 3, 2008) <http://www.radgeek.com/gt/2008/10/03/
libertarianism_through> (Dec. 31, 2009); Kerry Howley, “We’re All Cultural
Libertarians,” Reason (Reason Foundation, Nov. 2009) <http://www.reason.
com/archives/2009/10/20/are-property-rights-enough> (Dec. 31, 2009).
8 I became acquainted with this phrase thanks to Nicholas Lash, Believing
Three Ways in One God: A Reading of the Apostles’ Creed (Notre Dame, IN:
University of Notre Dame Press 1992); see, e.g., 12. But it appears, I have
subsequently discovered, to have a legal provenance and to be a rough trans-
lation of the Latin phrase noscitur a sociis.
9 To be sure, proponents of freed markets, and so of captalism1, could obvi-
advocates of Freed Markets should oppose Capitalism | 113
the vast gap between ideals of freedom and an economic reality distorted by
privilege and misshapen by past acts of violent dispossession will have good
reason to oppose what is commonly called capitalism, rather than embrac-
ing it.
4. To Challenge a Conception of the Market Economy that Treats Capital
as More Fundamental than Labor. Multiple factors of production – notably
including labor – contribute to the operation of a market economy. To refer
to such an economy as “capitalist” is to imply, incorrectly, that capital plays
the most central role in a market economy and that the “capitalist,” the
absenteee owner of investable wealth, is ultimately more important than
the people who are the sources of labor. Advocates of freed-markets should
reject this inaccurate view.11
5. To Reclaim “Socialism” for Freed-Market Radicals. “Capitalism” and
“socialism” are characteristically seen as forming an oppositional pair. But
it was precisely the “socialist” label that a radical proponent of freed mar-
kets, Benjamin Tucker, owned at the time when these terms were being
passionately debated and defined.12 Tucker clearly saw no conflict between
his intense commitment to freed markets and his membership of the First
International. That’s because he understood socialism as a matter of liber-
ating workers from oppression by aristocrats and business executives, and
he – plausibly – believed that ending the privileges conferred on economic
elites by the state would be the most effective – and safest – way of achiev-
ing socialism’s liberating goal. Opposing capitalism helps to underscore the
important place of radicals like Tucker in the contemporary freedom move-
ment’s lineage and to provide today’s advocates of freedom with a persua-
11 See Kevin A. Carson, “Capitalism: A Good Word for a Bad Thing,” Center
for a Stateless Society (Center for a Stateless Society, Mar. 6, 2010) <http://
www.c4ss.org/content/1992> (Mar. 6, 2010).
12 See Benjamin R. Tucker, “State Socialism and Anarchism: How Far They
Agree and Wherein They Differ,” Instead of a Book: By a Man Too Busy to
Write One (New York: Tucker 1897) (Fair-Use.Org, n.d.) <http://www.fair-
use.org/benjamin-tucker/instead-of-a-book> (Dec. 31, 2009). Cp. Kevin
A. Carson, “Socialist Definitional Free-for-All: Part II,” Mutualist Blog: Free
Market Anticapitalism (n.p., Dec. 8, 2005) <http://www.mutualist.blogspot.
com/2005/12/socialist-definitional-free-for-all_08.html> (Dec. 31, 2009);
Brad Spangler, “Re-Stating the Point: Rothbardian Socialism,” BradSpangler.
Com (n.p., Oct. 10, 2009) <http://bradspangler.com/blog/archives/1458>
(Dec. 31, 2009); Gary Chartier, Socialist Ends, Market Means: 5 Essays (Tul-
sa, OK: Tulsa Alliance of the Libertarian Left 2009) (Center for a State-
less Society, Aug. 31, 2009) <http://c4ss.org/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/
Garychartier_forprint_binding.pdf> (Dec. 31, 2009).
advocates of Freed Markets should oppose Capitalism | 115
sive rationale for capturing the socialist label from state socialists. (This is
especially appropriate because advocates of freedom believe that society –
connected people cooperating freely and voluntarily – rather than the state
should be seen as the source of solutions to human problems. Thus, they
can reasonably be said to favor socialism not as a kind of, but as an alterna-
tive to, statism.)13 Embracing anticapitalism underscores the fact that freed
markets offer a way of achieving socialist goals – fostering the empower-
ment of workers and the wide dispersion of ownership of and control over
the means of production – using market means.14
6. To Express Solidarity with Workers. If MUP is correct, the ability
of big business – “capital” – to maximize the satisfaction of its preferences
more fully than workers are able to maximize the satisfaction of theirs is a
function of business-state symbiosis that is inconsistent with freed-market
principles. And, as a matter of support for CL, there is often further reason
to side with workers when they are being pushed around, even non-aggres-
sively. To the extent that the bosses workers oppose are often called “capi-
talists,” so that “anticapitalism” seems like a natural tag for their opposition
to these bosses, and to the extent that freed markets – by contrast with
capitalism2 and capitalism3 – would dramatically increase the opportunities
for workers simultaneously to shape the contours of their own lives and to
experience significantly greater prosperity and economic security, embrac-
ing “anticapitalism” is a way of clearly signaling solidarity with workers.15
7. To Identify with the Legitimate Concerns of the Global Anticapitalist
Movement. Owning “anticapitalism” is also a way, more broadly, of iden-
tifying with ordinary people around the world who express their opposi-
tion to imperialism, the increasing power in their lives of multinational
V. CONCLUSION
Thirty-five years ago, Karl Hess wrote: “I have lost my faith in capi-
talism” and “I resist this capitalist nation-state,” observing that he had
“turn[ed] from the religion of capitalism.”17 Distinguishing three senses
16 “‘If you were to ask, “What is anarchism?” we would all disagree,’ said Vlad
Bliffet, a member of the collective that organized the . . . [2010 Los Angeles
Anarchist Bookfair]. While most anarchists agree on the basic principle that
the world would be better without hierarchy and without capitalism, he said,
they have competing theories on how to achieve that change” (Kate Linthi-
cum, “Book Fair Draws an Array of Anarchists,” LATimes.Com [Los Ange-
les Times, Jan. 25, 2010] <http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-anar-
chists25-2010jan25,0,3735605.story?track=rss> [Jan. 27, 2010]). Given the
focus on opposition to real-world hierarchy, I suspect, without evidence, that
Bliffet’s primary objection was not to capitalism as a system of ownership
and exchange in the abstract—capitalism1—but rather to social dominance
by capitalists—capitalism3. The failure to see this point will tend to impede
an otherwise natural alliance focused on issues ranging from war to torture
to surveillance to drugs to freedom of speech to corporatism to bailouts to
decentralization to the reach of the administrative state.
17 Karl Hess, Dear America (New York: Morrow 1975) 3, 5. Even more bluntly,
Hess writes: “What I have learned about corporate capitalism, roughly, is
that it is an act of theft, by and large, through which a very few live very
high off the work, invention, and creativity of very many others. It is the
Grand Larceny of our particular time in history, the Grand Larceny in which
a future of freedom which could have followed the collapse of feudalism was
stolen from under our noses by a new bunch of bosses doing the same old
advocates of Freed Markets should oppose Capitalism | 117
things” (1). (Complicating the story is the fact that Hess subsequently wrote
Capitalism for Kids: Growing up to Be Your Own Boss [Wilmington, DE: En-
terprise 1987].)
18 Brian Doherty, “Ayn Rand: Radical for Something Other Than Capitalism?,”
Hit and Run: Reason Magazine (Reason Foundation, Jan, 20, 2010) <http://
www.reason.com/blog/2010/01/20/ayn-rand-radical-for-something> (Jan.
21, 2010), reports: “I have been happy using capitalism in Rand’s ideal sense
as that which American libertarians advocate . . . , which I think is true and
I don’t think represents such a severe intellectual, marketing, or historical
problem as Long says…” Doherty opines that Long “is far too blithe in his
conclusion that the fact that Western prosperity can be attributed to the
extent that it has honored property rights, free exchange, and a price system
deserves only the intellectual status of that part of our culture that is ‘not
diseased.’” I am not clear what it means to say that “Rand’s ideal sense . . .
is true” (in what way are definitions or senses true?), and I am inclined to
suspect that a cluster of praxeological, moral, and historical claims provides
credible support for the left-libertarian critique of “capitalism” and for the
diagnosis of much of the economic order that obtains in the contemporary
West as diseased. (This most emphatically does not amount to a positive as-
sessment of actually existing alternatives.)
10
The Dandelion 4.13 (spring 1980): 24-5.
aNarCHisM WitHout
HYpHeNs
KARL HESS
(1980)
archists who see only the stars. Some are anarchists who see only the mud.
They spring from a single seed, no matter the flowering of their ideas.
The seed is liberty. And that is all it is. It is not a socialist seed. It is not a
capitalist seed. It is not a mystical seed. It is not a determinist seed. It is
simply a statement. We can be free. After that it’s all choice and chance.
Anarchism, liberty, does not tell you a thing about how free people will
behave or what arrangements they will make. It simply says the people have
the capacity to make the arrangements.
Anarchism is not normative. It does not say how to be free. It says only
that freedom, liberty, can exist.
Recently, in a libertarian journal, I read the statement that libertarian-
ism is an ideological movement. It may well be. In a concept of freedom
it, they, you, or we, anyone, has the liberty to engage in ideology or any-
thing else that does not coerce others denying their liberty. But anarchism
is not an ideological movement. It is an ideological statement. It says that
all people have a capacity for liberty. It says that all anarchists want liberty.
And then it is silent. After the pause of that silence, anarchists then mount
the stages of their own communities and history and proclaim their, not
anarchism’s, ideologies – they say how they, how they as anarchists, will
make arrangements, describe events, celebrate life, work.
Anarchism is the hammer-idea, smashing the chains. Liberty is what
results and, in liberty, everything else is up to people and their ideologies. It
is not up to THE ideology. Anarchism says, in effect, there is no such upper
case, dominating ideology. It says that people who live in liberty make their
own histories and their own deals with and within it.
A person who describes a world in which everyone must or should be-
have in a single way, marching to a single drummer is simply not an an-
archist. A person who says that they prefer this way, even wishing that all
would prefer that way, but who then says that all must decide, may cer-
tainly be an anarchist. Probably is.
Liberty is liberty. Anarchism is anarchism. Neither is Swiss cheese or
anything else. They are not property. They are not copyrighted. They an
old, available ideas, part of human culture. They may be hyphenated but
they are not in fact hyphenated. They exist on their own. People add hy-
phens, and supplemental ideologies.
Liberty, finally is not a box into which people are to be forced. Liberty is
a space in which people may live. It does not tell you how they will live. It
says, eternally, only that we can.
11
“Capitalism versus the Free Market – part
1,” Freedom Daily (Future of Freedom
Foundation, aug. 6, 2010) <http.//www.
fff.org/freedom/fd1005b.asp> (aug. 8,
2011); “Capitalism versus the Free Market
– part 2,” Freedom Daily (Future of Free-
dom Foundation, sep. 10, 2010) <http.//
www.fff.org/freedom/fd1006b.asp>
(aug. 8, 2011).
w riting in the Guardian last January under the headline “caribbean coM-
munism v. Capitalism,” respected journalist Stephen Kinzer began
his article like this:
Many people would read this without pause, but presumably not liber-
tarians. Are Jamaica, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Guatemala, Hondu-
ras, and El Salvador capitalist countries? Kinzer’s matter-of-fact statement
seems to conflict with other evidence. For example, the Heritage Founda-
tion Index of Economic Freedom (which overstates countries’ degree of
economic freedom) rates the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, El Salvador,
and Guatemala “moderately free” (and not “free” or “mostly free), and
Honduras and Haiti “mostly unfree.” So how can they be “capitalist” – un-
less capitalism and freedom are two different things?
One may infer from Kinzer’s article that he classifies any country “capi-
talist” as long as Marxist socialism is not its official ideology. So he states,
“Comparing the two political and social systems also reminds us that for
many people in the world, a truly fulfilling life is unattainable… The best
hope for longtime communist Cuba and its longtime capitalist neighbours
would be to learn from each other.”
My purpose here is not to focus on Kinzer’s curiously positive state-
ments about Cuba and its “social safety net” but rather on his use of the
word “capitalist.” He apparently regards that designation so uncontroversial
that he feels no need to justify it or even to define the term.
Kinzer, however, is not an anomaly. Consider Richard Posner’s book
about the recent financial debacle, A Failure of Capitalism. Posner is no
left-leaning journalist. He’s a federal judge with a long association with
the University of Chicago and the market-oriented law-and-economics
movement. Yet here he is, blaming “capitalism” for the current economic
troubles and, as a result, embracing Keynesianism. He writes in his preface,
“We are learning from it [the “depression”] that we need a more active and
intelligent government to keep our model of a capitalist economy from
running off the rails. The movement to deregulate the financial industry
went too far by exaggerating the resilience – the self-healing powers – of
laissez faire capitalism.”
Posner is hardly a lone wolf on his side of the political spectrum. Tune in
to the financial programs on the Fox News Channel and Fox Business Net-
work any day and you’ll hear Lawrence Kudlow, Ben Stein, or any num-
ber of other economic conservatives warning that Barack Obama’s policies
threaten to undermine “our capitalist system.” That certainly implies there
is today a capitalist system to undermine.
WHat is CapitalisM?
What, then, is this system called “capitalism”? It can’t be the free market
because we have no free market. Today the hand of government is all over
What laissez Faire | 123
men’s land rights. Members of the ruling class and observers frequently
expressed concern that no one would choose to work for someone else in
an unpleasant factory if he could work for himself on the land or as an
artisan. They shared the view of the early 19th-century British writer E.G.
Wakefield: “Where land is cheap and all men are free, where every one
who so pleases can obtain a piece of land for himself, not only is labour
very dear, as respects the labourers’ share of the product, but the difficulty
is to obtain combined labour at any price.”
In no way did laissez faire begin at this point. Kevin Carson writes,
tHe CoNstitutioN
Given this pre-independence picture, it should come as no surprise that
independent America was no bastion of laissez-faire libertarianism. Indeed,
the effort to overthrow the Articles of Confederation – with its weak central
quasi government that lacked the power to tax the people directly or regu-
late trade – and establish a far stronger central government under the U.S.
Constitution was a continuation of the internal struggle that had occurred
before the Revolution. To give just one indication here, it is erroneously
believed that the driving force behind the Constitution was the determina-
tion to create a free trade zone among the states. Thus, according to the
standard account, the Commerce Clause was the response to widespread
trade barriers between the states. But several problems present themselves.
First, the United States were already a free trade zone (with the exception
of rare restrictions on European goods passing from one state to another).
Second, in arguing for ratification of the Constitution in The Federalist
Papers, Alexander Hamilton complained that tariffs were too low, not too
high:
In other words, competition among the states was keeping tariffs down,
while uniting the states under a strong central government would curb that
competition, cartel-style, and permit higher tariffs. (Indeed, the first eco-
nomic act of the new Congress in 1789 – on July 4! – was a comprehensive
protective tariff ranging from 5 to 10 percent. It was called “the second
Declaration of Independence.”)
Third, historian Calvin Johnson notes,
DistriButiNG laND
A revealing story is to be found in the disposition of federal lands. As
noted, political favoritism and land speculation, yielding fortunes, were
scandalous in the colonial period. Things changed little after the Revolu-
tion. Despite the impression given by the Homestead Act of 1862, most
land – and certainly the best land – was given or sold on sweetheart terms
to influential economic interests, most prominently but not exclusively
the railroad interests. Needless to say, the landless and powerless were not
among the buyers.
As historian Paul Wallace Gates wrote in 1935,
The large land holdings produced by this policy, parts of which were
kept idle, limited the opportunities of those without power and influence,
What laissez Faire | 129
Thus, during the colonial period virtually every aspect of economic life
was subject to nonmarket controls. Some of this tradition would not sur-
vive, some would become even more powerful, while some would ascend
to the level of federal control. The colonial background was like an insti-
tutional gene pool. Most of the colonial institutions and practices live on
today in some form, and there is very little in the way of nonmarket control
that does not have a colonial or English forerunner. American history did
not begin in 1776.
In the second half of the 19th century, America moved further from, not
closer to, laissez faire, thanks to Lincoln’s adoption of Henry Clay’s statist
American System, which included a national bank, internal improvements,
tariffs, and, for a while, an income tax. As Joseph R. Stromberg writes, “In
truth, the Gilded Age witnessed a ‘great barbecue,’ to use Vernon Louis
130 | sheldon richman
Parrington’s phrase, rooted in the rampant statism of the war years, whose
participants defended themselves with Spencerian rhetoric while grasping
with both hands.”
The 20th century only accelerated this process by shifting it further to
the national level. Big business’s complicity in the Progressive Era “reforms”
is well documented, thanks to Gabriel Kolko and others. If you count fa-
vors for major businesses as government intervention, then there was no
laissez faire in the 20th century, even during the Harding-Coolidge years.
Herbert Hoover’s interventionist record is well known. And it ought to
be understood that big business supported Franklin Roosevelt’s election in
1932 and his administration during its initial period. The corporatist Na-
tional Recovery Administration was much to its liking and for some didn’t
go far enough. If one believes that in the throes of the Depression, America
might have embraced explicit nationalization of the means of production,
then one can conclude that Roosevelt did indeed “save capitalism,” but not
in the sense of the free market, which had already been compromised virtu-
ally beyond recognition.
The upshot is that historical capitalism was not the free market. Rather
it was an anti-competitive, pro-business system of controls and subsidies
in which government and mercantile interests worked together in a mis-
guided attempt to produce economic growth and to promote the fortunes
of specific well-connected interests. As in any period, there are rent-seekers
and obliging rulers, with a revolving door between the two groups. But it
is important to note that there was no attempt at comprehensive economic
planning. Thus, there was scope for entrepreneurship, which needs little
encouragement to flourish. By historical standards the burden of govern-
ment was light. Grass sprouts through the cracks in the sidewalk. A little
economic freedom goes a long way.
This historical account is relevant to understanding the basis from which
the U.S. economy evolved and to realizing that the trajectory of develop-
ment has been different from what it would have been had a real free mar-
ket existed. Privilege has had long-lasting effects, which we still feel today
owing to what Kevin Carson calls the “subsidy of history.”
Thus those who call today’s system “capitalism” cannot be said to be mis-
using the term. Advocates of the real free market therefore would be well
advised to avoid using it to describe their preferred social system.
12
Rad Geek People’s Daily (n.p., oct.
3, 2008) <http://radgeek.com/
gt/2008/10/03/libertarianism_
through/> (aug. 22, 2011).
liBertariaNisM
tHrouGH tHiCk aND
tHiN
CHARLES W. JOHNSON
(2008)
oppose, which should they support, and towards which should they coun-
sel indifference? And how do we tell the difference?
Recently, this question has often arisen in the context of debates over
whether or not libertarianism should be integrated into a broader com-
mitment to some of the social concerns traditionally associated with anti-
authoritarian Left, such as feminism, anti-racism, gay liberation, counter-
culturalism, labor organizing, mutual aid, and environmentalism. Chris
Sciabarra has called for a “dialectical libertarianism” which recognizes that
“Just as relations of power operate through ethical, psychological, cultural,
political, and economic dimensions, so too the struggle for freedom and in-
dividualism depends upon a certain constellation of moral, psychological,
and cultural factors,”1 and in which the struggle for liberty is integrated
into a comprehensive struggle for human liberation, incorporating (among
other things) a commitment to gay liberation and opposition to racism.
Kevin Carson has criticized the “vulgar libertarianism” of “apologists for
capitalism” who “seem to have trouble remembering, from one moment
to the next, whether they’re defending actually existing capitalism or free
market principles,”2 and has argued that free market anarchists should ally
themselves with those radical industrial unions, such as the IWW, that
reject the interventionist methods of the state labor bureaucracy. Radical
libertarians including Carol Moore, Roderick Long, and myself, have sug-
gested that radical libertarian insights naturally complement, and should be
integrated with, an anti-statist form of radical feminism.
On the other hand, Jan Narveson has argued that left libertarian con-
cerns about the importance of cultural and social arrangements are at the
most a strategic issue which libertarians should consider a separate issue
from “the structure of our theory.” Leonard Read, the indefatigable founder
of FEE, famously promoted the argument that libertarianism is compat-
ible with “Anything That’s Peaceful.” And Walter Block has criticized “left
wing libertarians” for “perverting libertarianism”3 in their effort to inte-
grate common leftist concerns into the libertarian project. So long as cul-
tural values are expressed without indulging in government intervention or
any other form of coercion, Block argues, it should not matter to “plumb-
line” libertarians whether the cultural values in question are left wing, right
wing, or something else: “Give me a break; this issue has nothing to do with
libertarianism… No, these are all matters of taste, and de gustibus non est
disputandum.”4
However, it is important to keep in mind that the issue at hand in these
discussions goes beyond the debate over left libertarianism specifically. The
debate leads to some strange bedfellows: not only left libertarians defend
the claim that libertarianism should be integrated into a comprehensive
critique of prevailing social relations; so do “paleolibertarians” such as Gary
North or Hans-Hermann Hoppe, when they make the equal but opposite
claim that efforts to build a flourishing free society should be integrated
with a rock-ribbed inegalitarian cultural and religious traditionalism. As
do Randian Objectivists, when they argue that political freedom can only
arise from a culture of secular romantic individualism and an intellectual
milieu grounded in widespread, fairly specific agreement with the tenets
of Objectivist metaphysics, ethics, and epistemology. Abstracting from the
numerous, often mutually exclusive details of specific cultural projects that
have been recommended or condemned in the name of libertarianism, the
question of general principle has to do with whether libertarianism should
be seen as a “thin” commitment, which can be happily joined to absolutely
any non-coercive set of values and projects, or whether it should instead
be seen as one strand among others in a “thick” bundle of intertwined
social commitments. These disputes are often intimately connected with
other disputes concerning the specifics of libertarian rights theory, or class
analysis and the mechanisms of social power. In order to better get a grip
on what’s at stake, it will be necessary to make the question more precise,
and to tease out the distinctions between some of the different possible
relationships between libertarianism and “thicker” bundles of social, cul-
tural, religious, or philosophical commitments, which might recommend
integrating the two on some level or another.
4 Block 29.
134 | Charles W. Johnson
time, many if not most of these problems would likely sort themselves
out spontaneously through free market processes, even without conscious
anti-poverty activism. But even where problems of poverty or economic
inequality would sort themselves out in a society that has already been free
for some time, they are still likely to be extremely pressing for societies like
ours, which are not currently free, which libertarians hope to help become
free through education and activism. Certainly in our unfree market there
are large-scale inequalities of wealth and widespread poverty, most of it cre-
ated by the heavy hand of government intervention, in the form of direct
subsidies and the creation of rigged or captive markets. Those tycoons who
now enjoy the fruit of those privileges can and have and and will continue
to exercise some of the tremendous advantage that they enjoy in material
resources and political pull to pressure government to perpetuate or expand
the interventions from which the profiteering class benefits. Since libertar-
ians aim to abolish those interventions, it may well make good strategic
sense for them to oppose, and to support voluntary, non-governmental ef-
forts that work to undermine or bypass, the consolidated economic power
that the government-privileged robber barons currently command. Other-
wise we will find ourselves trying to fight with slingshots while our enemies
haul out bazookas.
Or, to take a less controversial example, many if not most libertarians,
throughout the history of the movement, have argued that there are good
reasons for libertarians to promote a culture in which reason and inde-
pendent thinking are highly valued, and blind conformism is treated with
contempt. But if this is a good thing for liberty, it must be for reasons
other than some kind of entailment of the non-aggression principle. Cer-
tainly everyone has a right to believe things simply because “everybody”
believes it, or to do things simply because “everybody” does it, as long as
their conformism respects the equal rights of independent thinkers to think
independently and act independently with their own person and property.
It is logically conceivable that a society could be rigidly conformist while
remaining entirely free; it would just have to be the case that the individual
people within that society were, by and large, psychologically and culturally
inclined to be so docile, and so sensitive to social disapproval, ostracism,
and verbal peer pressure, that they all voluntarily chose to go along with
the crowd.
But, again, while it is logically possible for people in such a society to
be convinced to respect individual liberty, it’s hardly likely to happen, or,
if it does happen, it’s unlikely that things will stay that way for very long.
If libertarians have good reasons to believe that reason and independent
thinking are good for liberty, it is because, in today’s unfree society, where
140 | Charles W. Johnson
the vast majority of people around you are statists, it takes quite a bit of
critical thinking and resistance to peer pressure in order to come to liber-
tarian conclusions. And similarly, in a free society, it’s likely that a healthy
respect for critical thinking and contempt for conformism would be neces-
sary in order to successfully resist later attempts to re-institute collectivism
or other forms of statist coercion.
While the non-aggression principle doesn’t entail any particular attitude
towards socioeconomic equality, or independent thinking, it is quite likely
that any chance of implementing the non-aggression principle in the real
world will be profoundly affected by whether these material or intellectual
preconditions have been met, and so principled libertarians have good stra-
tegic reasons to promote them, and to adopt forms of activism that tend to
support them through non-statist, voluntary means.
oNWarD
I should make it clear, if it is not yet clear, that my aim in this essay has
been to raise some questions, provoke some discussion, and offer some
categories for carrying on that discussion intelligently. I’ve not attempted
to answer all the questions I’ve raised, or to provide a fully detailed elabora-
tion of thick conceptions of libertarianism. And I’ve deliberately left a lot of
questions open for further discussion. Two of them are worth mentioning
in particular, in order to avoid possible confusion.
First, pointing out that conscientious libertarians may have good rea-
sons, as libertarians, to favor other social projects in addition to libertarian-
ism raises a related, but importantly distinct question: whether libertarians
should favor a gradualist or an immediatist stance towards the abolition
of statist controls while those other social projects remain incomplete or
frustrated in their progress. In particular, if getting or keeping a flourish-
ing free society depends on having a base of certain social or intellectual
preconditions in place, should libertarians still make direct efforts to abol-
ish all statist controls immediately and completely, regardless of the social
or cultural situation? Or should they hold off until the groundwork is in
place, and restrict themselves to calls for limited and moderated repeals in
the meantime?
For much of his career, Murray Rothbard endorsed a form of thin lib-
ertarian anarchism, arguing that libertarianism “will get nowhere until we
realize that there is and can be no “libertarian” culture.”5 At the same time,
he endorsed ultra-immediatism, joking that if he had a magic button that
immediately abolished an aspect of the state, he’d break his finger push-
ing it. In Total Freedom, Chris Sciabarra criticizes Rothbard’s thin liber-
tarianism as “unanchored utopianism;6 Sciabarra argues that a “dialectical
sensibility” recommends a more comprehensive three-level model of so-
cial transformation, incorporating not only to the political structure of the
state, but the interlocking dynamics by which political structure (Level-3)
affects, and is affected by, individual psychology and philosophy (Level-1)
and the framework of established cultural institutions (Level-2).
Sciabarra’s critique of Rothbardianism, and his later writing foreign pol-
icy, have emphasized the dangers of directly pursuing libertarian policies in
contexts where libertarian individualism and anti-authoritarianism are not
well-established in the local culture. All this strongly suggests that Sciabarra
prefers a form of libertarian gradualism, and suspects that any form of im-
mediatism depends on non-dialectical disregard for the cultural base neces-
sary to sustain liberty. But whether Sciabarra’s right about that, or wrong
about that, you need to keep in mind that endorsing a form of strategic
thickness does not, just by itself, commit you to gradualism; that’s a sepa-
rate issue that needs a separate argument. Believing in particular material
or cultural preconditions for the flourishing or long-term survival of a free
society, once statist interventions are repealed, does not entail any particu-
lar position on whether those invasions ought to continue until that base
is established. A dialectical sensibility requires us to consider the possibility
that individual attitudes and cultural institutions might adjust dynamically
as the political structure changes, and that these changes might be favor-
able rather than hostile to the cultural base that we advocate. Or they may
not: illiberal attitudes may be intransigent, and even without statism they
may nevertheless find new, equally destructive expressions. They may even
worsen. The point awaits further investigation, and is not settled simply by
accepting a thick conception over a thin conception of libertarianism.
But even if you concede that immediate repeal of statist controls, with-
out the preconditions in place, would eventually result in disaster, rather
than cultural adaptation, that still doesn’t settle the argument in favor of
gradualism. To do that, you would need to add some kind of further moral
argument that would show that people are entitled to continue invading
the rights of other people in order to maintain a particular standard of liv-
ing, or to stave off aggression that would otherwise be committed by some
unrelated third party at some point in the future. I happen to think that the
kind of arguments that you’d need to add to thick libertarianism in order
to justify gradualism are morally indefensible. Fortunately, since they are
separable from strategic thickness itself, there is no reason why advocates
of strategic thickness need to adopt them. That’s an important debate, and
one worth having – but it’s worth having elsewhere, since it’s independent
of the debate over thickness.
Second, it should be clear that I have not attempted to provide detailed
justifications for the specific claims that I made on behalf of particular
“thick” commitments – for example the claims that libertarians have strong
reasons to oppose sexism or to support state-free efforts at mutual aid and
labor solidarity. To explain the different forms of thickness, I drew most
of my examples from the left libertarian literature, and I happen to think
that there are good arguments to be made on that literature’s behalf. But
for the purposes of this essay, these claims are intended as particular illus-
trations of underlying concepts – not as proofs of a detailed left libertarian
analysis. For all I have said here, it might still be true that further argument
would reveal reasons of thickness in application, or from grounds, or in
strategy, or from consequences, that support a form of libertarianism quite
144 | Charles W. Johnson
soCialisM: WHat it is
BENJAMIN R. TuCKER
(1884)
d o you like the word socialism?” said a lady to Me the other day; “i fear i do
not; somehow I shrink when I hear it. It is associated with so much that
is bad! Ought we to keep it?”
The lady who asked this question is an earnest Anarchist, a firm friend
of Liberty, and – it is almost superfluous to add – highly intelligent. Her
words voice the feeling of many. But after all it is only a feeling, and will not
stand the test of thought. “Yes,” I answered, “it is a glorious word, much
abused, violently distorted, stupidly misunderstood, but expressing better
than any other the purpose of political and economic progress, the aim of
the Revolution in this century, the recognition of the great truth that Lib-
erty and Equality, through the law of Solidarity, will cause the welfare of
each to contribute to the welfare of all. So good a word cannot be spared,
must not be sacrificed, shall not be stolen.”
How can it be saved? Only by lifting it out of the confusion which obscures
it, so that all may see it clearly and definitely, and what it fundamentally means.
Some writers make Socialism inclusive of all efforts to ameliorate social condi-
tions. Proudhon is reputed to have said something of the kind. However that
may be, the definition seems to broad. Etymologically it is not unwarrantable,
but derivatively the word has a more technical and definite meaning.
Today (pardon the paradox!) society is fundamentally anti-social. The
whole so-called social fabric rests on privilege and power, and is disordered
146 | Benjamin r. tucker
soCialist eNDs,
Market MeaNs
GARy CHARTIER
(2009)
numbers of wage laborers and (b) a tiny minority of people owning large
quantities of wealth and capital goods. We might understand socialism
in positive terms as any economic system marked by (i) wide dispersal
of control over the means of production; (ii) worker management as the
primary mode of economic activity; together with (iii) the social pre-
eminence of ordinary people, as those who both operate and manage the
means of production.
State socialism has attempted to realize socialism through the power of
the state. Not surprisingly, given everything we know about states, state
socialism has proven in most respects to be a disaster. Coupled with the
economic inefficiencies associated with central planning, the secret police,
the barbed wire fences, and the suppression of dissent are all elements of
state socialism’s disastrous record.
If you want to define socialism as state socialism, be my guest. Many
people do so. But the history of the term makes clear that many people
have not meant state control or society-wide ownership of the means of
production when they have talked about socialism.
the other hand, if “socialism” can have a sufficiently broad meaning – one
compatible with market anarchism – that it makes sense to say that Kevin
(or another market anarchist) does defend such positions, then it is unclear
why talk of “socialism” should be objectionable.
BeYoND seMaNtiCs
So, in short, I’m not sure that using “socialism” as the label for a particu-
lar sort of market anarchist project, or of “capitalism” for what that project
opposes, has to be seen as just an exercise in semantic game-playing.
1. Emancipatory intent. For instance: labeling a particular sort of mar-
ket anarchist project “socialist” clearly identifies its emancipatory intent:
it links that project with the opposition to bossism and deprivation that
provide the real moral and emotional force of socialist appeals of all sorts.
2. Warranted opposition to “capitalism.” Thus, identifying one’s project as
“socialist” is a way of making clear one’s opposition to “capitalism” – as that
term is understood by an enormous range of ordinary people around the
world. The “socialist” label signals to them that a market anarchist project
like Kevin’s is on their side and that it is opposed to those entities they
identify as their oppressors.
socialist ends, Market Means | 153
puBliC or private?
l ibertarians often assuMe that a free society will be one in which all (or nearly
all) property is private. I have previously expressed my dissent from this
consensus, arguing that libertarian principles instead support a substantial
role for public property.1 In this article I develop this heretical position
further.
Let me specify once again what sort of public property I am defend-
ing. To most people, “public property” means “government property,”
on the (dubious) theory that governments hold their property in trust
for the public, and administer such property with an eye to the public
interest. As an anarchist, I do not regard government as a legitimate
institution, and so do not advocate government property of any sort.
But this is not the only kind of public property. As I wrote in my earlier
article:
tion) and a wooden branch that I carve into a spear (a detachable extension
of my hand) is only one of degree.2
When we put the Respect Principle and the Incorporation Principle
together, the result is that it is wrong to appropriate the products of other
people’s labor; for if your spear is a part of you, then I cannot subject your
spear to my ends without thereby subjecting you to my ends. In the words
of the 19th-century French libertarians Leon Wolowski and Émile Levas-
seur:
2 For a fuller defense of this claim, see Samuel C. Wheeler III, “Natural Prop-
erty Rights as Body Rights,” The Main Debate: Communism versus Capital-
ism, ed. Tibor R. Machan (New York: Random 1987) 272–89.
3 Qtd. Murray N. Rothbard, For A New Liberty: The Libertarian Manifesto, rev.
ed. (San Francisco: Fox 1994) 36–37.
160 | roderick t. long
Since collectives, like individuals, can mix their labor with unowned
resources to make those resources more useful to their purposes, collectives,
too can claim property rights by homestead. And since collectives, like in-
dividuals, can be the beneficiaries of free voluntary transfer, collectives too
can claim property rights by bequest.
I should note one important difference between the homesteading case
and the bequest case. In the homesteading case, it is presumably not the
human race at large, but only the inhabitants of the village, that acquire a
collective property right in the cleared path; since it would be difficult for
humankind as a whole, or even a substantial portion thereof, to mix its
labor with a single resource, and so the homesteading argument places an
upper limit on the size of property-owning collectives. But there seems to
be no analogous limit to the size of the collective to which one can freely
give one’s property, so here the recipient might well be the human race as
a whole.
I have argued that the Lockean argument does not specify private prop-
erty as the only justifiable option, but makes a place for public property as
well. It should also be noted that in at least one case, the Lockean argument
positively forbids private property: namely, the case of intellectual property.
This fact is not always recognized by Lockeans. But consider: suppose
Proprius, a defender of protectionist legislation, were to invoke Lockean
a plea for public property | 161
the idea of the widget doesn’t make less available for others. Nor does it
make others’ widgets less valuable; on the contrary, the more widgets there
are, the more uses for widgets are likely to be discovered or developed, and
so the value of each widget increases. Ideas are public property, in that no
one may be legitimately excluded from their use.
Another example of a largely nonrivalrous good is the Internet. I say
largely nonrivalrous, because the Internet does have a physical basis,
which, though constantly expanding, is finite at any given time, and an
increase in users can cause delays for everyone. But this rivalrous aspect
is offset by the reverse effect: the value of the Internet to any one user in-
creases as the volume of available information, potential correspondents,
etc., increases; so additional users on balance increase the value of the
good as a whole.
It might be argued that this the-more-the-merrier effect occurs only
with goods that are wholly or largely nonphysical, but could never apply
to more concrete resources like land. As Carol Rose and David Schmidtz
have shown,5 however, although any physical resource is finite and so in-
evitably has some tragedy-of-the-commons aspects, many resources have
“comedy-of-the-commons” aspects as well, and in some cases the latter may
outweigh the former, thus making public property more efficient than pri-
vate property.
For instance (to adapt one of Carol Rose’s examples), suppose that a
public fair is a comedy-of-the-commons good; the more people who partic-
ipate, the better (within certain limits, at any rate). Imagine two such fairs,
one held on private property and the other on public. The private owner
has an incentive to exclude all participants who do not pay him a certain
fee; thus the fair is deprived of all the participants who cannot afford the
fee. (I am assuming that the purpose of the fair is primarily social rather
than commercial, so that impecunious participants would bring as much
value to the fair as wealthy ones.) The fair held on public property will thus
be more successful than the one held on private property.
Yet, it may be objected, so long as a comedy-of-the-commons good still
has some rivalrous, tragedy-of-the-commons aspects, it will be depleted,
and thus the comedy-of-the-commons benefits will be lost anyway. But this
assumes that privatization is the only way to prevent overuse. In fact, how-
ever, most societies throughout history have had common areas whose users
were successfully restrained by social mores, peer pressure, and the like.
Two bodies cannot occupy the same place at the same time…
Ten men may be legally equal owners of one field, but none
of them can get any good of it unless its occupancy and use is
allotted among them by measures of time and space… If all
ten wished to do exactly the same thing at the same time in the
same spot, it would be physically impossible… [G]roup own-
ership necessarily resolves into management by one person…6
6 Isabel Paterson, The God of the Machine (New Brunswick: Transaction 1993)
180–1.
7 Paterson 181-2.
a plea for public property | 165
Note that here Paterson actually points out three ways in which public
property can be feasible. First, it may be the case that not enough people are
competing for use of the same portion of the property to cause a conflict.
Paterson assumes this will only happen in cases where any one user’s oc-
cupancy of a given area is of minimal duration; but clearly the same result
could be achieved when the total volume of users is low enough, and the
resource itself is homogeneous enough, that a lengthier occupancy of any
particular portion of the resource is no inconvenience to anyone else.
Second and third, in cases where use is becoming rivalrous, Paterson
offers two different possible solutions. One solution is to require frequent
turnover, so that no one member of the public is allowed to monopolize any
portion of the resource for longer than a certain time period; the other solu-
tion is to adopt “first come, first served,” meaning that those who currently
occupy portions of the property may stay there and exclude newcomers.
Paterson thinks that both of these options take away from the genuinely
“public” nature of the property. But do they?
According to Paterson, the turnover requirement takes away from the
publicness of the property because the public then lacks “the essential prop-
erty right of continuous and final occupancy.” But is this true? If no indi-
vidual member of the public has “the essential property right of continuous
and final occupancy,” it hardly follows that the public as such lacks this
right; in fact, the turnover requirement is precisely a means of implement-
ing that right.
What about the first-come-first-served rule? Paterson may think that
this ends the publicness of the property because it gives individuals the
right to exclude others from the particular portions they have claimed. But
this falls short of a full private property right. If I have private ownership
of a portion of land, then that land remains mine, off limits to others, even
when I am away from the land. But if I leave the particular area of a public
park that I’ve been squatting in, I lose all rights to it; in that respect, what I
have a “right” to is more like a place in line than it is like freehold property.
Which is preferable, the turnover rule or the first-come-first-served rule?
Presumably it depends on the function of the resource in question. In the
case of a road, it is in the interest of the owners – the public – that the
turnover rule be applied, because a road loses its usefulness if it cannot be
traversed. However, the autonomy argument suggests that not all public
property should be subject to the turnover rule, so in some cases the first-
come-first-served rule is appropriate.
Suppose a conflict arises between two users of the property, one who
thinks it should be governed by the turnover rule, and another who thinks
it should be governed by the first-come-first-served rule. What happens?
166 | roderick t. long
Well, ideally the decision should be made by the owner: the public.
But only a unanimous decision could count as the will of the public, and
unanimous decisions are hard to come by. (Putting the matter to a vote
would reveal only the will of a majority faction of the public.) In that case,
the public is in the same situation as an infant, a lunatic, a missing person,
or a person in a coma: the public has the right to decide the matter, but
is currently incapable of making a coherent decision, and so the decision
must be made for them by a court which attempts (presumably in response
to a class-action suit) to determine what is in the best interest of the rights-
holder.
This is a difficult problem, to which I do not have a full solution. But let
me try out a few possibilities.
There are two ways I can lose my claim to property. I can give or sell
it, or I can abandon it. The public is not in a position to give or sell its
property,8 but perhaps it is capable of abandoning it.
What counts as the public’s having abandoned a piece of property? Well,
the easiest case would be if no one has used it for a very long time. (How
long? Well, the length of time should presumably be the same as whatever
is accepted in the case of abandoning private property.) But what if only a
few people have used it? Does that count as the public’s using it (given that
the property has never been used by the entire public)?
Or suppose I privatize some portion of the property, claiming it for my
own use, fencing it in and so forth. Perhaps it then counts as mine so long
as no one protests. (How widely do I have to advertise the fact that I’ve
done this?) But again, what if just a few people protest – does that count?
Ultimately these problems will have to be resolved by a libertarian le-
gal system, through evolving common-law precedents. That’s fine with me.
What I would want to insist on, though, is that some role for public prop-
erty is important for a libertarian society. An all-private system can be op-
pressive, just as an all-public one can be; but a system that allows networks
of private spaces and public spaces to compete against each other offers the
greatest scope for individual freedom.
8 At least I don’t think so. Someone could argue that the court could act on be-
half of the people’s interests, authorizing the transfer of ownership from the
collective to me, in exchange for the “price” of my doing something judged
to be of general benefit to the public. But I am wary of heading too far down
that path. For one thing, if the court acquires too much power to administer
the property of the “disorganized public,” we start to move back toward the
“organized public” model of government property, and the whole idea of
free access is replaced by access-in-the-interests-of-the-public-as-determined-
by-some-official. For another, the value of public property is severely under-
mined if it can be unpredictably privatized on some judge’s say-so.
16
Human Iterations (n.p., Nov. 13, 2009)
<http://humaniterations.wordpress.
com/2009/11/13/from-whence-do-
property-titles-arise/> (aug. 22, 2011).
FroM WHeNCe Do
propertY titles arise?
WILLIAM GILLIS
(2009)
M any Market theorists take property titles as axioMatic and then develop
coercive apparatuses to enforce them – justifying such coercion by
appealing to notions like implicit consent and/or the justness of contracts
that sell off part of one’s agency in the future. This rightfully bugs the crap
out of many anarcho-communists. Left market theorists in turn tend to
write off these apprehensions as a contention over differing ideal systems
of property – ie differences over what constitutes abandonment and the
general viability of collective property.
But this, as I’ve argued time and time again, is a profoundly limited
understanding of the criticisms being lobbed against them.
First off, not every system of mediating between different people’s
desires or uses for objects is describable in terms of property titles.
Property titles are claims by discrete agents to absolute veto power over
the use of an object; they’re a construct used for negotiating between
the justness of uses by individuals with competing intentions for an
object. Property titles solve the problem by determining whether A or
170 | William Gillis
rectly, because on such a level we can’t dictate intent, we can only recognize
and work around biases. So it’s no more a fundamental problem than it is
for anarcho-communism. That said, I think intent and psychological issues
of control are rightfully at the very core of the anarchist project. It just falls
outside the purview of this discussion.
174 | William Gillis
will exist a natural, mean personal wealth value, beyond which diminishing
returns enter quickly, and below which one is extremely disposed towards
profit and enrichment.
It’s a distinction between information and objects; ultimately you can’t
steal good credit. People’s trust, goodwill and their whole panorama of in-
tention towards you exists within them internally. It’s accessible by anyone
anywhere, but they’re the only ones capable of changing it. There are no
banks it can be kept within, only distributed collective or institutional relay
points through which it can be conveyed. And trust critically underlies all
material transactions.
Incidentally this renders the entire debate over proposed systematic pro-
hibitions of wages, rent, and interest moot. Obviously all will be, in some
contexts, however fringe, desirably or neutrally regarded by all parties. But
even if they crop up as large phenomenon, that’s not reason to panic, flip
the fuck out and organize shit like armed roving ‘homesteaders’ with ideo-
logically precise definitions of legitimate property. Instead the market will
already be ready to grind down or impede any vast swathes of accumulated
wealth because it will be the market that negotiates the acceptance of said
wealth. Not necessarily through malicious crime, but through higher-level
market mechanisms that ultimately give rise the extent and strength of
claim.
As a market it might not look much like the idealized American myth of
our simplistic contemporary ‘market.’ But then we knew it wouldn’t.
17
Two-Gun Mutualism and the Golden Rule
(n.p., sep. 25, 2008) <http://libertarian-
labyrinth.blogspot.com/2008/09/gift-
economy-of-property.html> (aug. 22,
2011).
i think Most anarchists and libertarians share a faith that it is possible for needs
to be met, goods to be distributed and some level of general prosperity
achieved, in a way that is voluntary and at least approximately just. But we
couldn’t differ more, it seems, when we start to ask how to get the work
done. Probably most of us aim, in the long run, for a society where there
is sufficient prosperity that we could be much less concerned about such
things, where generosity would be a logical response to plenty. But we live
in the midst of a society and economic system which is very far from that
ideal, and dream our dreams of the future and freedom while we deal with
a very unfree present. On a day when we’ve just witnessed the largest US
bank failure in history, in the context of a government-brokered market-
move by JPMorgan, who also benefited from the Bear Stearns maneuver,
talk about “genuinely free markets” seems a bit pipe-dreamy. But if it’s go-
ing to be a long struggle to whatever freedom we manage to wrest from the
corrupt bastards who are currently monkeying with our lives, we can prob-
ably take the time to get on something like the same page.
176 | shawn Wilbur
1 See Shawn Wilbur, “Proudhon on Freedom and Free Will,” Two-Gun Mu-
tualism & the Golden Rule (n.p., Sep. 12, 2008) <libertarian-labyrinth.
blogspot.com/2008/09/proudhon-on-freedom-and-free-will.html> (March
13, 2011).
the Gift economy of property | 177
FairNess aND
possessioN
GARy CHARTIER
(2011)
J ustice in possession is not, per se, a Matter of relationships between people and
things. Rather, it’s a matter of relationships among people. Like many
(perhaps not all) moral requirements, it has to do with how it’s reasonable for
us to treat each other. The basic moral requirement of fairness means that we
have good reason to take each others’ interests into account when we make
decisions. In tandem with a set of truisms about human behavior and the
human condition, this principle entails respect for a set of rules about posses-
sion. There is good reason for a just legal system to treat these rules as excep-
tionless, though somewhat less reason for individual moral actors to do so.
We can fail to be reasonable in relation to each other in various ways.
For instance, I can opt to attack some aspect of your well being out of spite
or a desire for revenge, or as a means to accomplishing some goal of mine.
And this kind of unreasonableness is extremely important – it’s at the root
of much injustice in war, for instance. But it’s not the kind of unreasonable-
ness that typically arises when people ignore or actively violate each other’s
legitimate possessory interests. Generally, the kind of unreasonable action
at issue in such cases is arbitrary discrimination among those affected by
an agent’s choices. This kind of unreasonableness violates what I’ll call the
Principle of Fairness.
182 | Gary Chartier
There are different ways to express this principle, none immune to criti-
cism. For present purposes, I want to highlight a fairly simple aspect of
the principle, which can be formulated something like this: avoid treating
others in ways you wouldn’t be willing to be treated in relevantly similar cir-
cumstances. This formulation is rooted in what I take to be the intuitively
plausible suggestion that those affected by our acts and omissions are gener-
ally quite like ourselves, and that simple numerical difference is insufficient
to warrant fundamentally different treatment.
This aspect of the Principle of Fairness can serve as the basis of a set of
possessory rules.
First, the Principle establishes a presumption in favor of allowing people
to retain control of the things they actually possess. Most of us aren’t willing
most of the time for others violently or deceptively to snatch our stuff. So
it’s generally not reasonable for us to take theirs.
Of course, that basic presumption can be defeated – as the notion of
objectionable snatching itself suggests. Thieves don’t like their possessions
taken any more than do those who come by what they have honestly and
peacefully, but our reactions to thieves’ possessory claims tend, I think jus-
tifiably, to be rather different from our responses to the claims of those the
thieves have dispossessed.
Further considerations help to clarify the reach and narrow the range
of just possessory rules. Taken in tandem with the Principle of Fairness,
these considerations provide considerable support for what I call the base-
line rules: (i) someone establishes a just possessory claim to an unclaimed
physical object or tract of land by establishment effective possession of it;
(ii) once a person takes possession of a physical object or tract of land, it’s
up to her how it is used and what is done with it (to the extent that, in so
doing, she doesn’t attack other people’s bodies or justly acquired posses-
sions); (iii) this means, in particular, that someone with a just possessory
claim that freely permit someone else to take possession of an object or tract
of land that is hers, on any mutually agreeable terms. If I’m right about
the baseline rules, then, while it will be true in some sense that posses-
sory norms are conventions, they are tightly constrained conventions, since
fairness seems to require that reasonable possessory norms incorporate the
baseline rules.
A look at some relevant considerations will help to make clear how they
support the baseline rules.
t Accessibility. All other things being equal (presuming, in particular,
that costs can’t be shifted onto the unwilling, as so often happens in
connection with abuses ranging from slavery to pollution), everyone
benefits as supplies of the goods and services people want increases and
Fairness and possession | 183
their costs decrease. If people’s possessory rights are stable, so that they
can bargain with others and keep what they are promised in return for
goods and services they provide, they are more likely to produce those
goods and services in desirable quantities at desirable prices.
t Autonomy. People tend to want autonomy: they want to be able to
make their own decisions without, at minimum, forcible interfer-
ence from others. Stable possessory claims enable people to preserve
their autonomy. So it will be unreasonable for most people not to
favor rules that protect such claims.
t Coordination. Coordinating the behavior of economic actors – setting
prices and determining production levels and distribution patterns –
can be a rational activity only if people have stable possessory rights.
t Compensation. Stable possessory rights enable people to bargain ef-
fectively with each other – such rights create a baseline for bargaining
– and make people to be compensated for their past efforts.
t Generosity. You can’t be generous if you don’t have stable possessory
rights and those to whom you give lack such rights.
t Incentivization. People are likely to be productive – in ways that ben-
efit themselves and others alike – when they can keep what they earn.
This means, in turn, that they and those with whom they bargain
need stable possessory rights.
t Peacemaking. Stable possessory rights, acknowledged as such by ev-
eryone, reduce conflict over scarce resources.
t Productivity. Having stable possessory rights means that people are
likely to put resources to their most productive use. (This point needs
some qualifying, of course, since different people have different goals;
one person’s goal for a piece of land, for instance, may be precisely
that it function effectively as a nature preserve.)
t Reliability. Reliability makes for stability and effective planning.
t Simplicity. Simple rules are easier to formulate, articulate, under-
stand, and apply. The baseline rules are simpler than almost all al-
ternatives. (They are less so, perhaps, than a set of rules allowing
everyone access to everything, but the other considerations certainly
suggest that such rules would be undesirable.)
t Stability. Some rules are likely to be rooted in self-enforcing con-
ventions. Such rules are easier to understand and apply. And there
is good reason to think that the baseline rules are, precisely, stable,
self-enforcing conventions.
t Stewardship. Stewardship matters: everyone benefits when things are
well taken care, and things are well taken care of when someone in
particular is responsible for everything.
184 | Gary Chartier
ture, and the power to exact tribute from others for the use of
this natural wealth, which should be open to all.1
1 Benjamin Tucker, Instead of a Book, By a Man Too Busy to Write One: A Frag-
mentary Exposition of Philosophical Anarchism (New York: Tucker 1893) 13.
the libertarian Case against intellectual property rights | 191
But this reply will not do. Rand is suggesting that the competition to get
to the patent office first is like any other kind of commercial competition.
For example, suppose you and I are competing for the same job, and you
happen to get hired simply because you got to the employer before I did.
In that case, the fact that I might have gotten there first does not give me
any rightful claim to the job. But that is because I have no right to the job
in the first place. And once you get the job, your rightful claim to that job
depends solely on the fact that your employer chose to hire you.
In the case of patents, however, the story is supposed to be different. The
basis of an inventor’s claim to a patent on X is supposedly the fact that he
has invented X. (Otherwise, why not offer patent rights over X to anyone
who stumbles into the patent office, regardless of whether they’ve ever even
heard of X?) Registering one’s invention with the patent office is supposed
to record one’s right, not to create it. Hence it follows that the person who
arrives at the patent office second has just as much right as the one who
arrives first – and this is surely a reductio ad absurdum of the whole notion
of patents.
2 Ayn Rand, Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal (New York: NAL 1967) 133.
192 | roderick t. long
were interested in doing the same for the second part of Lord of the Rings,
left unfilmed by Bakshi.
But there was a problem. Bakshi’s studio had the rights to the first two
volumes of the trilogy. Only the rights to the third volume were avail-
able. So Rankin-Bass’ sequel (released as The Return of the King) ended
up, of necessity, covering only the third volume. Those events from the
second volume that Bakshi had left unfilmed were simply lost. (Not even
flashbacks to events in the first two volumes were permitted – although
flashbacks to The Hobbit were okay, because Rankin-Bass had the rights
to that.)
Video catalogues now sell The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, and The
Return of the King as a unified package. But viewers unfamiliar with the
books will be a bit puzzled. In the Bakshi film, the evil wizard Saruman is
a looming force to be reckoned with; in the Rankin-Bass sequel, he is not
even mentioned. Likewise, at the end of the Bakshi film, Frodo, Sam, and
Gollum are traveling together; at the beginning of the Rankin-Bass sequel
we find them split up, without explanation. The answers lie in the unfilmed
portion of the second volume, which deals with Saruman’s defeat, Gollum’s
betrayal of Frodo, Sam’s battle with Shelob, and Frodo’s capture by the
Orcs. Not unimportant events, these. But thanks to intellectual property
laws, the viewer is not allowed to know about them.
Is this a catastrophe? I suppose not. The aesthetic unity and continuity
of a work of art was mangled, pursuant to the requirements of law. But it
was just an animated TV-movie. So what?
So what, perhaps. But my story does serve to cast doubt on the idea that
copyright is a bulwark of artistic expression. When a work of art involves
reworking material created by others (as most art historically has), copy-
right laws can place it in a straitjacket.
stances of such organized boycotts. In the 1930’s, for example, the Guild
of Fashion Originators managed to protect dress styles and the like from
piracy by other designers, without any help from the coercive power of
government.
A voluntary boycott is actually a much safer tool than government for
protecting the claims of intellectual producers, because, in the course of
trying to strike a pragmatic balance between the economic power of pro-
ducers and the economic power of consumers, a private effort is more likely
than a government monopoly freed from market incentives to strike an
analogous balance between the legitimate moral claims of the two groups
– the producers’ moral claim to remuneration, and the consumers’ moral
claim to easily accessible information.
Something more formal can easily be imagined. In the late Middle
Ages a voluntary court system was created by merchants frustrated with
the inadequacies of governmentally-provided commercial law. This sys-
tem, known as the Law Merchant (“law” being the noun and “merchant”
the adjective), enforced its decisions solely by means of boycott, and yet
it was enormously effective. Suppose producers of intellectual products
– authors, artists, inventors, software designers, etc. – were to set up an
analogous court system for protecting copyrights and patent rights – or
rather, copyclaims and patent claims (since the moral claims in question,
though often legitimate, are not rights in the libertarian sense). Individu-
als and organizations accused of piracy would have a chance to plead their
case at a voluntary court, but if found guilty they would be required to
cease and desist, and to compensate the victims of their piracy, on pain
of boycott.
What if this system went too far, and began restricting the free flow
of information in the same undesirable ways that, I’ve argued, intellectual
property laws do?
This is certainly a possibility. But I think the danger is much greater with
coercive enforcement than with voluntary enforcement. As Rich Hammer
likes to point out: ostracism gets its power from reality, and its power is
limited by reality. As a boycotting effort increases in scope, the number and
intensity of frustrated desires on the part of those who are being deprived
by the boycott of something they want will become greater. As this hap-
pens, there will also be a corresponding increase in the number of people
who judge that the benefits of meeting those desires (and charging a hefty
fee to do so) outweigh the costs of violating the boycott. Too strenuous and
restrictive a defense of copyclaims will founder on the rock of consumer
preferences; too lax a defense will founder on the rock of producer prefer-
ences.
the libertarian Case against intellectual property rights | 197
CorporatioNs
versus tHe Market,
or WHip CoNFlatioN
NoW
RODERICK T. LONG
(2008)
d efenders of the free Market are often accused of being apologists for big
business and shills for the corporate elite. Is this a fair charge?
No and yes. Emphatically no – because corporate power and the free
market are actually antithetical; genuine competition is big business’s worst
nightmare. But also, in all too many cases, yes – because although liberty
and plutocracy cannot coexist, simultaneous advocacy of both is all too
possible.
First, the no. Corporations tend to fear competition, because competi-
tion exerts downward pressure on prices and upward pressure on salaries;
moreover, success on the market comes with no guarantee of permanency,
depending as it does on outdoing other firms at correctly figuring out how
202 | roderick t. long
1 For documentation and analysis see James Weinstein, The Corporate Ideal in
the Liberal State, 1900-1918 (New York: Farrar 1976); Gabriel Kolko, The
Triumph of Conservativm: A Reinterpretation of American History, 1900-1916
(New York: Free 1963); Gabriel Kolko, Railroads and Regulation, 1877-1916
(Princeton: Princeton University Press 1965); Paul Weaver, The Suicidal
Corporation: How Big Business Fails America (New York: Touchtose-Simon
1988); Butler D. Shaffer, In Restraint of Trade: The Business Campaign Against
Competition, 1918-1938 (Lewisburg PA: Bucknell University Press 1997).
For briefer accounts see Roy A. Childs, “Big Business and the Rise of Ameri-
can Statism,” ch. 23 (223-240), in this volume; Joseph R. Stromberg, “The
Political Economy of Liberal Corporatism,” Individualist, May 1972: 2-11
<http://anarchyisordergovernmentiscivilwar.blogspot.com/2010/08/politi-
cal-economy-of-liberal.html> (March 13, 2011).
2 This is especially true if, as some libertarians argue, the corporate form itself
(involving legal personality and limited liability) is inconsistent with free-
market principles. For this position, see Frank Van Dun, “Is the Corpora-
tion a Free-Market Institution?,” The Freeman: Ideas on Liberty 53.3 (March
2003): 29-33 (Foundation for Economic Education, 2003) <http://www.
thefreemanonline.org/featured/is-the-corporation-a-free-market-institu-
tion> (March 13, 2011); for the other side see Norman Barry, “The Theory
of the Corporation,” The Freeman: Ideas on Liberty 53.3 (March 2003): 22-6
(Foundation for Economic Education, 2003) <http://www.thefreemanon-
line.org/featured/the-theory-of-the-corporation> (March 13, 2011). For the
purposes of the present discussion, however, let us assume the legitimacy of
the corporation.
3 Roderick T. Long, “Regulation: The Cause, Not the Cure, of the Financial
Crisis,” ch. 24 (241-246), in this volume.
As I have written elsewhere:
One especially useful service that the state can render the corpo-
rate elite is cartel enforcement. Price-fixing agreements are un-
stable on a free market, since while all parties to the agreement
have a collective interest in seeing the agreement generally hold,
each has an individual interest in breaking the agreement by un-
derselling the other parties in order to win away their customers;
and even if the cartel manages to maintain discipline over its
own membership, the oligopolistic prices tend to attract new
competitors into the market. Hence the advantage to business
of state-enforced cartelisation. Often this is done directly, but
there are indirect ways too, such as imposing uniform quality
standards that relieve firms from having to compete in qual-
ity. (And when the quality standards are high, lower-quality but
cheaper competitors are priced out of the market.)
The ability of colossal firms to exploit economies of scale is
also limited in a free market, since beyond a certain point the
benefits of size (e.g., reduced transaction costs) get outweighed
by diseconomies of scale (e.g., calculational chaos stemming
from absence of price feedback) – unless the state enables them
to socialise these costs by immunising them from competition
– e.g., by imposing fees, licensure requirements, capitalisation
requirements, and other regulatory burdens that dispropor-
tionately impact newer, poorer entrants as opposed to richer,
more established firms.4
Nor does the list end there. Tax breaks to favored corporations repre-
sent yet another non-obvious form of government intervention. There is of
4 Roderick T. Long, “Those Who Control the Past Control the Future,” Art of
the Possible Essays (n.p., Sep. 18, 2008) <http://praxeology.net/aotp.htm#4>;
cf. Roderick T. Long, “History of an Idea; or, How an Argument Against
the Workability of Authoritarian Socialism Became an Argument Against
the Workability of Authoritarian Capitalism,” Art of the Possible Essays (n.p.,
Oct. 2, 2008) <http://praxeology.net/aotp.htm#5> (March 13, 2011); Kevin
A. Carson, “Economic Calculation in the Corporate Commonwealth,” ch.
22 (213-222) in this volume. For a more detailed case see Kevin A. Carson,
Studies in Mutualist Political Economy (Charleston, SC: BookSurge 2007)
(Mutualist.org, 200) <http://mutualist.org/id47.html> (March 13, 2011);
Kevin A. Carson, Organization Theory: A Libertarian Perspective (Charleston,
SC: BookSurge 2008).
204 | roderick t. long
course nothing anti-market about tax breaks per se; quite the contrary. But
when a firm is exempted from taxes to which its competitors are subject,
it becomes the beneficiary of state coercion directed against others, and to
that extent owes its success to government intervention rather than market
forces.
Intellectual property laws also function to bolster the power of big busi-
ness. Even those who accept the intellectual property as a legitimate form
of private property5 can agree that the ever-expanding temporal horizon
of copyright protection, along with disproportionately steep fines for viola-
tions (measures for which publishers, recording firms, software companies,
and film studios have lobbied so effectively), are excessive from an incenti-
val point of view, stand in tension with the express intent of the Constitu-
tion’s patents-and-copyrights clause, and have more to do with maximizing
corporate profits than with securing a fair return to the original creators.
Government favoritism also underwrites environmental irresponsibil-
ity on the part of big business. Polluters often enjoy protection against
lawsuits, for example, despite the pollution’s status as a violation of private
property rights.6 When timber companies engage in logging on public
lands, the access roads are generally tax-funded, thus reducing the cost of
logging below its market rate; moreover, since the loggers do not own the
forests they have little incentive to log sustainably.7
In addition, inflationary monetary policies on the part of central banks
also tend to benefit those businesses that receive the inflated money first in
the form of loans and investments, when they are still facing the old, lower
prices, while those to whom the new money trickles down later, only after
they have already begun facing higher prices, systematically lose out.
And of course corporations have been frequent beneficiaries of U.S.
military interventions abroad, from the United Fruit Company in 1950s
Guatemala to Halliburton in Iraq today.
Vast corporate empires like Wal-Mart are often either hailed or condemned
(depending on the speaker’s perspective) as products of the free market. But
not only is Wal-Mart a direct beneficiary of (usually local) government in-
5 Another disputed issue among libertarians; see, e.g., Cato Unbound’s sym-
posium, The Future of Copyright (Cato Institute, June 2008) <http://www.
cato-unbound.org/archives/june-2008-the-future-of-copyright> (March 13,
2011).
6 Murray N. Rothbard, “Law, Property Rights, and Air Pollution,” Cato Jour-
nal 2.1 (Spring 1982): 55-99 (Cato Institute, 1982) <http://www.cato.org/
pubs/journal/cj2n1/cj2n1-2.pdf> (March 13, 2011).
7 Mary J. Ruwart, Healing Our World in an Age of Aggression (Kalamazoo: Sun-
Star 2003) 117-9.
tervention in the form of such measures as eminent domain and tax breaks,
but it also reaps less obvious benefits from policies of wider application. The
funding of public highways through tax revenues, for example, constitutes
a de facto transportation subsidy, allowing Wal-Mart and similar chains to
socialize the costs of shipping and so enabling them to compete more suc-
cessfully against local businesses; the low prices we enjoy at Wal-Mart in our
capacity as consumers are thus made possible in part by our having already
indirectly subsidized Wal-Mart’s operating costs in our capacity as taxpayers.
Wal-Mart also keeps its costs low by paying low salaries; but what makes
those low salaries possible is the absence of more lucrative alternatives for
its employees – and that fact in turn owes much to government interven-
tion. The existence of regulations, fees, licensure requirements, et cetera
does not affect all market participants equally; it’s much easier for wealthy,
well-established companies to jump through these hoops than it is for new
firms just starting up. Hence such regulations both decrease the number of
employers bidding for employees’ services (thus keeping salaries low) and
make it harder for the less affluent to start enterprises of their own.8 Legal
restrictions on labor organizing also make it harder for such workers to
organize collectively on their own behalf.9
I don’t mean to suggest that Wal-Mart and similar firms owe their success
solely to governmental privilege; genuine entrepreneurial talent has doubtless
been involved as well. But given the enormous governmental contribution
to that success, it’s doubtful that in the absence of government intervention
such firms would be in anything like the position they are today.
In a free market, firms would be smaller and less hierarchical, more lo-
cal and more numerous (and many would probably be employee-owned);
prices would be lower and wages higher; and corporate power would be in
shambles. Small wonder that big business, despite often paying lip service
to free market ideals, tends to systematically oppose them in practice.
So where does this idea come from that advocates of free-market lib-
ertarianism must be carrying water for big business interests? Whence the
pervasive conflation of corporatist plutocracy with libertarian laissez-faire?
Who is responsible for promoting this confusion?
There are three different groups that must shoulder their share of the
blame. (Note: in speaking of “blame” I am not necessarily saying that the
8 On this latter point see Charles W. Johnson, “Scratching By: How Govern-
ment Creates Poverty as We Know It,” ch. 41 (377-384), this volume.
9 For some of the ways in which purportedly pro-labor legislation turns out
to be anti-labor in practice, see Charles W. Johnson, “Free the Unions (and
All Political Prisoners),” RadGeek People’s Daily (n.p., May 1, 2004) <http://
radgeek.com/gt/2004/05/01/free_the> (March 13, 2011).
206 | roderick t. long
“The Roots of War” (Capitalism 35-44), for example, she condemns “men
with political pull” who seek “special advantages by government action in
their own countries” and “special markets by government action abroad,”
and so “acquire fortunes by government favor… which they could not have
acquired on a free market.” Moreover, while readers often come away from
her novel Atlas Shrugged (New York: Penguin 1999) with the vague memory
that the heroine, Dagny Taggart, was fighting against evil bureaucrats who
wanted to impose unfair regulations on her railroad company, in fact Tag-
gart’s struggle is against evil bureaucrats (in league with her power-hungry
brother/employer) who want to give her company special favors and priv-
ileges at its competitors’ expense. For an analysis of what Rand got right
and wrong about corporatism, see Roderick T. Long, “Toward a Libertarian
Theory of Class,” Social Philosophy and Policy 15.1 (1998): 321-5 (Social
Philosophy and Policy Center, 1998) <http://praxeology.net/libclass-theory-
part-1.pdf>, <http://praxeology.net/libclass-theory-part-2.pdf> (March 13,
2011).
15 See Roderick T. Long, “Poison As Food, Poison As Antidote,” Art of the Pos-
sible Essays (n.p., Aug. 28, 2008) <http://praxeology.net/aotp.htm#13>.
16 Kevin A. Carson, “Vulgar Libertarianism Watch, Part 1,” Mutualist Blog:
Free Market Anticapitalism (n.p., Jan. 11, 2005) <http://mutualist.blogspot.
com/2005/01/vulgar-libertarianism-watch-part-1.html> (March 13, 2011).
corresponding tendency to treat the undesirability of those features of actu-
ally existing corporatist society as though they constituted an objection to the
free market.17 Both tendencies conflate free markets with corporatism, but
draw opposite morals; as Murray Rothbard notes, “Both left and right have
been persistently misled by the notion that intervention by the government is
ipso facto leftish and antibusiness.”18 And if many leftists tend to see dubious
corporate advocacy in libertarian pronouncements even when it’s not there,
so likewise many libertarians tend not to see dubious corporate advocacy in
libertarian pronouncements even when it is there.
There is an obvious tendency for vulgar libertarianism and vulgar lib-
eralism to reinforce each other, as each takes at face value the conflation
of plutocracy with free markets assumed by the other. This conflation in
turn tends to bolster the power of the political establishment by rendering
genuine libertarianism invisible: Those who are attracted to free markets are
lured into supporting plutocracy, thus helping to prop up statism’s right or
corporatist wing; those who are repelled by plutocracy are lured into oppos-
ing free markets, thus helping to prop up statism’s left or social-democratic
wing. But as these two wings have more in common than not, the political
establishment wins either way.19 The perception that libertarians are shills
for big business thus has two bad effects: First, it tends to make it harder to
attract converts to libertarianism, and so hinders its success; second, those
converts its does attract may end up reinforcing corporate power through
their advocacy of a muddled version of the doctrine.
In the nineteenth century, it was far more common than it is today
for libertarians to see themselves as opponents of big business.20 The long
17 Kevin A. Carson, “Vulgar Liberalism Watch (Yeah, You Read It Right),” Mu-
tualist Blog: Free Market Anticapitalism (n.p., Dec. 21, 2005) <online: http://
mutualist.blogspot.com/2005/12/vulgar-liberalism-watch-yeah-you-read.
html> (March 13, 2011).
18 Murray N. Rothbard, “Left and Right: The Prospects for Liberty,”
Left and Right 1.1 (Spring 1965): 4-22 <http://mises.org/journals/lar/
pdfs/1_1/1_1_2.pdf> (March 13, 2011).
19 The relationship between big business and big government is like the relation
between church and state in the Middle Ages; it’s not an entirely harmonious
cooperation, since each would like to be the dominant partner (and whether
the result looks more like socialism or more like fascism depends on which
side is in the ascendant at the moment), but the two sides share an interest in
subordinating society to the partnership. See Long, “Poison.”
20 See Roderick T. Long, “They Saw it Coming: The 19th-Century Libertarian
Critique of Fascism,” Ludwig von Mises Institute Conference on the Econom-
ics of Fascism (Nov. 2, 2005) <http://lewrockwell.com/long/long15.html>
210 | roderick t. long
Does CoMpetitioN
MeaN War?
BENJAMIN R. TuCKER
(1888)
t he supposition that coMpetition Means war rests upon old notions and false
phrases that have been long current, but are rapidly passing into the lim-
bo of exploded fallacies. Competition means war only when it is in some
way restricted, either in scope or intensity – that is, when it is not perfectly
free competition; for then its benefits are won by one class at the expense of
another, instead of by all at the expense of nature’s forces. When universal
and unrestricted, competition means the most perfect peace and the truest
cooperation; for then it becomes simply a test of forces resulting in their
most advantageous utilization. As soon as the demand for labor begins to
exceed the supply, making it an easy matter for every one to get work at
wages equal to his product, it is for the interest of all (including his im-
mediate competitors) that the best man should win; which is another way
of saying that, where freedom prevails, competition and cooperation are
identical. For further proof and elaboration of this proposition I refer Mr.
Horn to Andrews’s Science of Society and Fowler’s pamphlets on Coopera-
tion. The real problem, then, is to make the demand for labor greater than
the supply, and this can only be done through competition in the supply of
money or use of credit. This is abundantly shown in Greene’s Mutual Bank-
ing and the financial writings of Proudhon and Spooner. My correspondent
seems filled with the sentiment of good-fellowship, but ignorant of the sci-
ence thereof, and even of the fact that there is such a science. He will find
this science expounded in the works already named. If, after studying and
mastering these, he still should have any doubts, Liberty will then try to set
them at rest.
22
The Freeman. Ideas on Liberty 57.5 (June
2007): 13-8.
eCoNoMiC
CalCulatioN iN
tHe Corporate
CoMMoNWealtH
KEVIN CARSON
(2007)
This doctrine disregards entirely the role that the capital and
money market, the stock and bond exchange, which a perti-
nent idiom simply calls the “market,” plays in the direction of
corporate business… In fact, the changes in the prices of…
stock and of corporate bonds are the means applied by the
capitalists for the supreme control of the flow of capital. The
price structure as determined by the speculations on the capi-
tal and money markets and on the big commodity exchanges
not only decides how much capital is available for the conduct
of each corporation’s business; it creates a state of affairs to
which the managers must adjust their operations in detail.
One can hardly imagine the most hubristic of state socialist central plan-
ners taking a more optimistic view of the utopian potential of numbers-
crunching.
Peter Klein argued that this foreshadowed Henry Manne’s treatment
of the mechanism by which entrepreneurs maintain control of corporate
management. So long as there is a market for control of corporations, the
discretion of management will be limited by the threat of hostile takeover.
Although management possesses a fair degree of administrative autonomy,
any significant deviation from profit-maximization will lower stock prices
and bring the corporation into danger of outside takeover.
The question, though, is whether those making investment decisions –
whether senior management allocating capital among divisions of a corpo-
ration or outside finance capitalists – even possess the information needed
to assess the internal workings of firms and make appropriate decisions.
How far the real-world, state capitalist allocation of finance differs from
Mises’s picture is suggested by Robert Jackall’s account in Moral Mazes of
the internal workings of a corporation (especially the notorious practices
of “starving,” or “milking,” an organization in order to inflate its apparent
short-term profit). Whether an apparent profit is sustainable, or an illusory
economic Calculation in the Corporate Commonwealth | 217
side effect of eating the seed corn, is often a judgment best made by those
directly involved in production. The purely money calculations of those at
the top do not suffice for a valid assessment of such questions.
One big problem with Mises’s model of entrepreneurial central planning
by double-entry bookkeeping is this: it is often the irrational constraints
imposed from above that result in red ink at lower levels. But those at the
top of the hierarchy refuse to acknowledge the double bind they put their
subordinates in. “Plausible deniability,” the downward flow of responsibil-
ity and upward flow of credit, and the practice of shooting the messenger
for bad news, are what lubricate the wheels of any large organization.
As for outside investors, participants in the capital markets are even
further removed than management from the data needed to evaluate the
efficiency of factor use within the “black box.” In practice, hostile take-
overs tend to gravitate toward firms with low debt loads and apparently low
short-term profit margins. The corporate raiders are more likely to smell
blood when there is the possibility of loading up an acquisition with new
debt and stripping it of assets for short-term returns. The best way to avoid
a hostile takeover, on the other hand, is to load an organization with debt
and inflate the short-term returns by milking.
Another problem, from the perspective of those at the top, is determin-
ing the significance of red or black ink. How does the large-scale investor
distinguish losses caused by senior management’s gaming of the system in
its own interest at the expense of the productivity of the organization from
losses occurring as normal effects of the business cycle? Mises of all people,
who rejected the neoclassicals’ econometric approach precisely because the
variables were too complex to control for, should have anticipated such
difficulties.
Management’s “gaming” might well be a purely defensive response to
structural incentives, a way of deflecting pressure from those above whose
only concern is to maximize apparent profits without regard to how short-
term savings might result in long-term loss. The practices of “starving” and
“milking” organizations that Jackall made so much of – deferring needed
maintenance costs, letting plant and equipment run down, and the like, in
order to inflate the quarterly balance sheet – resulted from just such pres-
sure, as irrational as the pressures Soviet enterprise managers faced from
Gosplan.
sHareD Culture
The problem is complicated when the same organizational culture – de-
termined by the needs of the managerial system itself – is shared by all the
218 | kevin Carson
1 Stanley Holmes and Wendy Zellner, “The Costco Way: Higher Wages Mean
Higher Profits. But Try Telling Wall Street,” Bloomberg Businessweek (Bloom-
berg LLP, April 12, 2004) <http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/con-
tent/04_15/b3878084_mz021.htm> (March 13, 2011).
economic Calculation in the Corporate Commonwealth | 219
t )JT DPOTPMJEBUJPO PG QVSDIBTJOH BOE NBOZ PUIFS GVODUJPOT UP "U-
lanta from several regions caused buyers to lose touch with their ven-
dors…
t 'JSJOHLOPXMFEHFBCMFBOEFYQFSJFODFEQFPQMFJOGBWPSPGVOJOGPSNFE
newbies and part-timers greatly reduced payroll and benefits costs,
but has eventually driven customers away, and given the company a
richly-deserved reputation for mediocre service…
t /BSEFMMJBOEIJTNJOJPOTQMBZFEFWFSZBDDPVOUJOH
BDRVJTJUJPO
BOE
quick-fix angle they could to keep the numbers looking good, while
letting the business deteriorate.
In a follow-up comment directed to me personally, Blumer provided
this additional bit of information:
More than one observer has remarked on the similarity, in their distort-
ing effects, of the incentives within the Soviet state-planning system and
the Western corporate economy. We already noted the systemic pressure
to create the illusion of short-term profit by undermining long-term pro-
ductivity.
Consider Hayek’s prediction of the uneven development, irrationality,
and misallocation of resources within a planned economy:
pervasive irratioNalitY
It also describes quite well the environment of pervasive irrationality
within the large corporation: management featherbedding and self-dealing;
“cost-cutting” measures that decimate productive resources while leaving
management’s petty empires intact; and the tendency to extend bureau-
cratic domain while cutting maintenance and support for existing obliga-
tions. Management’s allocation of resources no doubt creates use value of
2 “Socialist Calculation II: The State of the Debate,” Individualism and Eco-
nomic Order (Chicago: University of Chicago Press 1949) 150 <http://mises.
org/books/individualismandeconomicorder.pdf> (March 13, 2011).
economic Calculation in the Corporate Commonwealth | 221
Left radicals that far from undermining the position of laissez-faire capital-
ism (as opposed to what they call state capitalism, a system of government
controls which is not yet socialism in the classic sense), their historical dis-
coveries actually support the case for a totally free market. Then, too, I wish
to illustrate how a libertarian would respond to the problems raised by New
Left historians. Finally, I wish implicitly to apply Occam’s razor by showing
that there is a simpler explanation of events than that so often colored with
Marxist theory. Without exception, Marxist postulates are not necessary to
explain the facts of reality.
tives defend them as heroic innovators who were the victims of misguided
or power-lusting progressives who used big businessmen as scapegoats and
sacrifices on the altar of the “public good.”
All three of the major schools of interpretation of this crucial era in
American history hold two premises in common: (a) that the trend in eco-
nomic organization at the end of the nineteenth century was in fact to-
wards growing centralization of economic power, and (b) that this trend
was an outcome of the processes of the free market. Only the Marxists,
and then only a portion of them, take issue with the additional premise
that the actions of state regulation were anti-big business in motivation,
purpose and results. And both the conservatives and the liberals see a sharp
break between the ideas and men involved in the Progressive Movement
and those of key big business and financial leaders. Marxists disagree with
many of these views, but hold the premise that the regulatory movement
itself was an outgrowth of the capitalistic economy.
The Marxists, of course, smuggle in specifically nonhistorical conclu-
sions and premises, based on their wider ideological frame of reference,
the most prominent being the idea of necessity applied to historical events.
Although there are many arguments and disputes between adherents
of the various schools, none of the schools has disputed the fundamental
historical premise that the dominant trend at the end of the last century
was toward increasing centralization of the economy, or the fundamental
economic premise that this alleged increase was the result of the operations
of a laissez-faire free market system.
Yet there are certain flaws in all three interpretations, flaws that are both
historical and theoretical, flaws that make any of the interpretations inad-
equate, necessitating a new explanation. Although it is not possible here
to argue in depth against the three interpretations, brief reasons for their
inadequacy can be given.
Aside from the enormous disputes in economics over questions such as
whether or not the “capitalistic system” inherently leads toward concentra-
tion and centralization of economic power in the hands of a few, we can
respond to the Marxists, as well as to others, by directing our attention to
the premise that there was in fact economic centralization at the turn of the
century. In confronting the liberals, once more we can begin by pointing to
the fact that there has been much more centralization since the Progressive
Era than before, and that the function, if not the alleged purpose, of the an-
titrust and other regulatory laws has been to increase, rather than decrease,
such centralization. Since the conservatives already question, on grounds
of economic theory, the premise that the concentration of economic power
results inevitably from a free market system, we must question them as to
Big Business and the rise of american statism | 227
why they believe that (a) a free market actually existed during the period
in question, and (b) how, then, such centralization of economic power re-
sulted from this supposed free market.
Aside from all the economic arguments, let us look at the period in
question to see if any of the schools presented hold up, in any measure or
degree.
While Kolko does not consider the causes and context of the economic
crises which faced businessmen from the 1870s on, we can at least sum-
marize some of the more relevant aspects here. The enormous role played
by the state in American history has not yet been fully investigated by any-
one. Those focusing on the role of the federal government in regulating
the economy often neglect to mention the fact that America’s ostensive
federalist system means that the historian concerned with the issue of regu-
lation must look to the various state governments as well. What he will find
already has been suggested by a growing number of historians: that nearly
2 James Weinstein, The Corporate Ideal in the Liberal State, 1900-1918 (Bos-
ton: Beacon 1968) ix.
Big Business and the rise of american statism | 229
a group of big businessmen that was the primary ideological force behind
many “reforms.”
Since the basic pattern of regulation was first established in the case of
the railroads, a glance at this industry will set the basis for an examination
of the others.
American industry as a whole was intensely competitive in the period
from 1875 on. Many industries, including the railroads, had overexpanded
and were facing a squeeze on profits. American history contains the myth
that the railroads faced practically no competition at all during this period,
that freight rates constantly rose, pinching every last penny out of the ship-
pers, especially the farmers, and bleeding them to death. Historian Kolko
shows that:
The two major means used by competitors to cut into each other’s mar-
kets were rate wars (price cutting) and rebates; the aim of business leaders
was to stop these. Their major, unsuccessful, tool was the “pool” which was
4 See both Kolko books for factual proof of this. Weinstein does not take this
fact into account in his book, and thus underestimates this as a motivating
force in the actions and beliefs of businessmen. For a theoretical explanation,
see Murray N. Rothbard, Man, Economy and State with Power and Market
(Auburn, AL: Mises 2009) 636-61 (ch. 10, Sect. 2: Cartels and Their Conse-
quences).
5 Kolko, Railroads 26.
Big Business and the rise of american statism | 231
Rate wars during 1881 pushed freight rates down 50 percent between
July and October alone; between 1882 and 1886, freight rates declined for
the nation as a whole by 20 percent. Railroads were increasingly talking
about regulation with a certain spark of interest. Chauncey Depew, attor-
ney for the New York Central, had become convinced “of the [regulatory
commission’s] necessity… for the protection of both the public and the
railroads.6 He soon converted William H. Vanderbilt to his position.7
Agitation for regulation to ease competitive pains increased, and in
1887, the Interstate Commerce Act was passed. According to the Railway
Review, an organ of the railroad, it was only a first step.
The Act was not enough, and it did not stop either the rate wars or
rebates. So, early in 1889 during a prolonged rate war, J. P. Morgan sum-
moned presidents of major railroads to New York to find ways to maintain
rates and enforce the act, but this, too, was a failure. The larger railroads
were harmed most by this competition; the smaller railroads were in many
cases more prosperous than in the early 1880s. “Morgan weakened rather
than strengthened many of his roads… [and on them] services and safety
often declined. Many of Morgan’s lines were overexpanded into areas where
competition was already too great.”8 Competition again increased. The
larger roads then led the fight for further regulation, seeking more power
for the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC).
In 1891, the president of a midwestern railroad advocated that the en-
tire matter of setting rates be turned over to the ICC. An ICC poll taken
in 1892 of fifteen railroads showed that fourteen of them favored legalized
pooling under Commission control.
Another important businessman, A. A. Walker, who zipped back and
forth betwene business and govenrment agencies, said that “railroad men
had had enough of competition. The phrase ‘free competition’ sounds well
enough as a universal regulator,” he said, “but it regulates by the knife.”9
In 1906, the Hepburn Act was passed, also with business backing. The
railroad magnate Cassatt spoke out as a major proponent of the act and said
that he had long endorsed federal rate regulation. Andrew Carnegie, too,
popped up to endorse the act. George W. Perkins, an important Morgan
associate, wrote his boss that the act “is going to work out for the ultimate
and great good of the railroad.” But such controls were not enough for
some big businessmen. Thus E. P. Ripley, the president of the Santa Fe,
suggested what amounted to a Federal Reserve System for the railroads,
cheerfully declaring that such a system “would do away with the enormous
wastes of the competitive system, and permit business to follow the line of
least resistance” – a chant later taken up by Mussolini.
In any case, we have seen that (a) the trend was not towards centraliza-
tion at the close of the nineteenth century – rather, the liquidation of previ-
ous malinvestment fostered by state action and bank-led inflation worked
against the bigger businesses in favor of the smaller, less overextended busi-
nesses; (b) there was, in the case of the railroads anyway, no sharp dichot-
omy or antagonism between big businessmen and the progressive Move-
ment’s thrust for regulation; and (c) the purpose of the regulations, as seen
by key business leaders, was not to fight the growth of “monopoly” and
centralization, but to foster it.
The culmination of this big-business-sponsored “reform” of the eco-
nomic system is actually today’s system. The new system took effect imme-
diately during World War I when railroads gleefully handed over control to
the government in exchange for guaranteed rate increases and guaranteed
profits, something continued under the Transportation Act of 1920. The
consequences, of course, are still making themselves felt, as in 1971, when
the Pennsylvania Railroad, having cut itself off from the market and from
market calculation nearly entirely, was found to be in a state of economic
chaos. It declared bankruptcy and later was rescued, in part, by the state.
1894-95 alone) for allegedly infringing Bell patents.”11 But such efforts to
stifle competition failed; by 1902, there were 9,100 independent telephone
systems; by 1907, there were 22,000. Most had rates lower than AT&T.
In the meat packing industry too, the large packers felt threatened by in-
creasing competition. Their efforts at control failed. Similar diffusion of eco-
nomic power was the case in other fields, such as banking, where the power of
the eastern financiers was being seriously eroded by midwestern competitors.
This, then, was the basic context of big business; these were the prob-
lems that it faced. How did it react? Almost unanimously, it turned to the
power of the state to get what it could not get by voluntary means. Big
business acted not only through concrete political pressure, but by engag-
ing in large-scale, long-run ideological propaganda or “education” aimed at
getting different sections of the American society united behind statism, in
principle and practice.
Let us look at some of the activities of the major organizational tool
of big business, the National Civics Federation. The NCF was actually a
reincarnation of Hamiltonian views on the relation of the state to business.
Primarily an organization of big businessmen, it pushed for the tactical
and theoretical alliance of business and government, a primitive version of
the modern business-government partnership. Contrary to the consensus
of many conservatives, it was not ideological innocence that led them to
create a statist economic order – they knew what they were doing and con-
stantly said so.
The working partnership of business and government was the result of
the conscious activities of organizations such as the NCF created in 1900
(coincided with the birth of what is called the “Progressive Movement”) to
fight with increasing and sustained vigor against what it considered to be its
twin enemies: “the socialists and radicals among workers and middle class
reformers, and the ‘anarchists’ among the businessmen” (as the NCF char-
acterized the National Association of Manufacturers). The smaller business-
men, who constituted the NAM, formed an opposition to the new liber-
alism that developed through cooperation between political leaders such
as Theodore Roosevelt, William H. Taft and Woodrow Wilson, and the
financial and corporate leaders in the NCF and other similar organizations.
The NCF before World War I was “the most important single organization
of the socially conscious big businessmen and their academic and political
theorists.” The NCF “took the lead in educating the businessmen to the
changing needs in political economy which accompanied the changing na-
ture of America’s business system.”12
The early leaders of the NCF were such big business leaders as Marcus
A. Hanna, utilities magnate Samuel B. Insull, Chicago banker Franklin
MacVeagh (later Secretary of the treasury), Charles Francis Adams and sev-
eral partners in J. P. Morgan & Co. The largest contributor to the group
was Andrew Carnegie; other important members of the executive commit-
tee included George W. Perkins, Elbert H. Gary (a Morgan associate and a
head of U. S. Steel after Carnegie), Cyrus McCormick, Theodore N. Vail
(president of AT&T) and George Cortelyou (head of Consolidated Gas).
The NCF sponsored legislation to promote the formation of “public
utilities,” a special privilege monopoly granted by the state, reserving an
area of production to one company. Issuing a report on “Public Ownership
of Public Utilities,” the NCF established a general framework for regulatory
laws, stating that utilities should be conducted by legalized independent
commissions. Of such regulation one businessman wrote another: “Twen-
ty-five years ago we would have regarded it as a species of socialism”; but
seeing that the railroads were both submitting to and apparently profiting
from regulation, the NCF’s self-appointed job of “educating” municipal
utilities corporations became much easier.
Regulation in general, far from coming against the wishes of the regulat-
ed interests, was openly welcomed by them in nearly every case. As Upton
Siclair said of the meat industry, which he is given credit for having tamed,
“the federal inspection of meat was historically established at the packers’
request… It is maintained and paid for by the people of the United States
for the benefit of the packers.”13
However, one interesting fact comes in here to refute the Marxist theory
further. For the Marxists hold that there are fundamentally two opposing
“interests” which clash in history: the capitalists and the workers. But what
we have seen, essentially, is that the interests (using the word in a journalis-
tic sense) of neither the capitalists nor the workers, so-called, were uniform
or clear-cut. The interests of the larger capitalists seemed to coincide, as
they saw it, and were clearly opposed to the interests of the smaller capital-
ists. (However, there were conflicts among the big capitalists, such as be-
tween the Morgan and Rockefeller interests during the 1900s, as illustrated
in the regimes of Roosevelt and Taft.) The larger capitalists saw regulation
as being in their interest, and competition as opposed to it; with the smaller
businessmen, the situation was reversed. The workers for the larger busi-
nesses also may have temporarily gained at the expense of others through
slight wage increases caused by restrictions on production. (The situation
is made even more complicated when we remember that the Marxist be-
lief is that one’s relationship to the means of production determines one’s
interests and hence, apparently, one’s ideas. Yet people with basically the
same relationship often had different “interests” and ideas. If this in turn is
explained by a Marxist in terms of “mystification,” an illuminating explana-
tion in a libertarian context, then mystification itself is left to be explained.
For if one’s ideas and interests are an automatic function of the economic
system and one’s relationship to the means of production, how can “mysti-
fication” arise at all?)
In any case, congressional hearings during the administration of Theo-
dore Roosevelt revealed that “the big Chicago packers wanted more meat
inspection both to bring the small packers under control and to aid them in
their position in the export trade.” Formally representing the large Chicago
packers, Thomas E. Wilson publicly announced: “We are now and have
always been in favor of the extension of the inspection.”14
In both word and deed American businessmen sought to replace the last
remnants of laissez-faire in the United States with government regulation –
for their own benefit. Speaking at Columbia University in February 1908,
George W. Perkins, a Morgan associate, said that the corporation “must
welcome federal supervision administered by practical businessmen.”15
As early as 1908, Andrew Carnegie and Ingalls had suggested to the
NCF that it push for an American version of the British Board of Trade,
which would have the power to judge mergers and other industrial actions.
As Carnegie put it, this had “been found sufficient in other countries and
will be so with us. We must have our industrial as we have a Judicial Su-
preme Court.”16 Carnegie also endorsed govenrment actions to end ruin-
ous competition.
but also supported such things as the Big Navy movement at the turn of
the century. He sold steel to the United States government that went into
the building of the ships and he saw in the Venezuela boundary dispute
the possibility of a large order for armor from the United States Navy.21
Carnegie, along with Rockefeller and, later, Ford, was responsible for sus-
tained support of American liberalism through the foundations set up in
his name.
J. P. Morgan, the key financial leader, was also a prime mover of Ameri-
can statism. His foreign financial dealings led him to become deeply in-
volved with Britain during World War I, and this involvement in turn led
him to help persuade Wilson to enter the war on Britain’s behalf, to help
save billions of dollars of loans which would be lost in the event of a Ger-
man victory.
In a more interesting light, consider the statements made in 1914 by S.
Thruston Ballard, owner of the largest wheat refinery in the world. Ballard
not only supported vocational schools as a part of the public schools (which
would transfer training costs to taxpayers), restrictions on immigration,
and a national minimum wage, he saw and proposed a way to “cure” unem-
ployment. He advocated a federal employment service, public works, and
if these wee insufficient, “government concentration camps where work
with a small wage would be provided, supplemented by agricultural and
industrial training.”22
Consider the role of big businessmen in pushing through public educa-
tion in many states after World War I. Senator Wadsworth spoke before a
NCF group in 1916, pointing out that compulsory government education
was needed “to protect the nation against destruction from within. It is to
train the boy and girl to be good citizens, to protect against ignorance and
dissipation.” This meant that the reason to force children to go to school, at
gunpoint if necessary, was so that they could be brainwashed into accepting
the status quo, almost explicitly so that their capacity for dissent (i.e., their
capacity for independent thinking) could be destroyed. Thus did Wadsworth
also advocate compulsory and universal military training: “Our people shall
be prepared mentally as well as in a purely military sense. We must let our
young men know that they owe some responsibility to this country.”
Indeed, we find V. E. Macy, president of the NCF at the close of the
war, stating that it was not “beside the mark to call attention to the nearly
thirty million minors marching steadily toward full citizenship,” and ask
“at what stage of their journey we should lend assistance to the work of
quickening… the sense of responsibility and partnership in the business of
maintaining and perfecting the splendid social, industrial, and commercial
structure which has been reared under the American flag.” The need, Macy
noted, was most urgent. Among American youths there was a widespread
“indifference toward, and aloofness from, individual responsibility for the
successful maintenance and upbuilding of the industrial and commercial
structure which is the indispensable shelter of us all.”23
Big business, then, was behind the existence and curriculum of the pub-
lic educational system, explicitly to teach young minds to submit and obey,
to pay homage to the “corporate liberal” system which the politicians, a
multitude of intellectuals and many big businessmen created.
My intention here simply has been to present an alternative model of
historical interpretation of key events in this one crucial era of American
history, an interpretation which is neither Marxist, liberal nor conservative,
but which may have some elements in common with each.
From a more ideological perspective, my purpose has been to present an
accurate portrait of one aspect of “how we got here,” and indicate a new
way of looking at the present system in America.
To a large degree it has been and remains big businessmen who are the
fountainheads of American statism. If libertarians are seeking allies in their
struggle for liberty, then I suggest that they look elsewhere. Conservatives,
too, should benefit from this essay, and begin to see big business as a de-
stroyer, not as a unit, of the free market. Liberals should also benefit, and
reexamine their own premises about the market and regulation. Specifically,
they might reconsider the nature of a free market, and ponder on the ques-
tion of why big business has been opposed to precisely that. Isn’t it odd that
the interests of liberals and key big businessmen have always coincided? The
Marxists, too, might rethink their economics, and reconsider whether or
not capitalism leads to monopoly. Since it can be shown scientifically that
economic calculation is impossible in a purely socialistic economy, and that
pure statism is not good for man, perhaps the Marxists might also look at
the real nature of a complete free market, undiluted by state control.
Libertarians themselves should take heart. Our hope lies, as strange as
it may seem, not with any remnants from an illusory “golden age” of indi-
vidualism, which never existed, but with tomorrow. Our day has not come
and gone. It has never existed at all. It is our task to see that it will exist in
the future. The choice and the battle are ours.
23 Weinstein 133-5.
24
Praxeology.Net (n.p., oct. 9, 2008)
<http://praxeology.net/aotp.htm#6>
(aug. 22, 2011).
reGulatioN: tHe
Cause, Not tHe Cure,
oF tHe FiNaNCial
Crisis
RODERICK T. LONG
(2008)
p eople who blaMe the crisis on the free Market have things precisely backward.
Market prices are the mechanism that allows consumer rankings of
consumption goods to determine choices among production goods; if con-
sumers rank goods made from steel higher than goods made from rubber,
steel prices will rise relative to those of rubber, thus encouraging economising
of existing steel and increased production of new steel. (This is incidentally
why anti-gouging laws are such a bad idea; they prolong the very shortages
whose effects they’re trying to mitigate, by suppressing the price signals that
function to end the shortage. When prices are legally prevented from rising
during a shortage, that’s like sending out a signal into the market saying “hey
everybody, no shortage here, no reason to economise on this item, no reason
to increase production of this item, feel free to focus your investment else-
where” – which is obviously the worst possible message to send.)
242 | roderick t. long
Interest rates are a kind of price also; they signal the extent to which
consumers are willing and able to defer present satisfactions for the sake of
greater future satisfactions. To take the standard example, if Crusoe makes a
net he’ll be able to catch far more fish than he can with his hands, but time
making the net takes away from time catching fish; if Crusoe can afford to
defer some present fish-catching in order to make the net, then it’s rational
for him to make it, but if instead he’s on the edge of starvation and might
not be able to survive on reduced rations long enough to finish the net, he’d
better stick to catching fish with his hands for the moment and save the net
project for another day. Whether it makes sense for him to divert time and
effort from fish catching to net making thus depends on how urgently he
needs fish now – in short, on his time-preference.
In a free market, low interest rates signal low time-preference and high
interest rates, high time-preference. If your time-preference (i.e. the ur-
gency of your preference for present over future satisfactions) is low, then
I would only have to offer you slightly more than X a year from now in
order to induce you to part with X today; if it is high, then I would have to
offer you a lot more than X a year from now in exchange for X today. The
prevailing interest rate thus guides investors in their choice between short-
term, less productive projects and those that are more productive but whose
benefits will take longer to achieve.
But when central banks, through their manipulation of the money sup-
ply, artificially lower the interest rate, then the signals get distorted; inves-
tors are led to act as though consumers have a lower time-preference than
they actually do. Thus investors are led to invest in longer-term projects
that are unsustainable, since the deferred consumption on which such proj-
ects depend is not actually going to get deferred, so that the goods that the
investors are counting on in order to complete their long-term projects are
not all going to be there when the investors need them. Such unsustainable
investment is the boom or bubble; the bust comes when the unsustainabil-
ity is recognised and a costly process of liquidation ensues.
The Austrian theory of the business cycle is sometimes called an “over-in-
vestment” theory, but that’s misleading. The problem is not that investors over-
invest across the board, but that they over-invest in higher-yield longer-term
projects and under-invest in lower-yield shorter-term. That’s why Austrians
talk about “malinvestment” rather than over-investment. The prevailing main-
stream tendency to treat capital as homogeneous ignores the difference between
higher and lower levels of production goods and thus fails to appreciate the
costs of having to switch from the high to the low when the bubble bursts.
In additional to the general misallocation of investment between lower-
order and higher-order inputs, monetary inflation produces further im-
regulation: the Cause, Not the Cure, of the Financial Crisis | 243
balances. When the central bank creates money, the new money doesn’t
propagate throughout the economy instantaneously; some sectors get the
new money first, while they’re still facing the old, lower prices, while other
sectors get the new money last, after they’ve already begun facing the higher
prices. The result of such “Cantillon effects” is not only a systematic redis-
tribution of wealth from those less to those more favoured by the banking-
government complex, but an artificial stimulation of certain sectors of the
economy, making them look more inherently profitable than they are and
so directing economically unjustified levels of investment toward them.
Does the Austrian account, as is often claimed, underestimate the abil-
ity of investors and entrepreneurs to recognise the effects of government
policies and compensate for them? No. Even if you know that a given price
represents some mix of genuine market signals and governmental distor-
tion, you may not know how much of the price represents which factor, so
how can you compensate for the distorting factor? (Likewise, if you know
there are magnetic anomalies in the area that are throwing off your com-
pass, that’s not terribly helpful information unless you know exactly where
the anomalies are and how strong they are compared with earth’s magnetic
field; otherwise you have no way to correct for them. And given that the
direction of your compass’s needle is at least partly responsive to true north,
you’re better off trusting it, despite its distortions, than simply abandoning
your compass and proceeding by coin-flip.)
On the Austrian understanding, governmental inflation of the money
supply, thereby artificially lowering interest rates, was the chief cause of
the Great Depression. (Mainstream economists dispute this, holding that
the Fed’s policy could not have been genuinely inflationary, since prices
were relatively stable during the period leading up to the crash. But for
Austrians the crucial question is not whether prices were higher than they
had previously been, but whether they were higher than they would have
been in the absence of monetary inflation.) Likewise, for Austrians the
housing bubble that precipitated the current crisis was the product of
the Federal Reserve’s low-interest policies of recent years. (An aside to
address a frequent misunderstanding: on the Austrian view there is noth-
ing wrong with low interest rates per se; indeed, low interest rates are a
symptom of a healthy economy, since the more prosperous people are, the
likelier they are to be willing to defer present consumption. But one can-
not make an economy healthy by artificially inducing symptoms of health
in the absence of their underlying cause. By the same principle, absence
of scabbing on one’s skin is a sign of physical health, but if there is scab-
bing, one does not promote health by ripping the scabs away; advocates
of minimum wage laws, take note.)
244 | roderick t. long
lation A granting a private or semi-private firm the right to play with other
people’s money, but then repeal or fail to enact regulation B restricting the
firm’s ability to take excessive risks with that money, the ensuing crisis is in
a sense to be attributed in part to the absence of regulation B. But the fatal
factor is not the absence of regulation B per se but the absence of B when
combined with the presence of A; the absence of B would cause no problem
if A were absent as well. So, sure, there was insufficient regulation, if by
“insufficient regulation” you mean a failure on government’s part to rein
in, via further regulations, the problems created by its initial regulations.
So if the problem is caused by A without B, it might be objected, why
must we adopt the libertarian solution of getting rid of A? Can’t we solve
the problem just as well by keeping A but adding regulation B alongside
it? The answer is no, because central planning doesn’t work; when one re-
sponds to bad regulations by adding new regs to counteract the old ones,
rather than simply repealing the old ones, one adds more and more layers
between decisions and the market, increasingly muffling price-system feed-
back and courting calculational chaos.
But, the objector may continue, what if we’re in a situation where we
have regulation A but no regulation B, and where, further, repealing A is
not politically possible but adding regulation B is – in that case, shouldn’t
we push to add B? In some circumstances, depending on the details, maybe
so; but the more important question, to my mind, is to which should we
devote more of our time and energy – tweaking the details of a fundamen-
tally unsound system within the parameters of what is currently considered
politically possible, or working to shift those parameters themselves? In
Hayek’s words: “Those who have concerned themselves exclusively with
what seemed practicable in the existing state of opinion have constantly
found that even this had rapidly become politically impossible as the result
of changes in a public opinion which they have done nothing to guide.”
Okay, some will say, maybe it was government, not laissez-faire, that got
us into the mess; but now that we’re in it, don’t we need government to get
us out? My answer is that government doesn’t have the ability to get us out.
There’s just not much the government can do that will help (apart from
repealing the laws, regulations, and subsidies that first created and then
perpetuate the mess – but that would be less a doing than a ceasing-to-do,
and anyway given the incentives acting on government decision-makers
there’s no realistic chance of that happening). The bailout is just divert-
ing resources from the productive poor and middle-class to the failed rich,
which doesn’t seem like a very good idea on either ethical or economic
grounds. The only good effect such a bailout could possibly have (at least if
you prefer costly boondoggles without piles of dead bodies to costly boon-
246 | roderick t. long
doggles with them) is if it convinced the warmongers that they just can’t
afford a global war on terror right now – but there’s no sign that they’re
being convinced of anything of the sort.
If the price system were allowed to function fully, the crisis would right
itself – not instantly or painlessly, to be sure, but far more quickly and with
less dislocation than any government could manage. What the government
should do is, in the final analysis, nothing.
But such a response would be politically impossible? Quite true; but
what makes it politically impossible? Is it some corporatist bias on the part
of the American people? Did Congress pass the bailout because the voters
were clamouring for it? On the contrary, most of the voters seem to have
been decidedly against it. The bailout passed because Congress is primarily
accountable, not to the electorate, but to big business. And that’s a source
of political impossibility that stems not from shiftable ideology but from
the inherent nature of representative government. A government that was
genuinely responsible to the people would hardly be a paradise (since the
people are hardly free from ignorance and bias, and majority rule is all too
often simply a mechanism for externalising the costs of majority prefer-
ences onto minorities) – but debating the merits of a government genuinely
responsible to the people is purely academic, because such a government,
whatever its merits or demerits, is impossible; you cannot make a monopo-
ly responsive to the people. Other than the market itself, no political system
has ever been devised or discovered that will subordinate the influence of
concentrated interests to that of dispersed interests. Monopoly cannot be
“reformed”; it has to be abolished.
Now that is of course not to say that some governments can’t be less un-
responsive than others, just as some forms of slavery can be less awful than
others. One of the striking features of slavery in the antebellum Ameri-
can south, for example, is how much worse it was, on average, than most
other historical forms of slavery; and if the abolitionists, despairing of the
prospects of actually freeing the slaves, had focused their efforts on reform-
ing American slavery to make it more like ancient Greco-Roman slavery
or medieval Scandinavian slavery, I’m not going to say that wouldn’t have
been worth doing or wouldn’t have made a lot of people’s lives significantly
better – but isn’t it setting on one’s political sights a tad low?
25
The Economics of Anarchy: A Study of the
Industrial Type (New York: twentieth Cen-
tury 1890).
iNDustrial
eCoNoMiCs
DyER D. LuM
(1890)
i desire to group certain deductions, both critical and constructive, that we May
better see the paramount importance of freedom in industrial economics.
1. DIVISION OF LABOR is an outgrowth of social progress, essential to the
augmentation of wealth, the evils incidental to it being the result of extra-
neous causes; and Economists, in speaking of limitations and disadvantages
of this social law, have shown their incompetence to clearly analyze the
essential factors of the industrial problem. It is not in division, but in the
subordination of division to privilege that the Economists make the error
of ascribing disadvantages to a law evolved in social growth. The element of
freedom lacking in exchange, division consequently falls under the control
of prerogative, hence the limitations and disadvantages of which Econo-
mists learnedly prate.
2. MACHINERY socializes where division isolates. Machinery is to the in-
dustrial toiler what the musket is to the militant supporter, a tool by which
their respective lines of activity are rendered effective. In the cheapening
of products, in the annihilation of time by the telegraph and of space by
the railway, and the countless facilities to comfort with which we are sur-
248 | Dyer D. lum
Whether legalization of the lower instincts and the speculative laws now
dominant tend to the higher evolution of free action, our apostle of liberty
sayeth not.
4. COMPETITION is the exact opposite, not parent of monopoly. Freedom
is essential to true competition, and wherever restriction exists on one side,
it implies privilege on the other, and in so far competition ceases: mo-
nopoly rather than competition now exists. In the abrogation of privilege
competition becomes not only free, but acts, as the governor on an engine,
self-regulative and bringing cost as the mean of price. “Our friends, the en-
emy,” the Socialists, in flying into a passion at the mention of competition
but thereby betray their own logical adherence to the militant camp, for
liberty includes and implies freedom to compete.
But that cannot in justice be called a competitive system where wages
are constantly depressed as with an iron hand as a definite residual divi-
dend; and the divorce between labor and capital justified as calling in an
“indispensable” go-between whose earnings, or profits, “constitute a special
or fourth branch of the national income, co-ordinate with rent, wages, and
interest on capital” – and hailed as an extension of freedom.2
5. THE REAL PROBLEM is a far deeper one than enters into the arguments of
the advocates of protection and restriction, or of a post-production liberty. It
is the same as has for centuries past underlain all struggles in social progress
and which, looking back over the centuries, we find recorded as ever won
for the sovereignty of the individual, the widening of the sphere of personal
initiative, the conflict between militant authority and personal liberty. The
renaissance of mind from scholastic tyranny; the revolt of Luther and his
followers against mental dictation; the temporary compromise in religious
toleration; the insurrection against kingcraft leading in its triumph to the tol-
eration of political opinions; have now logically led to an insurrection against
economic subjection to the privileges usurped and hotly defended by capital
in its alliance with labor, and calling from thinkers of all schools – even from
economic Hessian allies – the prediction that unless an equitable adjustment
be found, civilization must again go through the parturition pangs of revo-
lutionary strife and bloodshed. By one or other of these antagonistic prin-
ciples must every proposed solution be tested, and reposing confidently on
the historical development of progress, wherein even the man of genius is but
“the secretary of his age,” we assert that no answer can be given to the eternal
conflict that is not based upon full freedom to human activity: for freedom
destroys strife by removing its cause – denial of freedom.
With these deductions for our guide we began the search for economic
laws based upon justice, enlightened by wisdom, supported by truth, in
which alone industry can find its goal in equitable cooperation. Taking
these, therefore, as the basis of industrial economics, rather than laws de-
scribing modes of action under inequitable conditions, we have been led to
demand for labor:
6. FREE LAND, that labor in its struggle shall not forever find the
source of production the ward of monopoly, and thus left upon as un-
equal a footing to compete in production as existed between the slave and
his master. That as land is the source of production its real, or natural,
value lies in its use, not what it will bring where privilege exists to give
it a fictitious value. One of the effects of this would be the elimination
of rent as a necessary prelude to occupancy, or a factor in the distribu-
tion of the shares of production. That under freedom of access to vacant
land, and the spring it would give to production, labor would determine
a juster proportionality of values between products, wherein alone real
value exists.
We see in nationalization of land but a recurrence to militancy in its
methods, and its application beset with many fatal compromises… To one
who accepts authority, rather than liberty, as a guiding principle, the con-
clusion may be natural; but to one who endeavors to square his principles
by the test of liberty, whether land be called private property or not, after
it has ceased to be a factor in economic exploitation, is immaterial. Liberty
cannot deny the calling of one’s possession of anything his own. It is in the
power given by legalization to hold for speculative purposes, not particu-
lar possession for occupancy, that the danger to civilization lies. We also
submit that making it “common property” involves invasion of individual
freedom to use, for it can be neither so made nor so maintained except by
militant methods, whether under George’s or Most’s attempted organiza-
tion of liberty…
7. FREE EXCHANGE… would break the monopoly now possessed by
currency, the instrument of exchange, and also could open full use of the
possession of land. To day the small retail dealer cannot compete with the
merchant prince in the purchase of goods, any more than the mechanic
who buys his coal by the bushel enters into competition with one who
buys his year’s supply by the cargo. Has the workman equal freedom to
compete with the employer of labor? Can “hands” enter the market on
equal term with the wealthy contractor? But why not? Because behind the
capitalist, as we now find him, privilege lends support which transforms
the result of honest industry into a hideous Moloch standing with out-
stretched arms to receive as sacrificial victims the toilers who have made
industrial economics | 251
that capital possible. The legalized power given to money determines the
difference; it makes it more than the mere instrument of exchange; it be-
comes an implement of exploitation, having a fictitious value and culling
from industry to increase by payment for use. Thus claiming that “yester-
day’s labor” is more than wealth acquired, and through interest entitled to
prerogatives not granted to today’s labor, but even taken from it. We thus
see that it is not capital per se that liberty assails, but the artificial power
it usurps; that under equal freedom, where no privilege exists to entail
exploitation, it is as harmless as we have seen private property would
be. Capital itself is man’s best friend, the true social savior that opens
the march of progress and that has transformed society from warlike to
peaceful pursuits. But under the crucifying hands of legalization, where
prerogative mocks at penury, its mission is thwarted and it becomes a
ravenous beast. As Satan is said to have once been an angel of light, so,
in the denial of equal freedom to the capitalization of the fruits of labor,
capital has become a demon of hell, and beyond the power of redemption
by single-tax sanctification.
8. MUTUAL BANKING we have seen would open the door for relief. In
the absence of artificial restraint upon individual activity, that every one
in possession of returns for labor applied, indorsed by business capacity
or not, whether individually or by association, could command credit to
the extent of their honestly acquired wealth, or confidence in their pledge
of labor force, and use their own labor as a basis for increased production.
Whether production would then be individualistic or associative – on
which point the author has strong convictions – would not in the least
alter the case. Freedom to normal growth secured, its natural course is
a detail which would regulate itself. The fact remains that under release
from compulsory rent, and cessation of usury, energy and capacity would
be more assiduously cultivated and command greater confidence than a
State certificate for honesty, and thereby create an ample medium for ex-
change based on labor products. To doubt it is to assert that capacity and
energy, together with inventive talent, can only germinate where exhaus-
tive mental or manual labor most exist, and where rest and recreation are
least known.
Credit would be a matter of confidence in both security and character,
and character would be as essential an element then as shrewdness and cun-
ning are now. “Business” emancipated from inequitable conditions would
continue as uninterruptedly as under the present system of a mortgage se-
curity on the source of production where labor toils for another’s benefit,
and the benumbing effect of a Frankenstein-State no longer repress indi-
viduality nor inspire the superstitious with awe.
252 | Dyer D. lum
iNsuraNCe or seCuritY
… Under equal freedom wherever demand exists supply necessarily will
be forthcoming, and guarantees for security will arise as easy as guarantees
for politeness in the ballroom or parlor.
Under equal opportunities wherever mankind are thrown upon their
own resources, when being fed from a spoon by government pap shall
have become a traditionary tale of a past superstition, what is there in the
power of activity that co-operative enterprise cannot undertake? We now
see on every hand a thousand instances of voluntary association to attain
certain objects. Many such deemed impracticable a few centuries since are
commonplaces today. Who will say the limit has been reached? Even in
functions government assumes as necessary we find voluntary militia and
homeguards; fire departments in many places in which all members risk
their lives and turn out in all weather to render the lives and property of
their neighbors secure; associations of private watchmen who find support
even though their patrons pay taxes for municipal police protection; a fire
patrol in the interests of insurance companies to protect property from de-
struction. These are instances of cooperation applied to guaranteeing secu-
rity, of supply seeking demand without difficulty or friction, a demand by
no means dependent upon legalization, but supplementing its deficiencies.
All relations under equal freedom will tend to become associative when
and where it is seen to be most effective. Freedom for the individual cannot
be construed into compulsory isolation…
What is even now done by wealthy mill-owners may be done by all
when equal opportunities to exploit nature shall have removed special priv-
ileges to exploit fellow men, when cooperation in all needed relations lies
open before us and labor enjoys its full, just share of the wealth, or values,
it creates. With its resultant release from rent, interest, profits, and taxation
as enforced tribute, the causes for vice and crime would rapidly diminish,
for free access to nature would open to all more than a competence, and
in ease give greater scope to the purely human sympathies for the unfortu-
nate… And so far as protection from the still vicious and idle is concerned,
an extension of the scope of insurance can meet all requirements. An or-
ganization for protection to person and labor product, or property if you
will, composed of those who felt the need for the exercise of such functions,
in which loss by depredation would involve no greater difficulty than loss
by fire, would naturally arise where such demand existed. The difference
between the watchmen of such an organization, whose functions consist in
mutual protection and defence of the equal limits of personal freedom, for
commercial needs, and a political-policy system wherein personal liberty
is subordinated to inanimate things as of a greater importance than their
industrial economics | 253
creators, is so apparent to the candid reader that I need not pause to dwell
upon it… Progress and order is the true expression of social evolution,
rather than the reverse, for law is ever fixity and its resulting order but uni-
formity wherein progress finds its grave. Order based upon progress, on the
contrary, ever retains the plasticity essential to the latter, and this can only
be realized in the further evolution of “the law of equal freedom” required
by the Industrial Type…
Such is Anarchy!
26
Thumb Jig (n.p., Nov. 1, 2008) <http://thum-
bjig.blogspot.com/2008/11/labor-strug-
gle-in-free-market.html> (aug. 22, 2011)
laBor struGGle iN a
Free Market
KEVIN A. CARSON
(2008)
Long argues that, despite the absence of many of today’s formal legal
protections, the shift of bargaining power toward workers in a free labor
market will result in “a reduction in the petty tyrannies of the job world.”
This last is especially important. Present day labor law limits the bar-
gaining power of labor at least as much as it reinforces it. That’s especially
true of reactionary legislation like Taft-Hartley and state right-to-work
laws. Both are clearly abhorrent to free market principles.
Taft-Hartley, for example, prohibited many of the most successful labor
strategies during the CIO organizing strikes of the early ’30s. The CIO
planned strikes like a general staff plans a campaign, with strikes in a plant
supported by sympathy and boycott strikes up and down the production
chain, from suppliers to outlets, and supported by transport workers refus-
ing to haul scab cargo. At their best, the CIO’s strikes turned into regional
general strikes.
Right wing libertarians of the vulgar sort like to argue that unions
depend primarily on the threat of force, backed by the state, to exclude
non-union workers. Without forcible exclusion of scabs, they say, strikes
would almost always turn into lockouts and union defeats. Although this
has acquired the status of dogma at Mises.Org, it’s nonsense on stilts. The
primary reason for the effectiveness of a strike is not the exclusion of scabs,
but the transaction costs involved in hiring and training replacement work-
ers, and the steep loss of productivity entailed in the disruption of human
capital, institutional memory, and tacit knowledge.
With the strike is organized in depth, with multiple lines of defense –
those sympathy and boycott strikes at every stage of production – the cost
and disruption have a multiplier effect far beyond that of a strike in a single
plant. Under such conditions, even a large minority of workers walking off
the job at each stage of production can be quite effective.
labor struggle in a Free Market | 257
The bosses, with their large financial reserves, are better able to
withstand a long drawn-out strike than the workers. In many
cases, court injunctions will freeze or confiscate the union’s
strike funds. And worst of all, a long walkout only gives the
boss a chance to replace striking workers with a scab (replace-
ment) workforce.
Workers are far more effective when they take direct action
while still on the job. By deliberately reducing the boss’ profits
while continuing to collect wages, you can cripple the boss
without giving some scab the opportunity to take your job.
trol over the worker’s capacity to work over a given time period, and because
the workers’ goals differ from those of the employer. The amount of labor
actually done is determined by a struggle between workers and capitalists.
The labor contract is incomplete because it is impossible for a contract
to specify, ahead of time, the exact levels of effort and standards of perfor-
mance expected of workers. The specific terms of the contract can only be
worked out in the contested terrain of the workplace.
The problem is compounded by the fact that management’s authority in
the workplace isn’t exogenous: that is, it isn’t enforced by the external legal
system, at zero cost to the employer. Rather, it’s endogenous: management’s
authority is enforced entirely with the resources and at the expense of the
company. And workers’ compliance with directives is frequently costly –
and sometimes impossible – to enforce. Employers are forced to resort to
endogenous enforcement
1 Samuel Bowles and Herbert Gintis, “Is the Demand for Workplace Democ-
racy Redundant in a Liberal Economy?,” Democracy and Effciency in the Eco-
nomic Enterprise, ed. Ugo Pagano and Robert Rowthorn (London: Routledge
1996) 64-81.
260 | kevin a. Carson
He quotes Peter Blau and Richard Scott’s observation to the same effect:
Legal authority, likewise, “does not and cannot” proscribe working to rule,
which is nothing but obeying management’s directives literally and without
question. If they’re the brains behind the operation, and we get paid to shut
up and do what we’re told, then by God that’s just what we’ll do.
Disgruntled workers, Williamson suggests, will respond to intrusive or
authoritarian attempts at surveillance and monitoring with a passive-ag-
gressive strategy of compliance in areas where effective metering is possible
– while shifting their perfunctory compliance (or worse) into areas where it
is impossible. True to the asymmetric warfare model, the costs of manage-
ment measures for verifying compliance are generally far greater than the
costs of circumventing those measures.
As frequent commenter Jeremy Weiland says, “You are the monkey wrench”:
labor struggle in a Free Market | 261
At this point, some libertarians are probably stopping up their ears and
going “La la la la, I can’t hear you, la la la la!” Under the values most of us
have been encultured into, values which are reinforced by the decidely pro-
employer and anti-worker libertarian mainstream, such deliberate sabotage
of productivity and witholding of effort are tantamount to lèse majesté.
But there’s no rational basis for this emotional reaction. The fact that we
take such a viscerally asymmetrical view of the respective rights and obliga-
tions of employers and employees is, itself, evidence that cultural hangovers
from master-servant relationships have contaminated our understanding of
the employment relation in a free market.
The employer and employee, under free market principles, are equal
parties to the employment contract. As things normally work now, and as
mainstream libertarianism unfortunately take for granted, the employer is
expected as a normal matter of course to take advantage of the incomplete
nature of the employment contract. One can hardly go to Cato or Mises.
Org on any given day without stumbling across an article lionizing the
employer’s right to extract maximum effort in return for minimum pay, if
he can get away with it. His rights to change the terms of the employment
relation, to speed up the work process, to maximize work per dollar of
wages, are his by the grace of God.
Well, if the worker and employer really are equal parties to a voluntary
contract, as free market theory says they are, then it works both ways. The
worker’s attempts to maximize his own utility, under the contested terms of
an incomplete contract, are every bit as morally legitimate as those of the
boss. The worker has every bit as much of a right to attempt to minimize
his effort per dollar of wages as the boss has to attempt to maximize it.
What constitutes a fair level of effort is entirely a subjective cultural norm,
that can only be determined by the real-world bargaining strength of bosses
and workers in a particular workplace.
And as Kevin Depew argues, the continued barrage of downsizing,
speedups, and stress will likely result in a drastic shift in workers’ subjec-
tive perceptions of a fair level of effort and of the legitimate ways to slow
down.
The problem is that, to date, bosses have fully capitalized on the poten-
tial of the incomplete contract, whereas workers have not. And the only
thing preventing workers from doing so is the little boss inside their heads,
the cultural holdover from master-servant days, that tells them it’s wrong
to do so. I aim to kill that little guy. And I believe that when workers fully
realize the potential of the incomplete labor contract, and become as will-
ing to exploit it as the bosses have all these years, we’ll mop the floor with
their asses. And we can do it in a free market, without any “help” from the
NLRB. Let the bosses beg for help.
One aspect of direct action that especially interests me is so-called “open-
mouth sabotage,” which (like most forms of networked resistance) has seen
its potential increased by several orders of magnitude by the Internet.
Labor struggle, at least the kind conducted on asymmetric warfare prin-
ciples, is just one subset of the general category of networked resistance. In
the military realm, networked resistance is commonly discussed under the
general heading of Fourth Generation Warfare.
In the field of radical political activism, networked organization repre-
sents a quantum increase in the “crisis of governability” that Samuel Hun-
tington complained of in the early ’70s. The coupling of networked political
organization with the Internet in the ’90s was the subject of a rather panic-
stricken genre of literature at the Rand Corporation, most of it written
by David Ronfeldt and John Arquilla. The first major Rand study on the
subject concerned the Zapatistas’ global political support network, and was
written before the Seattle demos. Loosely networked coalitions of affinity
groups, organizing through the Internet, could throw together large dem-
onstrations with little notice, and swarm government and mainstream me-
dia with phone calls, letters, and emails far beyond their capacity to absorb.
Given this elite reaction to what turned out to be a mere foreshadowing,
the Seattle demonstrations of December 1999 and the anti-globalization
demonstrations that followed must have been especially dramatic. There
labor struggle in a Free Market | 263
The Internet has increased the potential for “open mouth sabotage” by
several orders of magnitude.
The first really prominent example of the open mouth, in the networked
age, was the so-called McLibel case, in which McDonalds used a SLAPP
lawsuit to suppress pamphleteers highly critical of their company. Even
in the early days of the Internet, bad publicity over the trial and the de-
fendants’ savvy use of the trial as a platform, drew far, far more negative
attention to McDonalds than the pamphleteers could have done without
the company’s help.
In 2004, the Sinclair Media and Diebold cases showed that, in a world
of bittorrent and mirror sites, it was literally impossible to suppress infor-
mation once it had been made public. As recounted by Yochai Benkler,
Sinclair Media resorted to a SLAPP lawsuit to stop a boycott campaign
against their company, aimed at both shareholders and advertisers, over
their airing of an anti-Kerry documentary by the SwiftBoaters. Sinclair
found the movement impossible to suppress, as the original campaign
264 | kevin a. Carson
websites were mirrored faster than they could be shut down, and the val-
ue of their stock imploded. As also reported by Benkler, Diebold resorted
to tactics much like those the RIAA uses against file-sharers, to shut down
sites which published internal company documents about their voting
machines. The memos were quickly distributed, by bittorrent, to more
hard drives than anybody could count, and Diebold found itself playing
whack-a-mole as the mirror sites displaying the information proliferated
exponentially.
One of the most entertaining cases involved the MPAA’s attempt to
suppress DeCSS, Jon Johansen’s CSS descrambler for DVDs. The code was
posted all over the blogosphere, in a deliberate act of defiance, and even
printed on T-shirts.
In the Alisher Usmanov case, the blogosphere lined up in defense of
Craig Murray, who exposed the corruption of post-Soviet Uzbek oligarch
Usmanov, against the latter’s attempt to suppress Murray’s site.
Finally, in the recent Wikileaks case, a judge’s order to disable the site
To grasp just how breathtaking the potential is for open mouth sabo-
tage, and for networked anti-corporate resistance by consumers and work-
ers, just consider the proliferation of anonymous employernamesucks.com
sites. The potential results from the anonymity of the writeable web, the
comparative ease of setting up anonymous sites (through third country
proxy servers, if necessary), and the possibility of simply emailing large
volumes of embarrassing information to everyone you can think of whose
knowledge might be embarrassing to an employer.
Regarding this last, it’s pretty easy to compile a devastating email dis-
tribution list with a little Internet legwork. You might include the man-
agement of your company’s suppliers, outlets, and other business clients,
reporters who specialize in your industry, mainstream media outlets, al-
ternative news outlets, worker and consumer advocacy groups, corporate
watchdog organizations specializing in your industry, and the major blog-
gers who specialize in such news. If your problem is with the management
of a local branch of a corporate chain, you might add to the distribution list
all the community service organizations your bosses belong to, and CC it
to corporate headquarters to let them know just how much embarrassment
your bosses have caused them. The next step is to set up a dedicated, web-
based email account accessed from someplace secure. Then it’s pretty easy
to compile a textfile of all the dirt on their corruption and mismanagement,
and the poor quality of customer service (with management contact info,
of course). The only thing left is to click “Attach,” and then click “Send.”
The barrage of emails, phone calls and faxes should hit the management
suite like an A-bomb.
So what model will labor need to follow, in the vacuum left by the near
total collapse of the Wagner regime and the near-total defeat of the estab-
lishment unions? Part of the answer lies with the Wobbly “direct action on
the job” model discussed above. A great deal of it, in particular, lies with
the application of “open mouth sabotage” on a society-wide scale as exem-
plified by cases like McLibel, Sinclair, Diebold, and Wikileaks, described
above.
Another piece of the puzzle has been suggested by the I.W.W.’s Alexis
Buss, in her writing on “minority unionism”:
But more than anything, the future is being worked out in the cur-
rent practice of labor struggle itself. We’re already seeing a series of
prominent labor victories resulting from the networked resistance mod-
el.
The Wal-Mart Workers’ Association, although it doesn’t have an NLRB-
certified local in a single Wal-Mart store, is a de facto labor union. And
it has achieved victories through “associates” picketing and pamphleting
stories on their own time, through swarming via the strategic use of press
releases and networking, and through the same sort of support network
that Ronfeldt and Arquilla remarked on in the case of the pro-Zapatista
campaign. By using negative publicity to emabarrass the company, the
Association has repeatedly obtained concessions from Wal-Mart. Even a
conventional liberal like Ezra Klein understands the importance of such
unconventional action.
The Coalition of Imolakee Workers, a movement of Indian agricultural
laborers who supply many of the tomatoes used by the fast food industry,
has used a similar support network, with the coordinated use of leaflets and
picketing, petition drives, and boycotts, to obtain major concessions from
Taco Bell, McDonalds, Burger King, and KFC. Blogger Charles Johnson
provides inspiring details.
labor struggle in a Free Market | 267
The factory closure last November was a scenario that has been
repeated across southern China, where more than 1,000 shoe
factories – about a fifth of the total – have closed down in the
past year. The majority were in Houjie, a concrete sprawl on
the outskirts of Dongguan known as China’s “Shoe Town.”
“In the past, workers would just swallow all the insults and
humiliation. Now they resist,” said Jenny Chan, chief coordi-
nator of the Hong Kong-based pressure group Students and
Scholars against Corporate Misbehavior, which investigates
factory conditions in southern China.
“They collect money and they gather signatures. They use
the shop floors and the dormitories to gather the collective
forces to put themselves in better negotiating positions with
factory owners and managers,” she said.
Technology has made this possible.
“They use their mobile phones to receive news and send
messages,” Chan said “Internet cafes are very important, too.
They exchange news about which cities or which factories are
recruiting and what they are offering, and that news spreads
very quickly.”
As a result, she says, factories are seeing huge turnover
rates. In Houjie, some factories have tripled workers’ salaries,
but there are still more than 100,000 vacancies.
Act and its counterparts in other industries, of all state right-to-work laws,
and of SLAPP lawsuits. All we’ll leave in place, out of the whole labor law
regime, is the provisions of Norris-LaGuardia taking intrusion by federal
troops and court injunctions out of the equation.
And we’ll mop the floor with your asses.
27
Liberty 5.19 (april 28, 1888): 4.
If the men who oppose wages – that is, the purchase and sale of labor –
were capable of analyzing their thought and feelings, they would see that
what really excites their anger is not the fact that labor is bought and sold,
but the fact that one class of men are dependent for their living upon the
sale of their labor, while another class of men are relieved of the necessity
of labor by being legally privileged to sell something that is not labor, and
that, but for the privilege, would be enjoyed by all gratuitously. And to such
a state of things I am as much opposed as any one. But the minute you re-
move privilege, the class that now enjoy it will be forced to sell their labor,
and then, when there will be nothing but labor with which to buy labor, the
distinction between wage-payers and wage-receivers will be wiped out, and
every man will be a laborer exchanging with fellow-laborers. Not to abol-
ish wages, but to make every man dependent upon wages and to secure to
every man his whole wages is the aim of Anarchistic Socialism. What Anar-
chistic Socialism aims to abolish is usury. It does not want to deprive labor
of its reward; it wants to deprive capital of its reward. It does not hold that
labor should not be sold; it holds that capital should not be hired at usury.
But, says Herr Most, this idea of a free labor market from which privi-
lege is eliminated is nothing but consistent Manchesterism. Well, what bet-
ter can a man who professes Anarchism want than that? For the principle
of Manchesterism is liberty, and consistent Manchesterism is consistent
adherence to liberty. The only inconsistency of the Manchester men lies in
their infidelity to liberty in some of its phases. And this infidelity to lib-
erty in some of its phases is precisely the fatal inconsistency of the Freiheit
school – the only difference between its adherents and the Manchester men
being that in many of the phases in which the latter are infidel the former
are faithful, while in many of those in which the latter are faithful the for-
mer are infidel. Yes, genuine Anarchism is consistent Manchesterism, and
Communistic or pseudo-Anarchism is inconsistent Manchesterism.
ParT FIvE
neoliberalism,
Privatization, and
redistribution
28
The Freeman: Ideas on Liberty 58.7 (sep.
2008): 28-31 <http://www.thefree-
manonline.org/featured/free-market-
reforms-and-the-reduction-of-statism/>
(aug. 22, 2011).
“focus on the basic principles involved, but with scant (or no) attention
paid to the overall context in which the principles are being analyzed. In
this manner, this approach treats principles like Plato’s Forms…” Atomistic
libertarians argue “as if the society in which one lives is completely irrel-
evant to an analysis of any problem at all.”
To determine the function a particular form of state intervention serves
in the structure of state power, we must first ask what has been the histori-
cal objective of the state. This is where libertarian class analysis comes in.
The single greatest work I’m aware of on libertarian class theory is Rod-
erick Long’s article, “Toward a Libertarian Theory of Class.”2 Long cate-
gorizes ruling-class theories as either “statocratic” or “plutocratic,” based on
the respective emphasis they place on the state apparatus and the plutocracy
(the wealthy “private-sector” beneficiaries of government intervention) as
components of the ruling class.
The default tendency in mainstream libertarianism is a high degree of
statocracy, to the point not only of (quite properly) emphasizing the nec-
essary role of state coercion in enabling “legal plunder” (Frédéric Bastiat’s
term) by the plutocracy, but of downplaying the significance of the plutoc-
racy even as beneficiaries of statism. This means treating the class interests
associated with the state as ad hoc and fortuitous. Although statocratic the-
ory treats the state (in Franz Oppenheimer’s phrase) as the organized politi-
cal means to wealth, it still tends to view government as merely serving the
exploitative interests of whatever assortment of political factions happens
to control it at any given time. This picture of how the state works does not
require any organic relation between the various interest groups controlling
it at any time, or between them and the state. It might be controlled by a
disparate array of interest groups, including licensed professionals, rent-
seeking corporations, farmers, regulated utilities, and big labor; the only
thing they have in common is that they happen to be currently the best at
latching onto the state.
Murray Rothbard’s position was far different. Rothbard, Long argues,
saw the state as controlled by “a primary group that has achieved a position
of structural hegemony, a group central to class consolidation and crisis in
contemporary political economy. Rothbard’s approach to this problem is,
in fact, highly dialectical in its comprehension of the historical, political,
economic, and social dynamics of class.”
I have argued in the past that the corporate economy is so closely bound
up with the power of the state, that it makes more sense to think of the
corporate ruling class as a component of the state, in the same way that
landlords were a component of the state under the Old Regime. Blogger
Brad Spangler used the analogy of a gunman and bagman to illustrate the
relationship:
that corporate capital will most benefit from having taken off its hands, and
to socialize those functions the cost of which capital would most prefer the
state to bear. They shift functions from the private to the state sector when
they are perceived as necessary for the functioning of the system, but not
sufficiently profitable to justify the bother of running them under “private
sector” auspices. Under “lemon market reform,” on the other hand, the po-
litical capitalists liquidate interventionist policies after they have squeezed
all the benefit out of state action.
A good example: British industrialists felt it was safe to adopt “free trade”
in the mid-nineteenth century, after mercantilism had served its purpose.
Half the world had been hammered into a unified market by British force
of arms and was held together by a British merchant fleet. Britain had
stamped out competing industry in the colonial world. It had reenacted
the Enclosures on a global scale, stealing enormous amounts of land from
native populations and converting it to cash crops for the imperial market.
The commanding position of British capital was the direct result of past
mercantilism; having established this commanding position, it could afford
“free trade.”
The so-called “free trade” movement in the contemporary United States
follows the same pattern. A century ago, high tariff barriers served the inter-
ests of American political capitalists. Today, when the dominant corporate
interests in America are transnational, tariffs are no longer useful to them.
They actually impede the transfer of goods and partially finished products
between the national subdivisions of a single global corporation.
On the other hand, so-called “intellectual property” today serves exactly
the same protectionist function for transnational corporations that tariffs
used to serve for the old national corporations a century ago. So the politi-
cal capitalists promote a version of “free trade” that involves doing away
with outmoded tariff barriers while greatly strengthening the new protec-
tionism of “intellectual property” law.
We must remember that the measure of statism inheres in the function-
ing of the overall system, not in the formal statism of its separate parts. A
reduction in the formal statism of some separate parts, chosen in accor-
dance with the strategic priorities of the statists, may actually result in a net
increase in the overall level of statism. Our strategic agenda as libertarians,
in dismantling the state, must reflect our understanding of the overall na-
ture of the system.
29
Contemporary Individualist Anarchism: The
Broadsides of the Boston Anarchist Drinking
Brigade, 1988-2000, political Notes 184,
by Joe peacott, Jim Baker, et al. (london:
libertarian alliance 2003) 21-2 <http://
www.libertarian.co.uk/lapubs/polin/po-
lin184.pdf> (aug. 22, 2011).
owners. And workers would be free to take possession of the factories and
other means of production which they currently use, since there would be
no government to enforce the demand of the current “owners” for a portion
of the labor of others. Without having to sacrifice any portion of the wealth
generated by their own labor, free workers would be affluent workers. Such
people would be free to exchange goods and services with others, regardless
of geographic location or ethnicity, as long as the interaction was volun-
tary. If trade were really free, the only exchanges that people would agree
to would be fair ones. And true, unhindered competition between various
worker-owners all over the world would prevent some from accumulating
vast amounts of wealth at the expense of others.
Real free trade would be risky in ways that a government supervised
economy would not be. There would be no state-run welfare system, no
labor laws, no laws against pollution and the wanton slaughter of wildlife.
But that does not mean individuals and the natural environment would be
set adrift to fend for themselves. People are more than capable of forming
voluntary organizations to provide for hard times, assist each other with
creating jobs, facilitate direct commerce between producers, and campaign
for a more humane treatment of nonhuman beings. People free to trade
with each other would also be free to look at the ways they live and work
and come up with ways to do both that are more humane and ecologically
sound than those that currently exist. They have done this all through his-
tory and do it now, alongside the institutions of the warfare/welfare state.
Anarchy and free trade would not solve all problems or lead to utopia.
They simply would free up people to interact with others as they choose,
to the benefit of both, or all, parties. Individuals and voluntary associations
would then be free to trade fairly with each other, band together as they see
fit to promote their common interests, and protect their shared environ-
ment, all without being pushed around by politicians and the economic
elites they empower and defend.
30
Rad Geek People’s Daily (n.p., Nov.
8, 2007) <http://radgeek.com/
gt/2007/11/08/sprachkritik_privatiza-
tion/> (aug. 22, 2011).
tWo WorDs oN
“privatizatioN”
CHARLES W. JOHNSON
(2007)
healthy naïveté towards the utopian claims that are often made on behalf of
government bureaucracies under an electoral form of government.1 But
setting the substantive issues aside, there’s another major roadblock for us
to confront, just from the use of language.
There is something called “privatization” which has been a hot topic for
the past 15-20 years. It has been a big deal in Eastern Europe, in third world
countries under the influence of the IMF, and in some cases in the United
States, too. Naomi Klein has a new book2 on the topic, which focuses on
the role that natural and artificial crises play in establishing the conditions
for what she calls “privatization.” But “privatization,” as understood by the
IMF, the neoliberal governments, and the robber baron corporations, is a
very different beast from “privatization” as understood by free market radi-
cals. What consistent libertarians advocate is the devolution of all wealth
to the people who created it, and the reconstruction of all industry on the
principle of free association and voluntary mutual exchange. But the IMF
and Naomi Klein both seem to agree on the idea that “privatization” in-
cludes “reforms” like the following:
t 5BYGVOEFE HPWFSONFOU DPOUSBDUT UP DPSQPSBUJPOT MJLF #MBDLXBUFS
or DynCorp for private mercenaries to fight government wars. This
has become increasingly popular as a way for the U.S. to wage small
and large wars over the past 15 years; I think it was largely pioneered
through the U.S. government’s efforts to suppress international free
trade in unauthorized drugs, and is currently heavily used by the
U.S. in Colombia, the Balkans, and Iraq.
t 5BYGVOEFE HPWFSONFOU DPOUSBDUT UP DPSQPSBUJPOT MJLF 8BDLFOIVU
for government-funded but privately managed prisons, police forces,
firefighters, etc. This has also become increasingly popular in the
U.S. over the past 15 years; in the case of prisons, at least, it was
largely inspired by the increasing number of people imprisoned by
the U.S. government for using unauthorized drugs or selling them to
willing customers.
t (PWFSONFOUBVDUJPOTPSTXFFUIFBSUDPOUSBDUTJOXIJDIOBUJPOBMJ[FE
monopoly firms – oil companies, water works, power companies,
and the like – are sold off to corporations, with the profits going into
the State treasury, and usually with some form of legally-enforced
monopoly left intact after “privatization.” One of the most notori-
1 See Charles Johnson, “State of Grace,” Rad Geek People’s Daily (n.p., Oct.
9, 2005) <http://www.radgeek.com/gt/2005/10/09/state_of> (March 13,
2011).
2 Naomi Klein, The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism (New York:
Metropolitan 2007).
two Words on “privatization” | 285
ous cases is the cannibalistic bonanza that Boris Yeltsin and a select
class of politically-connected “Oligarchs” helped themselves to after
the implosion of Soviet Communism. Throughout the third world,
similar auction or contract schemes are suggested or demanded as a
condition for the national government to receive a line of tax-funded
credit from the member states of the International Monetary Fund.
t :FU "OPUIFS %BNO "DDPVOU TDIFNFT GPS DPOWFSUJOH HPWFSONFOU
pension systems from a welfare model to a forced savings model, in
which workers are forced to put part of their paycheck into a special,
government-created retirement account, where it can be invested ac-
cording to government-crafted formulas in one of a limited num-
ber of government-approved investment vehicles offered by a tightly
regulated cartel of government-approved uncompetitive investment
brokers. This kind of government retirement plan is supposedly the
centerpiece of “privatization” in Pinochet’s Chile, and has repeatedly
been advocated by George W. Bush and other Republican politicians
in the United States.
Klein and other state Leftists very often claim that these government
“privatization” schemes are closely associated with Right wing authoritarian
repression, up to and including secret police, death squads, and beating,
torturing, or “disappearing” innocent people for exercising their rights of
free speech or free association in labor unions or dissident groups.
And they are right. Those police state tactics aren’t compatible with any
kind of free market, but then, neither are any of the government auctions,
government contracting, government loans, and government regulatory
schemes that Klein and her comrades present as examples of “privatiza-
tion.” They are examples of government-backed corporate kleptocracy. The
problem is that the oligarchs, the robber barons, and their hirelings dis-
honestly present these schemes – one and all of them involving massive
government intervention and government plunder from ordinary working
people – as if they were “free market” reforms. And Klein and her comrades
usually believe them; the worst sorts of robber baron state capitalism are
routinely presented as if they were arguments against the free market, even
though pervasive government monopoly, government regulation, govern-
ment confiscation, government contracting, and government finance have
nothing even remotely to do with free markets.
I’d like to suggest that this confusion needs to be exposed, and com-
bated. In order to combat it, we may very well need to mint some new
language. As far as I know, “privatization” was coined by analogy with “na-
tionalization;” if “nationalization” was the seizure of industry or resources
by government, then “privatization” was the reversal of that process, de-
286 | Charles W. Johnson
volving the industry or the resources into private hands. It is clear that the
kind of government outsourcing and kleptocratic monopolies that Klein et
al condemn don’t match up very well with the term. On the other hand, the
term has been abused and perverted so long that it may not be very useful
to us anymore, either.
So here’s my proposal for linguistic reform. What we advocate is the
devolution of state-confiscated wealth and state-confiscated industries back
to civil society. In some cases, that might mean transferring an industry or a
resource to private proprietorship (if, for example, you can find the person
or the people from whom a nationalized factory was originally seized, the
just thing to do would be to turn the factory back over to them). But in
most cases, it could just as easily mean any number of other ways to devolve
property back to the people:
1. Some resources should be ceded to the joint ownership of those who
habitually use them. For example, who should own your neighbor-
hood streets? Answer: you and your neighbors should own the streets
that you live on. For the government to seize your tax money and
your land and use it to build neighborhood roads, and then to sell
them out from under you to some unrelated third party who doesn’t
live on them, doesn’t habitually use them, etc., would be theft.
2. Government industries and lands where an original private owner
cannot be found could, and probably should, be devolved to the
co-operative ownership of the people who work in them or on them.
The factories to the workers; the soil to those who till it.
3. Some universally-used utilities (water works, regional power compa-
nies, perhaps highways) which were created by tax money might be
ceded to the joint ownership of all the citizens of the area they serve.
(This is somewhat similar to the Czechoslovakian model of privatiza-
tion, in which government industries were converted into joint-stock
companies, and every citizen was given so many shares.)
4. Some resources (many parks, perhaps) might be ceded to the unor-
ganized public – that is, they would become real public property, in
Roderick’s sense,3 rather than in the sense of government control.
Now, given the diversity of cases, and all of the different ways in which
government might justly devolve property from State control to civil soci-
ety, “privatization” is really too limiting a term. So instead let’s call what we
want the “socialization of the means of production.”
As for the IMF/Blackwater model of “privatization,” again, the word
doesn’t fit the situation very well, and we need something new in order to
3 See Roderick Long, “A Plea for Public Property.” ch. 15 (157-168), in this
volume.
two Words on “privatization” | 287
help mark the distinction. Whereas what we want could rightly be called
“socialization,” I think that the government outsourcing, government-
backed monopoly capitalism, and government goon squads, might more
accurately be described as “privateering.”
I’m just sayin’.
31
Libertarian Forum 1.6 (June 15, 1969): 2.
l ibertarianisM is clearly the Most, perhaps the only truly radical MoveMent in
America. It grasps the problems of society by the roots. It is not reformist
in any sense. It is revolutionary in every sense.
Because so many of its people, however, have come from the right there
remains about it at least an aura or, perhaps, miasma of defensiveness, as
though its interests really center in, for instance, defending private prop-
erty. The truth, of course, is that libertarianism wants to advance principles
of property but that it in no way wishes to defend, willy nilly, all property
which now is called private.
Much of that property is stolen. Much is of dubious title. All of it is
deeply intertwined with an immoral, coercive state system which has con-
doned, built on, and profited from slavery; has expanded through and ex-
ploited a brutal and aggressive imperial and colonial foreign policy, and
continues to hold the people in a roughly serf-master relationship to polit-
ical-economic power concentrations.
Libertarians are concerned, first and foremost, with that most valuable
of properties, the life of each individual. That is the property most brutally
and constantly abused by state systems whether they are of the right or left.
Property rights pertaining to material objects are seen by libertarians as
290 | karl Hess
CoNFisCatioN aND
tHe HoMesteaD
priNCiple
MuRRAy N. ROTHBARD
(1969)
k arl hess’s brilliant and challenging article in this issue1 raises a probleM of
specifics that ranges further than the libertarian movement. For ex-
ample, there must be hundreds of thousands of “professional” anti-Com-
munists in this country. Yet not one of these gentry, in the course of their
fulminations, has come up with a specific plan for de-Communization.
Suppose, for example, that Messers. Brezhnev and Co. become converted
to the principles of a free society; they then ask our anti-Communists, all
right, how do we go about de-socializing? What could our anti-Commu-
nists offer them?
This question has been essentially answered by the exciting develop-
ments of Tito’s Yugoslavia. Beginning in 1952, Yugoslavia has been de-
socializing at a remarkable rate. The principle the Yugoslavs have used
is the libertarian “homesteading” one: the state-owned factories to the
workers that work in them! The nationalized plants in the “public” sector
1 Karl Hess (1969), “Where Are the Specifics?,” ch. 31 (289-292), in this vol-
ume.
294 | Murray N. rothbard
have all been transferred in virtual ownership to the specific workers who
work in the particular plants, thus making them producers’ coops, and
moving rapidly in the direction of individual shares of virtual ownership
to the individual worker. What other practicable route toward destatiza-
tion could there be? The principle in the Communist countries should
be: land to the peasants and the factories to the workers, thereby getting
the property out of the hands of the State and into private, homesteading
hands.
The homesteading principle means that the way that unowned property
gets into private ownership is by the principle that this property justly be-
longs to the person who finds, occupies, and transforms it by his labor. This
is clear in the case of the pioneer and virgin land. But what of the case of
stolen property?
Suppose, for example, that A steals B’s horse. Then C comes along and
takes the horse from A. Can C be called a thief? Certainly not, for we can-
not call a man a criminal for stealing goods from a thief. On the contrary,
C is performing a virtuous act of confiscation, for he is depriving thief A of
the fruits of his crime of aggression, and he is at least returning the horse to
the innocent “private” sector and out of the “criminal” sector. C has done
a noble act and should be applauded. Of course, it would be still better if
he returned the horse to B, the original victim. But even if he does not, the
horse is far more justly in C’s hands than it is in the hands of A, the thief
and criminal.
Let us now apply our libertarian theory of property to the case of prop-
erty in the hands of, or derived from, the State apparatus. The libertarian
sees the State as a giant gang of organized criminals, who live off the theft
called “taxation” and use the proceeds to kill, enslave, and generally push
people around. Therefore, any property in the hands of the State is in the
hands of thieves, and should be liberated as quickly as possible. Any person
or group who liberates such property, who confiscates or appropriates it
from the State, is performing a virtuous act and a signal service to the cause
of liberty. In the case of the State, furthermore, the victim is not readily
identifiable as B, the horse-owner. All taxpayers, all draftees, all victims of
the State have been mulcted. How to go about returning all this property
to the taxpayers? What proportions should be used in this terrific tangle of
robbery and injustice that we have all suffered at the hands of the State?
Often, the most practical method of de-statizing is simply to grant the
moral right of ownership on the person or group who seizes the property
from the State. Of this group, the most morally deserving are the ones who
are already using the property but who have no moral complicity in the
State’s act of aggression. These people then become the “homesteaders” of
the stolen property and hence the rightful owners.
Take, for example, the State universities. This is property built on funds
stolen from the taxpayers. Since the State has not found or put into effect
a way of returning ownership of this property to the taxpaying public, the
proper owners of this university are the “homesteaders,” those who have al-
ready been using and therefore “mixing their labor” with the facilities. The
prime consideration is to deprive the thief, in this case the State, as quickly
as possible of the ownership and control of its ill-gotten gains, to return the
property to the innocent, private sector. This means student and/or faculty
ownership of the universities.
As between the two groups, the students have a prior claim, for the
students have been paying at least some amount to support the university
whereas the faculty suffer from the moral taint of living off State funds and
thereby becoming to some extent a part of the State apparatus.
The same principle applies to nominally “private” property which really
comes from the State as a result of zealous lobbying on behalf of the recipi-
ent. Columbia University, for example, which receives nearly two-thirds of
its income from government, is only a “private” college in the most ironic
sense. It deserves a similar fate of virtuous homesteading confiscation.
But if Columbia University, what of General Dynamics? What of the
myriad of corporations which are integral parts of the military-industrial
complex, which not only get over half or sometimes virtually all their rev-
enue from the government but also participate in mass murder? What are
their credentials to “private” property? Surely less than zero. As eager lob-
byists for these contracts and subsidies, as co-founders of the garrison state,
they deserve confiscation and reversion of their property to the genuine
private sector as rapidly as possible. To say that their “private” property
must be respected is to say that the property stolen by the horsethief and
the murdered [sic] must be “respected.”
But how then do we go about destatizing the entire mass of govern-
ment property, as well as the “private property” of General Dynamics? All
this needs detailed thought and inquiry on the part of libertarians. One
method would be to turn over ownership to the homesteading workers in
the particular plants; another to turn over pro-rata ownership to the indi-
vidual taxpayers. But we must face the fact that it might prove the most
practical route to first nationalize the property as a prelude to redistribu-
tion. Thus, how could the ownership of General Dynamics be transferred
to the deserving taxpayers without first being nationalized enroute? And,
further more, even if the government should decide to nationalize General
Dynamics – without compensation, of course – per se and not as a prelude
to redistribution to the taxpayers, this is not immoral or something to be
296 | Murray N. rothbard
combatted. For it would only mean that one gang of thieves – the govern-
ment – would be confiscating property from another previously cooperat-
ing gang, the corporation that has lived off the government. I do not often
agree with John Kenneth Galbraith, but his recent suggestion to nationalize
businesses which get more than 75% of their revenue from government, or
from the military, has considerable merit. Certainly it does not mean ag-
gression against private property, and, furthermore, we could expect a con-
siderable diminution of zeal from the military-industrial complex if much
of the profits were taken out of war and plunder. And besides, it would
make the American military machine less efficient, being governmental,
and that is surely all to the good. But why stop at 75%? Fifty percent seems
to be a reasonable cutoff point on whether an organization is largely public
or largely private.
And there is another consideration. Dow Chemical, for example, has
been heavily criticized for making napalm for the U.S. military machine.
The percentage of its sales coming from napalm is undoubtedly small, so
that on a percentage basis the company may not seem very guilty; but
napalm is and can only be an instrument of mass murder, and therefore
Dow Chemical is heavily up to its neck in being an accessory and hence a
co-partner in the mass murder in Vietnam. No percentage of sales, however
small, can absolve its guilt.
This brings us to Karl’s point about slaves. One of the tragic aspects of
the emancipation of the serfs in Russia in 1861 was that while the serfs
gained their personal freedom, the land – their means of production and
of life, their land was retained under the ownership of their feudal masters.
The land should have gone to the serfs themselves, for under the homestead
principle they had tilled the land and deserved its title. Furthermore, the
serfs were entitled to a host of reparations from their masters for the centu-
ries of oppression and exploitation. The fact that the land remained in the
hands of the lords paved the way inexorably for the Bolshevik Revolution,
since the revolution that had freed the serfs remained unfinished.
The same is true of the abolition of slavery in the United States. The
slaves gained their freedom, it is true, but the land, the plantations that they
had tilled and therefore deserved to own under the homestead principle,
remained in the hands of their former masters. Furthermore, no repara-
tions were granted the slaves for their oppression out of the hides of their
masters. Hence the abolition of slavery remained unfinished, and the seeds
of a new revolt have remained to intensify to the present day. Hence, the
great importance of the shift in Negro demands from greater welfare hand-
outs to “reparations,” reparations for the years of slavery and exploitation
and for the failure to grant the Negroes their land, the failure to heed the
Radical abolitionist’s call for “40 acres and a mule” to the former slaves. In
many cases, moreover, the old plantations and the heirs and descendants of
the former slaves can be identified, and the reparations can become highly
specific indeed.
Alan Milchman, in the days when he was a brilliant young libertarian
activist, first pointed out that libertarians had misled themselves by mak-
ing their main dichotomy “government” vs. “private” with the former bad
and the latter good. Government, he pointed out, is after all not a mystical
entity but a group of individuals, “private” individuals if you will, acting in
the manner of an organized criminal gang. But this means that there may
also be “private” criminals as well as people directly affiliated with the gov-
ernment. What we libertarians object to, then, is not government per se but
crime, what we object to is unjust or criminal property titles; what we are
for is not “private” property per se but just, innocent, non-criminal private
property. It is justice vs. injustice, innocence vs. criminality that must be
our major libertarian focus.
ParT SIx
Inequality and
Social Safety nets
33
Anarchy without Bombs (n.p., March 13,
2010) <http://anarchywithoutbombs.
com/2010/03/13/let-the-free-market-
eat-the-rich/> (aug. 22, 2011).
achieve this defines politics as we experience it. The purpose of this es-
say is to demonstrate how large scale aggregations of wealth require an
outside stabilizing force and defensive agency to maintain, and how in a
free, dynamic market there are entropies that move imbalances back to
equilibrium. There is also a proposed basis for a relative equilibrium among
people once privileges are abolished. This investigation will identify two
main institutions that arise from state intervention in capitalist society:
corporations and personal estates.
there are few (if any) rich people who aren’t heavily and diversely invested
in corporate capitalism and share in its redistribution of wealth and special
favors from the government, there are additional State provisions to benefit
individuals. Unlike corporate privileges, those which govern the stability
of personal estates arguably serve the interests of more modest individuals,
especially the middle class. However, I intend to show that the rich benefit
far more from fiat stability and socialized security than the rest of us.
The biggest subsidy enjoyed by the wealthy lies in government regula-
tion of finance. By regulating banking through inspections, audits, and the
centralized monetary maintenance practiced by the Federal Reserve Sys-
tem, depositors enjoy a level of stability in the system that is quite unrivaled
in history. Of course, regular joes like you and I prefer our current experi-
ence to frequent crashes and bank runs, but there’s a catch: we don’t pay
for this “service” in proportion to our deposits (or the interest we earn!).
Instead, we help subsidize the regulation and maintenance of the financial
system from which the elite depositors benefit disproportionately.
Rich depositors are more likely to invest in instruments and accounts
which yield higher interests rates. Plus, they’re more likely to earn a greater
amount of their income directly from the interest on their deposits. The
barriers to entry in banking prevent individuals from forming their own
mutual banks and force them to rely on the aggregated wealth of big depos-
itors at some level of the hierarchical financial establishment. And because
the rich can afford to pay for maintenance of their wealth by managers,
accountants, and brokers, they are more likely to anticipate and capitalize
upon market shifts than us.
Keep in mind that central regulation and maintenance of markets,
groomed and rationalized by the Federal Reserve System, the Federal De-
posit Insurance Corporation, and other departments encourages the sort of
investment patterns that count on steady profits and interest – phenomena
much more likely to benefit the wealthy than those of us investing in 401-
Ks and IRAs. By lowering risks, any entrepreneurial profit opportunities
for the little guy that regulation kills translate into the stability of markets
and the steadiness of investment income. Of course, that benefits those
who’ve already accumulated capital much more than those of us who’ve yet
to achieve our fortune.
However, the extent of State intervention to benefit the rich extends be-
yond finance into the very real area of asset security. The rich depend on the
stability and predictability of systems that ensure and protect their title to
their property, but again their benefit from these phenomena dwarfs ours.
For example, they count on the government keeping a central repository of
property titles to justify excluding others. This takes property off the mar-
306 | Jeremy Weiland
ket and thus raises the value of their property. While it is true that middle
class homeowners benefit from these systems, it does not benefit them to
nearly the degree it does the rich. Socializing the costs of kicking people off
one’s land necessarily favors those who have more land to guard.
Police patrols of moneyed neighborhoods provide an example of social-
ized security, where defense and sentry costs are not paid directly by the
beneficiaries. Sure, many wealthy types hire security guards, but they would
have to hire many more – and pay much higher insurance premiums – if it
were not for public law enforcement at least helping to defend their prop-
erty, nor the extensive, expensive system of socialized criminal investigation
that makes it less likely property will stay stolen and criminals remain at
large.
tion of the wealth over more people necessarily eases its protection. And
since everybody has basically the same amount of stuff, nobody has an
interest in taking advantage of, nor stealing from, others.
In fact, normal human greed suggests that there will always be an ele-
ment of society that wishes to steal and cheat others. In anarchy, the wealth
offer themselves as easy targets to such criminals, because big estates are
harder to defend and so invite more opportunities for plunder. Addition-
ally, it is far more likely that wealthy estates will be targeted because, for
instance, it is easier to steal a million dollars worth of cash or property from
one location such as a bank or mansion than it is to rob a thousand or so
common people. The larger the disparity in wealth, the more intensively
the wealthy will be targeted by criminals.
On the other hand, normal people would necessarily be less likely to be
targeted by the criminal, for a few reasons. First, since the ratio of human
bodies to wealth in a modest community would be much greater, the de-
terrent effect would be insurmountable to all but the most stupid crooks.
Second, once statist regulations and privileges stop making an honest living
less of a bad deal, the criminal elements in a modest community are more
likely to share in the legitimate wealth of the economy, easing their need
to prey on their neighbors. Markets freed from dehumanizing, deracinated
centralization imposed for corporate convenience would be fathomable,
with plenty of opportunities for entrepreneurship. While by no means a
utopia, a genuinely free market would ease the pressures on the lower and
middle classes.
iNDiviDualisM aND
iNeQualitY
JOE PEACOTT
(2007)
commune no one will be poorer than another, but some will certainly be
less free.
This is not to imply that all communist or collectivist anarchists believe
in imposing their economic views on those who view the world differently.
Many who advocate some form of communal society are as committed to
personal liberty as are private property advocates. But there is a tendency on
the part of many anarchists to present a “one size fits everyone” economic
model for the future, not realizing the possible implications of such an all-
encompassing ideal.
HoW GoverNMeNt
solveD tHe HealtH
Care Crisis
RODERICK T. LONG
(1993)
t oday, we are constantly being told, the united states faces a health care
crisis. Medical costs are too high, and health insurance is out of reach of
the poor. The cause of this crisis is never made very clear, but the cure is ob-
vious to nearly everybody: government must step in to solve the problem.
Eighty years ago, Americans were also told that their nation was facing a
health care crisis. Then, however, the complaint was that medical costs were
too low, and that health insurance was too accessible. But in that era, too,
government stepped forward to solve the problem. And boy, did it solve it!
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, one of the primary sources of
health care and health insurance for the working poor in Britain, Australia,
and the United States was the fraternal society. Fraternal societies (called
“friendly societies” in Britain and Australia) were voluntary mutual-aid as-
sociations. Their descendants survive among us today in the form of the
Shriners, Elks, Masons, and similar organizations, but these no longer play
316 | roderick t. long
the central role in American life they formerly did. As recently as 1920,
over one-quarter of all adult Americans were members of fraternal societ-
ies. (The figure was still higher in Britain and Australia.) Fraternal societies
were particularly popular among blacks and immigrants. (Indeed, Teddy
Roosevelt’s famous attack on “hyphenated Americans” was motivated in
part by hostility to the immigrants’ fraternal societies; he and other Pro-
gressives sought to “Americanize” immigrants by making them dependent
for support on the democratic state, rather than on their own independent
ethnic communities.)
The principle behind the fraternal societies was simple. A group of
working-class people would form an association (or join a local branch,
or “lodge,” of an existing association) and pay monthly fees into the as-
sociation’s treasury; individual members would then be able to draw on the
pooled resources in time of need. The fraternal societies thus operated as a
form of self-help insurance company.
Turn-of-the-century America offered a dizzying array of fraternal societ-
ies to choose from. Some catered to a particular ethnic or religious group;
others did not. Many offered entertainment and social life to their mem-
bers, or engaged in community service. Some “fraternal” societies were run
entirely by and for women. The kinds of services from which members
could choose often varied as well, though the most commonly offered were
life insurance, disability insurance, and “lodge practice.”
“Lodge practice” refers to an arrangement, reminiscent of today’s
HMOs, whereby a particular society or lodge would contract with a doc-
tor to provide medical care to its members. The doctor received a regular
salary on a retainer basis, rather than charging per item; members would
pay a yearly fee and then call on the doctor’s services as needed. If medical
services were found unsatisfactory, the doctor would be penalized, and the
contract might not be renewed. Lodge members reportedly enjoyed the
degree of customer control this system afforded them. And the tendency to
overuse the physician’s services was kept in check by the fraternal society’s
own “self-policing”; lodge members who wanted to avoid future increases
in premiums were motivated to make sure that their fellow members were
not abusing the system.
Most remarkable was the low cost at which these medical services were
provided. At the turn of the century, the average cost of “lodge practice” to
an individual member was between one and two dollars a year. A day’s wage
would pay for a year’s worth of medical care. By contrast, the average cost
of medical service on the regular market was between one and two dollars
per visit. Yet licensed physicians, particularly those who did not come from
“big name” medical schools, competed vigorously for lodge contracts, per-
How Government solved the Health Care Crisis | 317
haps because of the security they offered; and this competition continued
to keep costs low.
The response of the medical establishment, both in America and in Brit-
ain, was one of outrage; the institution of lodge practice was denounced in
harsh language and apocalyptic tones. Such low fees, many doctors charged,
were bankrupting the medical profession. Moreover, many saw it as a blow
to the dignity of the profession that trained physicians should be eagerly
bidding for the chance to serve as the hirelings of lower-class tradesmen.
It was particularly detestable that such uneducated and socially inferior
people should be permitted to set fees for the physicians’ services, or to sit
in judgment on professionals to determine whether their services had been
satisfactory. The government, they demanded, must do something.
And so it did. In Britain, the state put an end to the “evil” of lodge prac-
tice by bringing health care under political control. Physicians’ fees would
now be determined by panels of trained professionals (i.e., the physicians
themselves) rather than by ignorant patients. State-financed medical care
edged out lodge practice; those who were being forced to pay taxes for
“free” health care whether they wanted it or not had little incentive to pay
extra for health care through the fraternal societies, rather than using the
government care they had already paid for.
In America, it took longer for the nation’s health care system to be so-
cialized, so the medical establishment had to achieve its ends more indi-
rectly; but the essential result was the same. Medical societies like the AMA
imposed sanctions on doctors who dared to sign lodge practice contracts.
This might have been less effective if such medical societies had not had
access to government power; but in fact, thanks to governmental grants of
privilege, they controlled the medical licensure procedure, thus ensuring
that those in their disfavor would be denied the right to practice medicine.
Such licensure laws also offered the medical establishment a less overt
way of combating lodge practice. It was during this period that the AMA
made the requirements for medical licensure far stricter than they had pre-
viously been. Their reason, they claimed, was to raise the quality of medical
care. But the result was that the number of physicians fell, competition
dwindled, and medical fees rose; the vast pool of physicians bidding for
lodge practice contracts had been abolished. As with any market good, ar-
tifical restrictions on supply created higher prices – a particular hardship for
the working-class members of fraternal societies.
The final death blow to lodge practice was struck by the fraternal soci-
eties themselves. The National Fraternal Congress – attempting, like the
AMA, to reap the benefits of cartelization – lobbied for laws decreeing a
legal minimum on the rates fraternal societies could charge. Unfortunately
318 | roderick t. long
for the lobbyists, the lobbying effort was successful; the unintended con-
sequence was that the minimum rates laws made the services of fraternal
societies no longer competitive. Thus the National Fraternal Congress’ lob-
bying efforts, rather than creating a formidable mutual-aid cartel, simply
destroyed the fraternal societies’ market niche – and with it the opportunity
for low-cost health care for the working poor.
Why do we have a crisis in health care costs today? Because government
“solved” the last one.
36
Contemporary Individualist Anarchism: The
Broadsides of the Boston Anarchist Drinking
Brigade, 1988-2000, political Notes 184,
by Joe peacott, Jim Baker, et al. (london:
libertarian alliance 2003) 18-9 <http://
www.libertarian.co.uk/lapubs/polin/po-
lin184.pdf> (aug. 22, 2011).
chists should be looking into the matter more deeply and coming up with
critiques of state welfare and solutions to poverty more consistent with lib-
ertarian thinking, instead of falling in line behind the modern nanny state.
It certainly makes sense to make the best of the existence of a welfare
state and take advantage of the programs that have been instituted in re-
sponse to the demands and movements of radical or progressive statists,
but it is quite another thing to look to these programs as the preferred way
to solve social problems. Calling for the dismantling of the welfare system
for poor people may not be the best place for anarchists to start in the
fight against the very existence of the state, but arguing for its continued
maintenance – or even its expansion – as if this were the only way to help
people in need, is not the right course of action either. As we do in regard to
other social problems, anarchists should be advocating nonstatist solutions
to the problems of poverty. While doing away entirely with government is
the ultimate remedy for poverty, other measures which could be proposed
and implemented under the state, such as decreased taxation to increase the
wealth of the working poor, deregulation of health care to decrease health
care costs, and a return to mutual aid societies in place of extortionate in-
surance companies, are much more in line with anarchist principles than
cheerleading for AFDC.
Anarchists historically have tried to lessen the influence of government
in the lives of poor and working people. When faced with poverty, anar-
chists have advocated self-organization of and direct action by workers to
secure at least a greater portion of the fruit of their labor. When fighting
battles against corporations, anarchists did not call for the government to
enact labor laws, but criticized the state for using its police and military to
defend corporate interests. They demanded the state get out of the way, not
that it rescue the poor. And anarchists have foreseen a future where com-
petent, independent individuals and/or groups, freed from the restraints of
statist society, take care of themselves and their associates in whatever ways
make sense to them. This historical anarchist vision would appear to have
been lost on some in modern times.
A number of anarchists seem to have bought the idea that since govern-
ment can sometimes be more responsive to the demands of poor people
than private capitalists, the state can be seen as a guardian against their
depredations. This is inconsistent both with the anarchist analysis that the
state props up capitalism, and with the reality that in some cases private
companies provide better for their employees and customers than state en-
terprises care for their clients and workers. At least part of the reason it is,
at times, easier to squeeze concessions out of the state, is that it costs the
individuals in government nothing: they will simply force working people
the poverty of the Welfare state | 321
to foot the bill for any increase in welfare benefits by increasing taxes. In the
case of a private capitalist enterprises, the owners of the business are not al-
ways able to pass on the costs of better employees benefits to the consumer,
and consequently may lose some of their profits if they give in to workers’
demands for higher pay or other improved working conditions. But the
only time either the state or capitalist businesses provide any benefits to
anyone but themselves and their allies, is when they are pressured to do so.
Welfare, social security, and other government benefit schemes were created
in response to social movements, not out of governmental beneficence, just
as good benefits in many private corporations are the result of strong labor
movements which forced the owners to reimburse the workers for a greater
portion of their labor than was the case previously. Governments and capi-
talist enterprises have largely the same interests, and both can be forced to
make concessions by vigorous opposition from their subjects or employees.
While workers pressuring their employees for a better deal is simply a
case of people demanding part of what is rightfully theirs anyway, recipi-
ents of welfare payments and other benefits are asking the government to
take someone else’s money and give it to them. Many advocates of main-
taining the current welfare system, however, correctly state that it doesn’t
cost very much in the greater scheme of things. State spending on weapons
of mass destruction and payments to corporations are each much more
costly than welfare programs for poor individuals and families. Addition-
ally, many working people, not commonly thought of as welfare recipients
do, in fact, receive such benefits, as when middle class people get medicaid
to pay for their nursing home expenses, or working people obtain free care
from hospitals, the costs of which are covered by the government. While
this is all true, this does not justify government theft of working people’s
money to give to someone else. The money raised from taxation to fund
corporate welfare, AFDC, and medicaid is stolen property, as is the money
from compulsory fees on insurance companies to fund free care programs,
which the insurers pass on to their customers. The rich don’t pay taxes, and
the very poor don’t pay taxes. It is the huge number of working people in
the middle who do, and who support the other two groups. And, while
many in the middle get some of their extorted money back in the form
of benefits, most of them pay out more than they receive, otherwise there
wouldn’t be any left for the rich and the poor.
The rich and their corporations are wealthy because they or their ances-
tors were able unjustly to acquire some of the wealth produced by others.
They were able to do this only because the state and its police and military
support the institutions of profit, interest, and rent which transfer money
from working people to those who “own” businesses, banks and dwellings.
322 | Joe peacott
Rich people don’t deserve the wealth they already possess and certainly
should not receive any of the money that is stolen directly from workers by
the government, or any of the other advantages they receive at the expense
of taxpayers. Among the poor people who receive money or other benefits
from the state, on the other hand, there are those who are in genuine need.
Some are truly the victims of circumstances largely beyond their control,
and others have made bad choices and expect or hope that others will bail
them out. But there are also welfare recipients who are simply parasites
who feel that others should work to support them in the lifestyle to which
they’ve become accustomed (just like the rich). Being poor does not make
one virtuous or deserving. However, since at least some poor people are de-
serving of assistance it is preferable that tax money fund AFDC, medicaid,
and food stamps, rather than corporate welfare and the military, but none
of the recipients, rich or poor, are entitled to the money extracted by force
from working people.
Since such forcible transfers of money are not acceptable, we need to
seek other, non-coercive means, to enable people to better fend for them-
selves. As mentioned earlier, tax cuts, health care deregulation, and volun-
tary mutual aid societies would all mitigate poverty, even if implemented
in a statist society. Getting rid of the state and its protection of capitalist
economic relations entirely will produce even more options for people to
make their own way, resulting in higher incomes; cheaper goods includ-
ing health care, food, and housing; and, consequently, many fewer needy
people. The end of government will mean the end of involuntary poverty,
and therefore the end of the need for much of what now constitutes wel-
fare. The small number of people unable to work who need assistance from
the community can easily be helped by one form or another of mutual aid,
depending on the economic structure of the community in which they live.
Anarchy is based, at least in part, on the idea that simply getting govern-
ment out of the way would allow people to look at and solve their problems
all by themselves. This also applies to poor people. They are generally not
helpless incompetents who have no options other than having the state look
out for them. In fact, poor people are victimized by corporations not because
the state has failed to protect them, but because the state has prevented them
from protecting themselves. Laws and other government action preserve cap-
italism with its profit, interest, and rent, all of which are theft from working
people of all classes. Without the state and its armed thugs in the police and
military, capitalism would not survive for long, since people would simply
keep what was rightfully theirs and stop paying rent, do away with the bank-
ing monopoly, and work their factories and businesses for themselves. We
don’t need state welfare, we need state abolition.
ParT SEvEn
Barriers to Entry
and Fixed Costs of
Living
37
The Freeman. Ideas on Liberty 59.8 (oct.
2009): 17-21.
HoW “iNtelleCtual
propertY” iMpeDes
CoMpetitioN
KEVIN A. CARSON
(2009)
law. The digital copyright regime in force under the terms of the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act, the WIPO Copyright Treaty, and the TRIPS
provisions of the Uruguay Round of GATT, is focused entirely on prevent-
ing one from using his own hard drive and other property as he sees fit.
It is actually illegal, thanks to such legislation, to sell hardware capable of
circumventing DRM, or to publicize the codes enabling someone to cir-
cumvent it. As Cory Doctorow points out,
rival. As Tom Coates put it, “the gap between what can be accomplished at
home and what can be accomplished in a work environment has narrowed
dramatically over the last ten to fifteen years.”
It’s also true of news, with ever-expanding networks of amateurs in ven-
ues like Indymedia, alternative new operations like Robert Parry’s and Greg
Palast’s, and natives and American troops blogging news firsthand from
Iraq, at the very same time the traditional broadcasting networks are shut-
ting down.
In this environment, the only thing standing between the old informa-
tion and media dinosaurs and their total collapse is their so-called “intellec-
tual property” rights – at least to the extent they’re still enforceable. Owner-
ship of “intellectual property” becomes the new basis for the power of in-
stitutional hierarchies, and the primary buttress for corporate boundaries.
The increasing prevalence and imploding cost of small-scale, distributed
production machinery, and the rise of “crowdsourced,” distributed means
of aggregating capital from small donors, mean that physical production is
governed by the same phenomenon to a considerable extent.
Without “intellectual property,” in any industry where the basic produc-
tion equipment is widely affordable, and bottom-up networking renders
management obsolete, it is likely that self-managed, cooperative production
will replace the old managerial hierarchies. The network revolution, if its
full potential is realized (as James Bennett put it in the appropriately titled
article “The End of Capitalism and the Triumph of the Market Economy”),
The structure of the telephone industry had similar origins, with the Bell
Patent Association forming “the nucleus of the first Bell industrial organiza-
tion” (and eventually of AT&T). The National Bell Telephone Company,
from the 1880s on, fought vigorously to “occupy the field” (in the words of
general manager Theodore N. Vail) through patent control. AT&T, antici-
pating the expiration of its original patents, had “surrounded the business
with all the auxiliary protection that was possible…” By the time the FCC
was formed in 1935, the Bell System had acquired patents to “some of the
most important inventions in telephony and radio,” and “through various
radio-patent pool agreements in the 1920s… had effectively consolidated
its position relative to the other giants in the industry.”
The American chemical industry, in its modern form, was made possible
by the Justice Department’s seizure of German chemical patents in WWI.
More generally, “intellectual property” is an effective tool for cartelizing
332 | kevin a. Carson
markets in industry at large. They were used in the automobile and steel
industries among others, according to Noble. In a 1906 article, mechanical
engineer and patent lawyer Edwin Prindle described patents as “the best
and most effective means of controlling competition…” And unlike purely
private cartels, which tend toward defection and instability, patent control
cartels – being based on a state-granted privilege – carry a credible and ef-
fective punishment for defection.
At the global level, “intellectual property” plays the same protectionist
role for transnational corporations that tariffs performed in the old national
economies. It’s hardly coincidental that the dominant industrial sectors in
the global corporate economy are all heavily dependent on “intellectual
property”: software, entertainment, biotech, pharmaceuticals, and elec-
tronics. And the central focus of the neoliberal system, which has been
falsely identified with “free trade” and “free markets,” is on strengthening
the legal “intellectual property” regime as the primary source of profits.
Trademarks and other forms of “intellectual property” are central to
what Naomi Klein calls the “Nike model,” by which TNCs outsource ac-
tual production to independently owned job shops while retaining control
of finance, marketing and IP. Absent strong IP law, independent job shops
could treat corporate headquarters and produce knockoffs of identical
quality without the enormous brand name markup.
Patents are also used on a global scale to lock transnational manufactur-
ing corporations into a permanent monopoly on productive technology.
The central motivation in the GATT intellectual property regime is to per-
manently lock in the collective monopoly of advanced production technol-
ogy by transnational corporations, and relegate Third World countries to
supplying raw materials and sweatshop labor. It would, as the Third World
Network’s Martin Khor Kok Peng writes, “effectively prevent the diffusion
of technology to the Third World…”
“Intellectual property” is central to the so-called “cognitive capitalism”
model. Under that model, corporations rely on increasingly authoritarian
government legislation to capture value from proprietary information. Jo-
hann Soderberg compares the way photocopiers were monitored in the old
USSR, to protect the power of elites in that country, to the way the means
of digital reproduction are monitored in this country to protect corporate
power.
Today, “intellectual property” serves as a structural support for corporate
boundaries, at a time when the imploding cost of production technology
has undermined control of physical capital as their primary justification.
In this environment, the only thing standing between the old informa-
tion and media dinosaurs and their total collapse is their so-called “in-
How “intellectual property” impedes Competition | 333
DraWiNG to a Close
But to repeat, the good news is that, in both the domestic and glob-
al economies, this business model is doomed. The shift from physical to
human capital as the primary source of productive capacity in so many
industries, along with the imploding price and widespread dispersion of
ownership of capital equipment, means that corporate employers are in-
creasingly hollowed out and only maintain control over the physical pro-
duction process through legal fictions. When so much of actual physical
production is outsourced to the independent small shop (whether it be a
Chinese sweatshop, a flexible manufacturing firm in Emilia-Romagna, or a
member of GM’s supplier network), the corporation becomes a redundant
“node” that can be bypassed. As blogger David Pollard described it, from
the perspective of a future historian in 2015,
For all the harm it does, “intellectual property” is not really even neces-
sary as an incentive for innovation. Industrial analyst F. M. Scherer argued
in the 1990s, based on a survey of 91 companies, that some 86% of all
process and product innovations would have been developed from “the
necessity of remaining competitive, the desire for efficient production, and
the desire to expand and diversify their sales.”
And copyright is no more necessary for artistic creation than patents are
necessary for invention. There are many businesses, in the open-source world,
that manage to make money from auxiliary services even though their con-
tent itself is not proprietary. For example, Red Hat makes money off open-
source Linux software by customizing the software and offering specialized
customer support. Phish has actively encouraged fans to share its music free
of charge, while making money off of live performances and concessions.
334 | kevin a. Carson
i 1934 in the depths of the great depression, southern agrarian (and histo-
n
rian) Frank Owsley called for an American land reform. He suggested that
“unemployed or underemployed families be staked to a homestead, even
subsidized, to remain on the land and produce.”1
This proposal was not really all that shocking: Such a program would
have been consistent enough with the advertised purpose of certain phases
of American land policy from 1776 on. American governments handed out
land (however acquired) for over a century to veterans, settlers, land specu-
lators, railroads, timber corporations, mining companies, and other parties.
(I’ll give you three guesses which groups made out the best). Governments
did so as a source of revenue, for geostrategic reasons, to win favor with vot-
ers, or to reward a small class of typically American operators who flat-out
deserved to be rich.
In a new, revolutionary, and republican society, there was of course
much talk about widespread property as the bulwark of republican free-
dom. But the talk was so general that Federalists and Republicans could
share it, while leaving themselves plenty of room in which to create a small
class of owners of a disproportionate amount of the public domain. Over-
all – from the founding land speculators down to 1893, when the frontier
allegedly ran out – American land policy resembled in both theory and
practice the kind of “privatization” we see under mercantilist Republican
administrations. One landmark in the process was Johnson and Graham’s
Lessee v. William M’Intosh (1823). Here, Chief Justice John Marshall under-
took to write a long essay on the received theory of how property previously
stolen by European kings or their agents is best conveyed. As was his wont,
Marshall proved entirely too much, in as clear a case of Albert Jay Nock’s
“copper riveting” of narrowly focused property rights as we could want.2
Southern agrarian Andrew Lytle noted that from the settler’s point of
view the whole frontier process represented an attempt to get away from
would-be aristocrats and other aspiring land monopolists. Consistent re-
publican ideologists like Thomas Skidmore and George H. Evans agitated
from the 1820s into the 1840s in favor of giving homesteaders first claim
on the territories. Generally speaking, other claimants prevailed, while the
politics of slavery and antislavery further complicated the matter. In the
bigger picture, the Homestead Act of 1862 was the exception rather than
the rule, as Paul W. Gates showed in a noteworthy 1936 paper.3
I cannot discuss here what an ideal policy based on “mixing one’s labor”
with resources might have looked like. Suffice it to say that sales of thou-
2 For international law and property stolen overseas, see Antony Anghie,
“Finding the Peripheries: Sovereignty and Colonialism in Nineteenth-
Century International Law,” Harvard International Law Journal 40 (Winter
1999): 1-71. On Indian title, see Carl Watner, “Libertarians and Indians:
Proprietary Justice and Aboriginal Land Rights,” Journal of Libertarian Stud-
ies 7 (Spring 1983): 147-56; Ronald Takaki, Iron Cages: Race and Culture in
19th Century America (New York: OUP 1990 [ 1979]) ch. 4 (“Beyond Primi-
tive Accumulation”); Joseph R. Stromberg, “Albert Jay Nock and Alternative
History,” The Freeman: Ideas on Liberty 58.9 (Nov. 2008): 32-8.
3 Andrew Lytle, “The Backwoods Progression,” From Eden to Babylon: The So-
cial and Political Essays of Andrew Nelson Lytle, ed. M. E. Bradford (Wash-
ington, DC: Gateway-Regnery 1990) 77-94. On Skidmore and Evans, see
William Appleman Williams, The Roots of the Modern American Empire (New
York: Random 1969) 75; Paul W. Gates, “The Homestead Law in an Incon-
gruous Land System,” American Historical Review 41 (July 1936): 652-81;
Roy M. Robbins, Our Landed Heritage (Lincoln:Universityof NebraskaPre-
ss1942); Arthur A. Ekirch Jr., The Decline of American Liberalism (New York:
Atheneum 1969) ch. 10, (“Pre-emption, Exploitation, Progress”).
the american land Question | 337
4 Stewart H. Holbrook, The Age of the Moguls (Garden City, NY: Doubleday
1954) 118-28.
5 Harry N. Scheiber, “Regulation, Property Rights, and Definition of ‘The
Market’: Law and the American Economy,” Journal of Economic History, 41
(March 1981) 103-9. On corporate personhood, see Walter Prescott Webb,
Divided We Stand: The Crisis of a Frontierless Democracy (Westport, CT: Hy-
perion 1985 [ 1944]) 32-48.
338 | Joseph r. stromberg
all, was a temporary stage – to be endured while learning a skill or trade and
abandoned later in favor of real or potential independence. This indepen-
dence, derided in our time as “illusory,” left one free (within limits) not just
from state interference but also from nineteenth-century employers. And if
independence is illusory in our time, it is at least partly because the political
activities of well-connected elites long since removed the preconditions of
independence deliberately and systematically.
One key (but not the only one) to this much-sought-after independence
was access to land, a theme taken up by Catholic writers Hilaire Belloc and
G. K. Chesterton in early twentieth-century England. Sociologist Robert
Nisbet commented that never, after reading Belloc, did he “imagine that
there could be genuine individual liberty apart from individual ownership
of property.” In any case, as historian Christopher Lasch put it, “Americans
took it as axiomatic that freedom had to rest on the broad distribution of
property ownership.”6 Perhaps Americans were wrong to believe such a
thing. But let us examine the matter a bit more.
This American axiom receives support from those political economists
who believed that the land/labor ratio importantly determines social struc-
ture. Edward Gibbon Wakefield somewhat gave the game away in the
1830s by opposing easy access to land in Australia, lest potential wage-
earners try for self-sufficiency before spending “enough” years working for
others. Marx chided Wakefield for letting this “bourgeois secret” out and
was in turn chided by Franz Oppenheimer, Achille Loria, and Nock for not
learning the right lesson from Wakefield’s recommendations on rigging the
market.7
H. J. Nieboer argued (1900) that where resources are “open,” few will
work for big enterprises, and the latter will (if they can) institute some form
of slavery. Evsey Domar writes (1970) that one never finds “free land, free
peasants, and non-working owners” together. Why? Because where political
leverage allows, aspiring lords and (literal) rent-seekers will eliminate the
free land, the free peasants, or both.8
ColoNial poliCies
With this theorem in view, let us survey some colonial evidence. Enterpris-
ers in colonies have always wanted regular supplies of cheap labor for their
projects. Although there is no evidence in favor of a “right” to such a thing,
these prospective employers were never discouraged. Aided by colonial admin-
istrators with the same assumptions, they gradually overcame native economic
independence. Land was the key, and neither the colonizers nor the natives
doubted it. No matter how hard natives worked on their holdings, colonialists
decried their “idleness” – and their uncivilized failure to work for wages.
We may therefore give the overworked English Enclosures time off (for
now) and look at some other cases.9 Consider the Japanese colonial admin-
istrator in Okinawa who complained in 1899 that the typical Okinawan
held land and therefore had low expenses and few wants. For these reasons,
the native saw “no need to undertake any other business, nor to save mon-
ey.” Since native lands were held informally, they could not be capitalized.
Such people and properties did little for the great cause of development
and, shortly, the Japanese government (!) denounced Okinawans’ custom-
ary arrangements as “feudal” and set out to modernize the island. American
occupation later perfected this anti-agrarian revolution.10 Doubtless, how-
ever, much “employment” was created in the post-World War II Okinawan
service economy dominated by the U.S. military.
Turning to English colonies in the Caribbean and Africa, we find com-
parable phenomena. England abolished slavery in the colonies in the 1830s.
(Never mind that, as historian Eric Foner comments, “Through a regressive
tax system, the British working classes paid the bill for abolition.”) By this
time, English policymakers had embraced Adam Smith’s view that posi-
tive incentives motivated labor better than fear of starvation or draconian
punishments did. But an ocean made all the difference, Foner observes,
and new peasantries made up of former slaves were “seen in London, as
in the Caribbean, as a threat not simply to the economic well-being of the
islands, but to civilization itself.” John Stuart Mill’s famous defense of peas-
ant proprietors “did not extend to the blacks of the Caribbean; their desire
to escape plantation labor and acquire land was perceived as incorrigible
idleness.”11
(This last point has been misunderstood. It is quite separate from Mill’s
well-documented defense of the rights of black Jamaicans as subjects of the
Crown after the colonial governor Edward Eyre visited savage reprisal on
alleged rebels in 1865. Mill did not, however, defend the rights of Blacks in
the colonies as a class of free peasant farmers. He expected them to work for
wages or, at best, set themselves up as petty shopkeepers.12)
And so Britain’s former slave colonies put vagrancy and other laws to
work and crafted taxes aimed at restricting “the freedmen’s access to land.”
As Foner puts it, “Taxation has always been the state’s weapon of last resort
in the effort to promote market relations within peasant societies” – that is,
to force people into markets in which they were not eager to participate. In
Kenya the problem was one of “dispossessing a peasantry with a preexist-
ing stake in the soil,” but colonial legislation proved up to the task. Foner
concludes that in Britain’s Caribbean and African colonies “the free market
[was] conspicuous by its absence” – its workings restricted “as far as pos-
sible” in the interest of the well-off and powerful.13
Historian Colin Bundy has studied the economic rise and political-eco-
nomic fall of a class of independent African farmers in the Eastern Cape
Colony and other parts of South Africa. Various Cape Location Acts (1869,
1876, and 1884) sought to lessen “the numbers of ‘idle squatters’ (i.e.,
rent-paying tenants economically active on their own behalf ) on white-
owned lands.” Such peasant farming “conferred… a degree of economic
‘independence’: an ability to withhold, if he so preferred, his labour from
white landowners or other employers.” Further: “Both the farmer and the
mine-owner perceived… the need to apply extra-economic pressures… to
break down the peasant’s ‘independence,’ increase his wants, and to induce
him to part more abundantly with his labour, but at no increased price.” In
their view, “Africans had no right to continue as self-sufficient and indepen-
dent farmers if this conflicted with white interests.”14
Bundy observes that “Social engineering on this scale took time and
effort, but the incentives were powerful.” By way of a “one man one lot”
rule under the Glenn Grey Act of 1894, legislators sought to keep African
farming within “certain acceptable bounds.” (Here, finally, was a use for
John Locke’s famous “proviso” about leaving enough resources for others!)
Evictions increased after the Anglo-Boer War (1899-1903). Rents rose (En-
closure defenders, take note), and former tenants stayed on as laborers.
Tax pressure on African farmers increased. This “employers’ offensive” from
1890 to 1913 ended successfully in the South African Natives Land Act
of 1913, which effectively outlawed the practices under which a particular
African peasantry had shown much success.15
One supposes, in standard libertarian fashion, that agricultural employ-
ment increased thereafter along with land values. But that was the whole
point: to proletarianize independent peasants by leaving them no option
but to work for wages for Boers and Brits on farms, in mines, and else-
where. Whether more “employment” was good in itself seems unclear. We
can, at least, impute the outcome back to specific political intentions and
levers. So much for the colonies, then – and all this without even men-
tioning the two greatest monuments to England’s defense of free markets:
Ireland and India.
WHY Go aBroaD?
For Enclosure-like pressures on small-holders closer to home, we need
look no farther than states like Kentucky, where courts vigorously enforced
the full feudal rigor of the “broad form deed,” thereby ensuring the strip
mining of many a mountaineer out of productive existence down to the
early 1990s.19 With the system so long stacked in favor of big landhold-
ers and bankers, well subsidized by history, one begins to understand the
popularity of those New Deal programs that promoted individual home
ownership.
Economist Michael Perelman has confirmed a direct relationship be-
tween rural labor without independent means of support and the applied
politics of English classical economists.20 The latter preached a great gospel
of “work,” mainly for others, who ought to be doing this work. Except for a
narrow class of Dissenting Protestant factory owners, those most vigorously
17 Murray Rothbard, “Justice and Property Right,” Innovator, Jan. 1965: 10-1.
18 Wilhelm Röpke, The Solution of the German Problem (New York: Putnams
1946) 184, 186, 203-4.
19 James Branscome, “Paradise Lost,” Southern Exposure, Sum.-Fall 1973: 29-
41; and John Gaventa, “In Appalachia: Property Is Theft,” Southern Exposure,
Sum.-Fall 1973: 42-52.
20 Michael Perelman, The Invention of Capitalism: Classical Political Economy
and the Secret History of Primitive Accumulation (Duke, NC: Duke University
Press 2000) 1-12 (“Introduction: Dark Designs”).
the american land Question | 343
espousing this gospel were not themselves noted for doing a lot of work.
Together, however, owners and economists said in effect, “Work for us, join
the armed forces, or emigrate, ye doughty Angles, Saxons, Jutes, and Scots.”
And emigrate they did, leaving us with an American folk wisdom in which
old times in England, Scotland, and Ireland were not that great. (This folk
memory may have at least as much heuristic value as latter-day econometric
claims that everyone became better off in the new division of labor.)
And so we return to Henry George’s problem: How did Americans man-
age as a society to seize so much land, incur whatever moral guilt goes with
the seizures, and then not bloody have any of it? The chief mechanism was
precisely the political means to wealth that Oppenheimer and Nock ana-
lyzed.21 The reason the phrase “Robber Barons” struck the right note is that
there were such individuals. California was a laboratory case, as George well
knew, of the successful primitive accumulation of land by a microscopically
small class of state-made men. As with ontogeny and phylogeny, Western
accumulation recapitulated Eastern accumulation. From such causes arose
the famous “end” of the frontier circa 1893. But open land did not so much
disappear naturally as succumb to preemption. And then, with perfect tim-
ing, the conservation movement put enormous quantities of land beyond
the reach of actual settlers.
As for those Americans who currently own property, they typically own
it after 20 or more years of bank payments. Is land so genuinely scarce that
a bank must always be in the middle? This remains our central question.
Certainly, nineteenth-century allocations played a lasting role, and later
political interventions added to concentrated property ownership.
And what of the promotion of “easy” home ownership in recent years? It
is a product of 1) the widespread delusion, in the wake of Lyndon Johnson’s
and Richard Nixon’s inflationary financing of the Vietnam War, that real
estate constitutes the ultimate inflation hedge, and 2) the specific dynamics
of the expansionist fractional-reserve banking under new rules (“deregula-
tion”) increasing moral hazards for bankers.
There is also the unhappy fact of property taxes – our chief surviving
feudal due. Fail to pay those, and the state enrolls a new owner on your for-
mer property. This reduces somewhat the fact of private property in land.
game – and have for over a century. It seems to me that those libertarians
who join in this refrain rather willfully misconstrue a very simple point:
They hail the joys of the division of labor, the higher degree of civilization
(that is, more stuff) to be gained from dependence, interdependence, and
sundry trickles of income and utility down and up. But already in 1936,
Southern agrarian John Crowe Ransom noticed a flaw in this reasoning,
writing, “[I]ncome is not enough, and the distribution of income is not
enough. If those blessings sufficed, we might as well come to collectivism at
once; for that is probably the quickest way to get them.”22 If greater choice
among consumer goods makes up for lost independence, then the case for
socialism (or X) would be clinched, provided socialism (or X) could deliver
the economic goods (where “X” stands for any political ideology offering us
the same stuff/independence tradeoff.)
I doubt we are necessarily “better off” merely because of employment.
We need to know more, including why particular sets of choices exist in the
first place. Back in the ’60s, Selective Service used to “channel” us into the
“right” occupations by threatening to draft us. Given the parameters, our
choices were “free.” If it’s that easy, then we are always free, no matter the
historical and institutional constraints. Similarly, “To Hell or Connaught”
was a choice, and never mind that Oliver Cromwell and his army arbitrarily
created this particular prisoner’s dilemma. But perhaps I have leapt from
choices among goods to choices between ways of life. Why? Let us look
into this.
What if proletarianization is not the ideal form of human life? What if
a complex division of labor is merely useful or convenient, but not a moral
imperative? What if most of us are hirelings, well paid or otherwise, and
then we learn what that status amounts to? The post-Marxist socialist An-
dré Gorz writes, “Capitalism owes its political stability to the fact that, in
return for the dispossession and growing constraints experienced at work,
individuals enjoy the possibility of building an apparently growing sphere
of individual autonomy outside of work.”23 Our interest here is the “au-
tonomy” mentioned, which sounds like a near cousin of “independence.”
The sentiment seems sound enough, and the partial convergence of Röpke
and Gorz is eye-opening.
Now in the view of Quentin Skinner (a modern republican theorist
of note), unfreedom arises both from direct, forcible coercion and from
institutional arrangements that make people dependent, since the latter
always contain the possibility (realized or not) of arbitrary interference and
22 John Crowe Ransom, “The South Is a Bulwark” (1936) in Jack Salzman and
Barry Wallenstein, eds., Years of Protest (New York: Pegasus 1967) 268.
23 André Gorz, Farewell to the Working Class (Boston: South End 1982) 80.
the american land Question | 345
eNGlisH eNClosures
aND soviet
ColleCtivizatioN
two instances of an anti-peasant
Mode of Development
JOSEPH R. STROMBERG
(1995)
liberal Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises have stressed the role of force,
politics and extra-economic coercion in the creation of large landed estates.
In Marx’s words, “In actual history it is notorious that conquest, enslave-
ment, robbery, murder, briefly force, play the great part.”2 And Mises:
ings of the term. Certain features of this original feudalism persisted into suc-
ceeding social formations; see Alexander Rüstow, Freedom and Domination
(Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP 1980) and Arno Mayer, The Persistence of the
Old Regime (New York: Pantheon 1981).
2 Karl Marx, Capital (New York: International 1967) 1: 714. Marx was refer-
ring of course to “primitive accumulation of capital,” but his words have
application to other forms of property.
3 Ludwig von Mises, Socialism: An Economic and Sociological Analysis (London:
Jonathan Cape 1951) 375.
4 See Max Weber, “Capitalism and Rural Society in Germany,” From Max We-
ber: Essays in Sociology, ed. Hans Gerth and C. Wright Mills (New York:
OUP 1958) 363-85; Barrington Moore, Jr., Social Origins of Dictatorship
and Democracy (Boston: Beacon 1966); Immanuel Wallerstein, The Modern
World-System (New York: Academic 1974).
5 See Robert Brenner, “The Origins of Capitalist Development: A Critique of
Neo-Smithian Marxism,” New Left Review, July-August 1977, esp. 88-90;
english enclosures and soviet Collectivization | 349
26; Chambers and Mingay, “Enclosures” 63, David S. Landes, The Unbound
Prometheus: Technological Change and Industrial Development in Western Eu-
rope from 1750 to the Present (Cambridge, UK: CUP 1969) 69; and John
Clapham, A Concise Economic History of Britain (Cambridge, UK: CUP
1949) 194-207, 222-4.
17 See R. M. Hartwell, “History and Ideology,” Studies in History and Philosophy
3 (Menlo Park, CA: IHS n.d.).
18 Wilhelm Röpke, A Humane Economy: The Social Framework of the Free Mar-
ket (Indianapolis, IN: Liberty Fund 1971) 227-78; Friedrich Hayek, ed.,
Capitalism and the Historians (Chicago: University of Chicago Press 1954).
19 Pauline Gregg, Modern Britain: A Social and Economic History Since 1760
(New York: Pegasus 1965) ch. 1.
20 See Paul Mantoux, The Industrial Revolution in the Eighteenth Century (New
York: Harper 1961 [1928]) ch. 3 (“The Redistribution of Land”); Moore
ch. 1 (“England and the Contribution of Violence to Gradualism”); Theda
Skocpol, States and Social Revolutions (New York: CUP 1979) 140-4; and
Gregg 19-35.
english enclosures and soviet Collectivization | 353
row strips of land randomly interspersed (such that strips 1, 5, and 9 might
belong to one peasant, 2, 6, and 13 to another, and so on), and the wastes,
areas on the margin of cultivation where customary rights to pasture, col-
lection of firewood, and other benefits had developed over time. In addi-
tion to the open fields and the wastes, large areas of land were given over to
commercial agriculture and stock-raising by landlords or their large-scale
tenant farmers, especially in south and central England. (The situation in
the north and in Scotland21 was somewhat different, but far too complex to
deal with here.)
Besides the complexities of everyday cultivation, the system was criss-
crossed by several different degrees of ownership and tenancy, ranging
from fee simple ownership and long-term leases through copyhold down
to merely customary tenancies at the will of the landlord. In the course of
enclosure, it was precisely those cultivators with modest claims and the
weakest legal rights to land who fell by the wayside, becoming part of a
rural proletariat. Since the term enclosure applies to any consolidation of
open fields or waste into larger, more “rational” units of production (an-
other point we will return to), and since such consolidations date from
Tudor times to the late 18th and early 19th centuries (an especially brisk
period), the notion is stretched almost to the breaking point. A great many
authorities had to spend a great deal of time and effort to bring order and
coherence to the history of the enclosures.22
Whatever the merits of the argument that bigger units of production
are ipso facto more efficient and productive, the political dominance of
large landowners determined the course of enclosure. While “improving
landlords” may have believed the arguments put forward by agricultural
reformers and enthusiasts like Jethro Tull and Arthur Young, it was their
power in Parliament and as local Justices of the Peace that enabled them to
redistribute the land in their own favor.
A typical round of enclosure began when several, or even a single,
prominent landholder initiated it. In the great spurt of enclosures in the
late 18th and early 19th centuries, this was done by petition to Parlia-
ment. A Parliamentary commission would be set up to work out the de-
tails and engineer the appearance of local consensus. Since, as Mantoux
points out, the commissioners were invariably of the same class and out-
look as the major landholders who had petitioned in the first place, it
was not surprising that the great landholders awarded themselves the best
land and the most of it, thereby making England a classic land of great,
well-kept estates with a small marginal peasantry and a large class of rural
wage labourers. Those with only customary claim to use the land fell by
the wayside, as did those marginal cottagers and squatters who had de-
pended on use of the wastes for their bare survival as partly independent
peasants. In addition, better situated men often succumbed to the legal
costs built into the enclosure process. The result was – in the words of J.
L. and Barbara Hammond – that
30 Feder 3-45. André Gunder Frank makes a strong case that Latin American
economies were capitalist from the very beginning: Capitalism and Under-
development in Latin America (New York: Monthly Review 1969) 20-5. For
a comparable reading of North American history, see Andrew Lytle, “The
Backwoods Progression,” From Eden to Babylon: The Social and Political Es-
says of Andrew Nelson Lytle, ed. M. E. Bradford (Washington, DC: Gateway-
Regnery 1990) 77-94; Michael Merrill, “Putting ‘Capitalism’ in Its Place: A
Review of Recent Literature,” William and Mary Quarterly 52 (April 1995):
317-26.
31 Feder 148. On forceful exclusion from markets, see for example, Carol A.
Smith, “Local History in Global Context: Social and Economic Transi-
tions in Western Guatemala,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 26
(1984): 193-228; John Lie, “The Concept of Mode of Exchange,” American
Sociological Review 57 (Aug. 1992): 508-23.
32 On the problem of rational calculation, see Murray N. Rothbard, Man, Econ-
omy, and State with Power and Market (2d scholars ed; Auburn, AL: Mises
2009) 614-6, 659-61. On Rothbard’s analysis, any forcibly maintained mo-
nopoly represents a step in the direction of socialism, with the calculational
difficulties pointed out in the 1920s by Ludwig von Mises and Max Weber.
english enclosures and soviet Collectivization | 357
33 On Charles Comte and his colleague Charles Dunoyer, see Leonard Liggio,
“Charles Dunoyer and French Classical Liberalism,” Journal of Libertarian
Studies 1 (Sum. 1977): 153-78.
34 Andreski 1-22.
35 Andreski 77, 90, 138. For the human cost of keeping entrenched elites in
power in Latin America, see Penny Lernoux, Cry of the People (Garden City,
NY: Doubleday 1980).
358 | Joseph r. stromberg
mass base for radical revolution. In what would become a common pat-
tern in the 20th century, land-hungry peasants provided the backbone of a
revolution whose leaders, as Marxist and Leninists, had a somewhat differ-
ent agenda than did the peasantry. Certainly, the Bolshevik leaders of the
Russian Revolution were not inclined to let the goals of the struggle be set
by the peasants. For decades, socialists had regarded peasants as retrograde
individualists and natural enemies of the kinds of centralized direction that
socialism demanded.40 Like the petit bourgeoisie and the lumpen-proletar-
iat, the peasants were the likely source of renewed private accumulation of
capital and therefore – in the rather oversimplified model of base/super-
structure – the likely source of “reactionary,” antisocialist political activity.
The first socialist revolution had taken place in a country with an un-
developed proletariat. Having placed themselves at the head of a largely
peasant-based revolution, Lenin and his vanguardists faced the very serious
problem of how to hold onto power in a country where they and their sup-
posed natural constituency, the industrial working class, were in a decided
minority.41 War Communism, the attempt in the midst of civil war, to leap
into socialism by abolishing money and markets, had necessarily proved
disastrous. To bring the Russian economy back to life as well as to concili-
ate a peasantry restive under forced levies and pro-urban exchange ratios,
Lenin announced his strategic retreat from socialism – the New Economic
Policy (NEP). Soon Lenin himself was writing of the need for freedom of
trade and small-scale enterprise and cooperatives as intermediate steps in
the path to socialism. He began to worry about dragging Russians out of
“Asiatic” inefficiency and preventing the revival of stifling Tsarist bureau-
cracies.42
Of the three major contenders to Party leadership after Lenin’s death
– Trotsky, Stalin, and Bukharin – it was Bukharin who emerged as the
strongest proponent of continuing and extending the NEP free market and
pursuing what he called the worker-peasant alliance. Trostky clung fiercely
not entail the level of violence, death, and economic destruction required
to carry through the Trotsky-Stalin model. But just as in the case of the
English enclosures, political power decided the event, not necessarily in
the interests of the peasants – short or long run. Perhaps the two cases,
though they differ considerably, will shed light on some persistent fallacies
concerning peasants, agriculture, and development.
A. Counterfactual England
The English Civil War of the 1640’s provided perhaps the best opportu-
nity for a measure of agrarian reform. For better or worse, the Revolution
remained under the control of the men around Cromwell who were little
disposed to unleash the forces that might destroy them. Even the Levellers,
who were radical libertarians and not primitive socialists, largely shied away
from raising any agrarian questions, although some effort was made to ob-
tain freeholder status for copyholders.61 At the height of the enclosures,
one or two critics suggested alternative paths. We have already seen that
58 Dovring 519.
59 On corporatism, see R. Jeffrey Lustig, Corporate Liberalism: The Origins of
Modern American Political Economy, 1890-1920 (Berkeley, CA: University of
California Press 1982).
60 Walter Karp, Indispensable Enemies: The Politics of Misrule in America (Balti-
more: Penguin 1974) 179 (both quotes).
61 C. B. Macpherson, The Political Theory of Possessive Individualism: Hobbes to
Locke (London: OUP 1962) 107-591.
english enclosures and soviet Collectivization | 365
B. A Counterfactual Russia
Only a few die-hards would now defend the course of Soviet collec-
tivization under Stalin. Even so, a great many economists and historians
remain enamored of the notion that something like it was necessary to
industrialize and modernize a backward peasant society. In the face of the
growing critique of the centralized model of development this position no
longer seems tenable. The emergence in the 1960s of “market socialism”
and subsequent reforms from the 1970s onward in Eastern Europe, and
later China, seemed partial vindications of Bukharin and foretold the even-
tual decision of purely economic issues in favor of the “right deviation-
ists” of the 1920s.65 A turn toward markets became inevitable, even if in
practice internal gangsters and outside imperialists (NATO) reaped most
of the gains. Unfortunately for Soviet society in the 1920s, sheer lack of
experience with non-centralized economic management and Stalin’s ability
to seize the already dangerous political machinery created by Lenin com-
bined to prevent a reasonable reform of Russia’s agrarian economy. As with
the Enclosures, political power proved decisive, although other outcomes
would not have been impossible in principle.
Thus, alongside Moore’s three roads away from feudalism (where feu-
dal absolutism is actually meant) – the Anglo-American (“democratic”), the
Prussian (“revolution from above” as in Germany and Japan), and finally,
mass-based peasant revolution followed by communist rule – there perhaps
existed another route hinted at by Eric Hobsbawm: the “peasant road to
capitalism,” partially realized in North America,67 if only for a season. (We
may quarrel with Hobsbawm’s choice of the word “capitalism” here.) Along
with the new literature on Enclosures (referred to earlier), this reorientation
threatens to undermine received Whiggish analyses of modern history in
a way that should reinforce inquiry into Small Commodity Production as
a potentially distinct mode of production and an alternate way of life.68
The bottom line seems to be this: in 1500 England had a large peasantry
but by 1820 that class had virtually disappeared. Fear of conceding any-
thing to Marx (who, after all, must occasionally be right) has blocked the
vision of classical liberals investigating this disappearance. But 300 years
of English agrarian history cannot easily squeeze themselves into a Whig
story in which the forces of production demanded new relations of produc-
tion, which done, everyone lived happily ever after – full stop. It might be
added that improving landlords had many levers – and not just Enclosure
– with which to rid themselves of unwanted peasants. (They did, however,
improve their rent rolls.) Referring to the pre-Enclosure organization of
English farming, Michael Turner writes: “If in so many ways the gains from
enclosure are in doubt, yet the damage is plain to see, then we must ask
ourselves – if it wasn’t broken, why did we fix it?”69 The question is best
addressed to those classes that desired and brought about the new order of
agrarian capitalism.
peter,” Dilemmas of Liberal Democracies ed. Adrian Ellis and Krishan Kumar
(London: Tavistock 1983) 151-66.
67 Moore; Hobsbawm, “Scottish Reformers” 21.
68 Geoff Kennedy, “Digger Radicalism and Agrarian Capitalism,” Historical
Materialism 14 (2006): 113-43, maintains that even the supposedly “proto-
communist” Gerrard Winstanley was mainly interested in preventing the
spread of wage labor where it did not already exist, in favor of small-scale
production.
69 Michael Turner, “Enclosures Re-Opened,” Refresh 26 (Spring 1998): 4.
40
The Freeman. Ideas on Liberty 60.2 (March
2010): 8-11.
1 See David Beito, “Lodge Doctors and the Poor,” The Freeman: Ideas onf Lib-
erty 44.5 (May 1994): 220–5 <http://www.thefreemanonline.org/columns/
lodge-doctors-and-the-poor> (March 13, 2011).
Health Care and radical Monopoly | 371
removed all the legal barriers that prevent a bunch of open-source hardware
hackers from reverse-engineering a homebrew version of it, you could get
an MRI machine with a twentyfold reduction in cost. I know that’s the case
in an area I’m more familiar with: micromanufacturing technology. For ex-
ample, the RepRap – a homebrew, open-source 3-D printer – costs roughly
$500 in materials to make, compared to tens of thousands for proprietary
commercial versions.
More generally, the system is racked by artificial scarcity, as editor Shel-
don Richman observed in an interview a few months back. For example,
licensing systems limit the number of practitioners and arbitrarily impose
levels of educational overhead beyond the requirements of the procedures
actually being performed.
Libertarians sometimes – and rightly – use “grocery insurance” as an
analogy to explain medical price inflation: If there were such a thing as
grocery insurance, with low deductibles, to provide third-party payments
at the checkout register, people would be buying a lot more rib-eye and
porterhouse steaks and a lot less hamburger.
The problem is we’ve got a regulatory system that outlaws hamburger
and compels you to buy porterhouse if you’re going to buy anything at all.
It’s a multiple-tier finance system with one tier of service. Dental hygien-
ists can’t set up independent teeth-cleaning practices in most states, and
nurse-practitioners are required to operate under a physician’s “supervision”
(when he’s out golfing). No matter how simple and straightforward the
procedure, you can’t hire someone who’s adequately trained just to perform
the service you need; you’ve got to pay amortization on a full med school
education and residency.
Drug patents have the same effect, increasing the cost per pill by up to
2,000 percent. They also have a perverse effect on drug development, di-
verting R&D money primarily into developing “me, too” drugs that tweak
the formulas of drugs whose patents are about to expire just enough to
allow repatenting. Drug-company propaganda about high R&D costs, as
a justification for patents to recoup capital outlays, is highly misleading.
A major part of the basic research for identifying therapeutic pathways is
done in small biotech startups, or at taxpayer expense in university labora-
tories, and then bought up by big drug companies. The main expense of the
drug companies is the FDA-imposed testing regimen – and most of that is
not to test the version actually marketed, but to secure patent lockdown on
other possible variants of the marketed version. In other words, gaming the
patent system grossly inflates R&D spending.
The prescription medicine system, along with state licensing of pharma-
cists and Drug Enforcement Administration licensing of pharmacies, is an-
372 | kevin a. Carson
The medical licensing cartels were also the primary force behind the
move to shut down lodge practice, mentioned above.
In the case of all these forms of artificial scarcity, the government creates
a “honey pot” by making some forms of practice artificially lucrative. It’s
only natural, under those circumstances, that health care business models
gravitate to where the money is.
Health care is a classic example of what Ivan Illich, in Tools for Con-
viviality, called a “radical monopoly.” State-sponsored crowding out makes
other, cheaper (but often more appropriate) forms of treatment less usable,
and renders cheaper (but adequate) treatments artificially scarce. Artificial-
ly centralized, high-tech, and skill-intensive ways of doing things make it
harder for ordinary people to translate their skills and knowledge into use-
value. The State’s regulations put an artificial floor beneath overhead cost,
so that there’s a markup of several hundred percent to do anything; decent,
comfortable poverty becomes impossible.
A good analogy is subsidies to freeways and urban sprawl, which make
our feet less usable and raise living expenses by enforcing artificial depen-
dence on cars. Local building codes primarily reflect the influence of build-
ing contractors, so competition from low-cost unconventional techniques
(T-slot and other modular designs, vernacular materials like bales and pa-
percrete, and so on) is artificially locked out of the market. Charles Johnson
described the way governments erect barriers to people meeting their own
needs and make comfortable subsistence artificially costly, in the specific
case of homelessness, in “Scratching By: How the Government Creates
Poverty as We Know It.”3
The organizational culture of healthcare is a classic example of what Paul
Goodman, in People or Personnel, called “the great kingdom of cost-plus.”
Hospitals use the same Sloanist accounting system as the rest of cor-
porate America, but in more extreme form. Sloanism treats labor as the
only real variable or direct cost, and views inventory as an asset. Under this
accounting system, fixed expenses like capital projects and administrative
costs don’t really matter, because they are passed onto the customer as a
markup for general overhead. Under what the Sloanist management ac-
counting system, overhead is simply included in the cost of goods which are
“sold” to inventory, and is thereby transformed into an asset. As practiced
in hospitals, in particular, this means enormous markups for tests and pa-
tient supplies. So while administrators obsessively look for ways to reduce
nursing staff and shave a few minutes here and there off of direct labor, they
pour enormous sums of money down “capital improvement” ratholes and
featherbed the organization with multiple layers of adminstrative bureau-
cracy without a qualm. These things don’t count as costs, because they can
be passed on to the patient in the form of $10 aspirins and $300 bags of
saline. It’s the same organizational culture of cost-plus markup that led to
the Pentagon’s $600 toilet seat.
The major proposals for health care “reform” that went before Congress
would do little or nothing to address the institutional sources of high cost.
As Jesse Walker argued at Reason.com, a 100 percent single-payer system,
far from being a “radical” solution,
sCratCHiNG BY
How Government Creates
poverty as We know it
CHARLES W. JOHNSON
(2007)
g overnMents – local, state, and federal – spend a lot of tiMe wringing their
hands about the plight of the urban poor. Look around any govern-
ment agency and you’ll never fail to find some know-it-all with a suit and a
nameplate on his desk who has just the right government program to elimi-
nate or ameliorate, or at least contain, the worst aspects of grinding poverty
in American cities – especially as experienced by black people, immigrants,
people with disabilities, and everyone else marked for the special observa-
378 | Charles W. Johnson
gets rid of me? Where am I going next? See, I can’t take that chance, you
know… All I got is Johnnie and it took me the longest just to get him on
my side.”
The daily experience of the urban poor is shaped by geographical con-
centration in socially and culturally isolated ghetto neighborhoods within
the larger city, which have their own characteristic features: housing is con-
centrated in dilapidated apartments and housing projects, owned by a se-
lect few absentee landlords; many abandoned buildings and vacant lots are
scattered through the neighborhood, which remain unused for years at a
time; the use of outside spaces is affected by large numbers of unemployed
or homeless people.
The favorite solutions of the welfare state – government doles and “urban
renewal” projects – mark no real improvement. Rather than freeing poor
people from dependence on benefactors and bosses, they merely transfer
the dependence to the state, leaving the least politically connected people
at the mercy of the political process.
But in a free market – a truly free market, where individual poor people
are just as free as established formal-economy players to use their own prop-
erty, their own labor, their own know-how, and the resources that are avail-
able to them – the informal, enterprising actions by poor people themselves
would do far more to systematically undermine, or completely eliminate,
each of the stereotypical conditions that welfare statists deplore. Every day
and in every culture from time out of mind, poor people have repeatedly
shown remarkable intelligence, courage, persistence, and creativity in find-
ing ways to put food on the table, save money, keep safe, raise families,
live full lives, learn, enjoy themselves, and experience beauty, whenever,
wherever, and to whatever degree they have been free to do so. The fault for
despairing, dilapidated urban ghettoes lies not in the pressures of the mar-
ket, nor in the character flaws of individual poor people, nor in the char-
acteristics of ghetto subcultures. The fault lies in the state and its persistent
interference with poor people’s own efforts to get by through independent
work, clever hustling, scratching together resources, and voluntary mutual
aid.
HousiNG Crisis
Progressives routinely deplore the “affordable housing crisis” in Ameri-
can cities. In cities such as New York and Los Angeles, about 20 to 25
percent of low-income renters are spending more than half their incomes
just on housing. But it is the very laws that Progressives favor – land-use
policies, zoning codes, and building codes – that ratchet up housing costs,
380 | Charles W. Johnson
stand in the way of alternative housing options, and confine poor people
to ghetto neighborhoods. Historically, when they have been free to do so,
poor people have happily disregarded the ideals of political humanitarians
and found their own ways to cut housing costs, even in bustling cities with
tight housing markets.
One way was to get other families, or friends, or strangers, to move in
and split the rent. Depending on the number of people sharing a home,
this might mean a less-comfortable living situation; it might even mean one
that is unhealthy. But decisions about health and comfort are best made
by the individual people who bear the costs and reap the benefits. Unfor-
tunately today the decisions are made ahead of time by city governments
through zoning laws that prohibit or restrict sharing a home among people
not related by blood or marriage, and building codes that limit the number
of residents in a building.
Those who cannot make enough money to cover the rent on their own,
and cannot split the rent enough due to zoning and building codes, are
priced out of the housing market entirely. Once homeless, they are left
exposed not only to the elements, but also to harassment or arrest by the
police for “loitering” or “vagrancy,” even on public property, in efforts to
force them into overcrowded and dangerous institutional shelters. But
while government laws make living on the streets even harder than it al-
ready is, government intervention also blocks homeless people’s efforts to
find themselves shelter outside the conventional housing market. One of
the oldest and commonest survival strategies practiced by the urban poor is
to find wild or abandoned land and build shanties on it out of salvageable
scrap materials. Scrap materials are plentiful, and large portions of land in
ghetto neighborhoods are typically left unused as condemned buildings or
vacant lots. Formal title is very often seized by the city government or by
quasi-governmental “development” corporations through the use of emi-
nent domain. Lots are held out of use, often for years at a time, while they
await government public-works projects or developers willing to buy up the
land for large-scale building.
urBaN HoMesteaDiNG
In a free market, vacant lots and abandoned buildings could eventually
be homesteaded by anyone willing to do the work of occupying and using
them. Poor people could use abandoned spaces within their own commu-
nities for setting up shop, for gardening, or for living space. In Miami, in
October 2006, a group of community organizers and about 35 homeless
people built Umoja Village, a shanty town, on an inner-city lot that the lo-
scratching By | 381
cal government had kept vacant for years. They publicly stated to the local
government that “We have only one demand… leave us alone.”
That would be the end of the story in a free market: there would be
no eminent domain, no government ownership, and thus also no political
process of seizure and redevelopment; once-homeless people could estab-
lish property rights to abandoned land through their own sweat equity –
without fear of the government’s demolishing their work and selling their
land out from under them. But back in Miami, the city attorney and city
council took about a month to begin legal efforts to destroy the residents’
homes and force them off the lot. In April 2007 the city police took ad-
vantage of an accidental fire to enforce its politically fabricated title to the
land, clearing the lot, arresting 11 people, and erecting a fence to safeguard
the once again vacant lot for professional “affordable housing” developers.
Had the city government not made use of its supposed title to the aban-
doned land, it no doubt could have made use of state and federal building
codes to ensure that residents would be forced back into homelessness – for
their own safety, of course. That is in fact what a county health commission
in Indiana did to a 93-year-old man named Thelmon Green, who lived in his
’86 Chevrolet van, which the local towing company allowed him to keep on
its lot. Many people thrown into poverty by a sudden financial catastrophe
live out of a car for weeks or months until they get back on their feet. Living
in a car is cramped, but it beats living on the streets: a car means a place you
can have to yourself, which holds your possessions, with doors you can lock,
and sometimes even air conditioning and heating. But staying in a car over
the long term is much harder to manage without running afoul of the law.
Thelmon Green got by well enough in his van for ten years, but when the
Indianapolis Star printed a human-interest story on him last December, the
county health commission took notice and promptly ordered Green evicted
from his own van, in the name of the local housing code.
Since government housing codes impose detailed requirements on the
size, architecture, and building materials for new permanent housing, as
well as on specialized and extremely expensive contract work for electric-
ity, plumbing, and other luxuries, they effectively obstruct or destroy most
efforts to create transitional, intermediate, or informal sorts of shelter that
cost less than rented space in government-approved housing projects, but
provide more safety and comfort than living on the street.
options for independent work ratchets down the opportunities for increas-
ing income. And the squeeze makes poor people dependent on – and thus
vulnerable to negligent or unscrupulous treatment from – both landlords
and bosses by constraining their ability to find other, better homes, or oth-
er, better livelihoods. The same squeeze puts many more poor people into
the position of living “one paycheck away” from homelessness and makes
that position all the more precarious by harassing and coercing and impos-
ing artificial destitution on those who do end up on the street.
American state corporatism forcibly reshapes the world of work and
business on the model of a commercial strip mall: sanitized, centralized,
regimented, officious, and dominated by a few powerful proprietors and
their short list of favored partners, to whom everyone else relates as either
an employee or a consumer. A truly free market, without the pervasive
control of state licensure requirements, regulation, inspections, paperwork,
taxes, “fees,” and the rest, has much more to do with the traditional image
of a bazaar: messy, decentralized, diverse, informal, flexible, pervaded by
haggling, and kept together by the spontaneous order of countless small-
time independent operators, who quickly and easily shift between the roles
of customer, merchant, contract laborer, and more. It is precisely because
we have the strip mall rather than the bazaar that people living in poverty
find themselves so often confined to ghettoes, caught in precarious situa-
tions, and dependent on others – either on the bum or caught in jobs they
hate but cannot leave, while barely keeping a barely tolerable roof over their
heads.
The poorer you are, the more you need access to informal and flexible
alternatives, and the more you need opportunities to apply some creative
hustling. When the state shuts that out, it shuts poor people into ghet-
toized poverty.
ParT EIGhT
Freed-Market
regulation: Social
activism and
Spontaneous Order
42
The Goal is Freedom (Foundation for eco-
nomic education, June 5, 2009) <http.//
www.fee.org/articles/tgif/regulation-red-
herring/> (aug. 8, 2011).
reGulatioN reD
HerriNG
Why there’s No such thing as
an unregulated Market
SHELDON RICHMAN
(2009)
Since trade is not really a wild horse but rather a peaceful and mutually
beneficial activity between people, the Roosevelt administration’s propa-
ganda purpose is clear. A more honest title would be “Government Con-
trolling People.” But that would have sounded a little authoritarian even in
New Deal America, hence the wild horse metaphor.
What’s overlooked – intentionally or not – is that the alternative to a
government-regulated economy is not an unregulated one. As a matter of
fact, “unregulated economy,” like square circle, is a contradiction in terms.
If it’s truly unregulated it’s not an economy, and if it’s an economy, it’s not
unregulated. The term “free market” does not mean free of regulation. It
means free of government interference.
Ludwig von Mises and F. A. Hayek pointed out years ago that the real is-
sue regarding economic planning is not: To plan or not to plan? But rather:
Who plans (centralized state officials or decentralized private individuals in
the market)?
Likewise, the question is not: to regulate or not to regulate. It is, rather,
who (or what) regulates?
All markets are regulated. In a free market we all know what would hap-
pen if someone charged, say, $100 per apple. He’d sell few apples because
someone else would offer to sell them for less or, pending that, consumers
would switch to alternative products. “The market” would not permit the
seller to successfully charge $100.
Similarly, in a free market employers will not succeed in offering $1 an
hour and workers will not succeed in demanding $20 an hour for a job that
produces only $10 worth of output an hour. If they try, they will quickly
see their mistake and learn.
And again, in a free market an employer who subjected his employees to
perilous conditions without adequately compensating them to their satis-
faction for the danger would lose them to competitors.
What regulates the conduct of these people? Market forces. (I keep
specifying “in a free market” because in a state-regulated economy, market
forces are diminished or suppressed.) Economically speaking, people can-
not do whatever they want in a free market because other people are free
to counteract them. Just because the government doesn’t stop a seller from
charging $100 for an apple doesn’t mean he or she can get that amount.
Market forces regulate the seller as strictly as any bureaucrat could – even
more so, because a bureaucrat can be bribed. Whom would you have to
bribe to be exempt from the law of supply and demand?
It is no matter of indifference whether state operatives or market forces
do the regulating. Bureaucrats, who necessarily have limited knowledge and
perverse incentives, regulate by threat of physical force. In contrast, mar-
regulation red Herring | 389
economy…
In truth, could all this have happened, could such extraordinary phe-
nomena have occurred, unless there were in society a natural and wise order
that operates without our knowledge?
This is the same lesson taught by FEE’s founder, Leonard Read, in I,
Pencil.
Most people value order. Chaos is inimical to human flourishing. Thus
those who fail to grasp that, as Bastiat’s contemporary Proudhon put it,
liberty is not the daughter but the mother of order will be tempted to favor
state-imposed order. How ironic, since the state is the greatest creator of
disorder of all.
Those of us who understand Bastiat’s teachings realize how urgent it is
that others understand them, too.
43
“in a Freed Market, Who Will stop Mar-
kets From running riot and Doing Crazy
things? and Who Will stop the rich and
powerful from running roughshod over
everyone else?,” Rad Geek People’s Daily
(n.p., June 12, 2009) <http.//radgeek.
com/gt/2009/06/12/freed-market-
regulation/> (aug. 10, 2011).
We are Market
ForCes
CHARLES W. JOHNSON
(2009)
i n a freed Market, who will stop Markets froM running riot and doing crazy
things? And who will stop the rich and powerful from running roughshod
over everyone else?
We will.
Sheldon Richman recently wrote a nice piece for “The Goal Is Freedom”
(at The Freeman’s website) called “Regulation Red Herring: Why There’s No
Such Thing as an Unregulated Market.”1 Sheldon’s point, which is well
taken and important, is that if “regulation” is being used to mean “making
a process orderly, or regular,” then what radical free-marketeers advocate
is not a completely unregulated market. For something to even count as a
market, it has to be orderly and regular enough for people to conduct their
business and make their living in it and through it. Government interfer-
ence only seems necessary to regulate a market, in the positive sense of the
word “regulate,” if you think that the only way to get social order is by
means of social control, and the only way for to get to harmonious social in-
teractions is by having the government coerce people into working together
with each other. But, as Sheldon argues:
That last point is awfully important. It’s convenient to talk about “mar-
ket forces,” but you need to remember that remember that those “market
forces” are not supernatural entities that act on people from the outside.
“Market forces” are a conveniently abstracted way of talking about the
systematic patterns that emerge from people’s economic choices. So if the
question is, who will stop markets from running riot, the answer is: We will;
We are Market Forces | 393
by peacefully choosing what to buy and what not to buy, where to work
and where not to work, what to accept and what not to accept, we inevi-
tably shape and order the market that surrounds us. When we argue about
whether or not government should intervene in the economy in order to
regiment markets, the question is not whether markets should be made
orderly and regular, but rather whether the process of ordering is in the
hands of the people making the trade, or by unaccountable third parties;
and whether the means of ordering are going to be consensual or coercive.
The one thing that I would want to add to Sheldon’s excellent point
is that there are two ways in which we will do the regulating of our own
economic affairs in a free society – because there are two different kinds of
peaceful “spontaneous orders” in a self-regulating society.2 There is the sort
of spontaneity that Sheldon focuses on – the unplanned but orderly coordi-
nation that emerges as a byproduct of ordinary people’s interactions. (This
is spontaneity in the sense of achieving a goal without a prior blueprint
for the goal.) But a self-regulating people can also engage in another kind
of spontaneity – that is, achieving harmony and order through a conscious
process of voluntary organizing and activism. (This is spontaneity in the
sense of achieving a goal through means freely chosen, rather than through
constraints imposed.) In a freed market, if someone in the market exploits
workers or chisels costumers, if she produces things that are degrading or
dangerous or uses methods that are environmentally destructive, it’s vital
to remember that you do not have to just “let the market take its course” –
because the market is not something outside of us; we are market forces. And
so a freed market includes not only individual buyers and sellers, looking to
increase a bottom line, but also our shared projects, when people choose to
work together, by means of conscious but non-coercive activism, alongside,
indeed as a part of, the undesigned forms of spontaneous self-organization
that emerge. We are market forces, and the regulating in a self-regulating
market is done not only by us equilibrating our prices and bids, but also by
deliberately working to shift the equilibrium point, by means of conscious
entrepreneurial action – and one thing that libertarian principles clearly
imply, even though actually-existing libertarians may not stress it often
enough, is that entrepreneurship includes social entrepreneurship, working
to achieve non-monetary social goals.
So when self-regulating workers rely on themselves and not on the state,
abusive or exploitative or irresponsible bosses can be checked or plain run
out of the market, by the threat or the practice of strikes, of boycotts, of
2 See Charles Johnson, “Women and the Invisible Fist,” Rad Geek People’s Daily
(n.p., May 16, 2008) <http://www.radgeek.com/gt/2008/05/16/women_
and> (March 13, 2011).
394 | Charles W. Johnson
platoNiC
proDuCtivitY
RODERICK T. LONG
(2004)
What explains this wage gap? Various possibilities have been suggested.
But some Austrians have argued that there is only one possible explanation:
women are less productive than men.
The argument goes like this: If employers pay an employee more than
the value of that worker’s marginal revenue product, the company will
lose money and so will be penalised by the market. If employers pay an
employee less than the value of his or her marginal revenue product, then
other companies can profit by offering more competitive wages and so
luring the employee away. Hence wage rates that are set either above or
below the employee’s marginal revenue product will tend to get whittled
away via competition. (See Mises and Rothbard for this argument.) The
result is that any persistent disparity between men’s and women’s wages
must be due to a corresponding disparity between their marginal produc-
tivities.
As Walter Block puts it:
396 | roderick t. long
The fact that the wage gap does not get whittled away by competition in
this fashion shows that the gap must be based, so the argument runs, on a
real difference in productivity between the sexes. This does not necessarily
point to any inherent difference in capacities, but might instead be due to
the disproportionate burden of household work shouldered by women –
which would also explain why the wage gap is greater for married women
than for single women. (Walter Block makes this argument also.) Hence
feminist worries about the wage gap are groundless.
I’m not sure why this argument, if successful, would show that worrying
about the wage gap is a mistake, rather than showing that efforts to redress
the gap should pay less attention to influencing employers and more at-
tention to influencing marital norms. (Perhaps the response would be that
since wives freely choose to abide by such norms, outsiders have no basis for
condemning the norms. But since when can’t freely chosen arrangements
be criticised – on moral grounds, prudential grounds, or both?)
But anyway, I’m not persuaded by the argument, which strikes me as…
more neoclassical than Austrian, in that it ignores imperfect information,
the passage of time, etc. I certainly agree with Mises and Rothbard that
there is a tendency for workers to be paid in accordance with their marginal
revenue product, but the tendency doesn’t realise itself instantaneously or
without facing countervailing tendencies, and so, as I see it, does not li-
cense the inference that workers’ wages are likely to approximate the value
of their marginal revenue product – just as the existence of equilibrating
tendencies doesn’t mean the economy is going to be at or near equilibrium.
I would apply to this case the observation Mises makes about the final state
of rest – that although “the market at every instant is moving toward a final
state of rest,” nevertheless this state “will never be attained” because “new
disturbing factors will emerge before it will be realized.”
First of all, most employers do not know with any great precision their
workers’ marginal revenue product. Firms are, after all, islands of central
planning – on a small enough scale that the gains from central coordination
generally outweigh the losses, but still they are epistemically hampered by
the absence of internal markets. (And I’m rather skeptical of attempts to
simulate markets within the firm à la Koch Industries.) A firm confronts
platonic productivity | 397
does not count as a relevant rival.) If employers have a hard time estimating
their workers’ productivity (the knowledge problem), or sometimes cannot
be trusted to try (the incentive problem), that’s no reason to suppose that
government would do any better. Employers are certainly in a better (how-
ever imperfect) position to evaluate their employees’ productivity than is
some distant legislator or bureaucrat, and they likewise have more reason to
care about their company’s profitability (even if it’s not all they care about)
than would the government. So there’s no reason to think that transferring
decision-making authority from employers to the State would bring wag-
es into any better alignment with productivity. People in government are
crooked timber too, and (given economic democracy’s superior efficiency
in comparison with political democracy) they’re even less constrained by
any sort of accountability than private firms are.
Nothing I’ve said shows that men and women are equally productive;
it’s only meant to show that, given prevailing cultural norms and power
relations, we might well expect to see a gap between men’s and women’s
earnings even if they were equally productive (which is at least reason for
skepticism about claims that they are not equally productive).
I would also add that even if there are persistent problems – non-govern-
mental but nonetheless harmful power relations and the like – that market
processes do not eliminate automatically, it does not follow that there is
nothing to be done about these problems short of a resort to governmental
force. That’s one reason I’m more sympathetic to the labour movement and
the feminist movement than many libertarians nowadays tend to be. In the
19th century, libertarians saw political oppression as one component in an
interlocking system of political, economic, and cultural factors; they made
neither the mistake of thinking that political power was the only problem
nor the mistake of thinking that political power could be safely and effec-
tively used to combat the other problems.
As I have written elsewhere:
1 Roderick T. Long, “Defending a Free Nation,” Anarchy and Law: The Politi-
cal Economy of Choice, ed. Edward P. Stringham (New Brunswick, NJ: Trans-
action 2007) 152.
45
“the Goal is Freedom: libertarian-
ism = anti-racism,” The Freeman. Ideas on
Liberty (Foundation for economic educa-
tion, aug. 8, 2010) <http.//www.thefree-
manonline.org/columns/tgif/libertarian-
ism-antiracism/> (aug. 8, 2011).
liBertariaNisM aND
aNti-raCisM
SHELDON RICHMAN
(2010)
when asked what he thought of slavery: “I don’t like slavery because I don’t
like slaves.”)
eNCouraGiNG Waste
Whenever people do not pay the full cost of something they use, they have
less incentive to conserve. For example, when people pay the same amount of
taxes for solid waste disposal whether they recycle or not, fewer people are in-
clined to recycle. As a consequence, we have more waste and disposal problems.
406 | Mary ruwart
DisCouraGiNG CoNservatioN
Water utilities are usually public monopolies subsidized by our tax dol-
lars. In California’s San Joaquin Valley, 4.5 million acres of once-desert
farmland is irrigated by subsidized water. Taxes are used to construct dams
for irrigators, pay many of their delivery costs, and support zero-interest
loans to farmers who pay only a tenth of what residential customers do!3
These subsidies encourage wasteful over irrigation, resulting in soil erosion,
salt buildup, and toxic levels of selenium in the runoff. Kesterson Wild-
life Reservoir has been virtually destroyed by irrigation-induced selenium
buildup, which now threatens San Francisco Bay as well.4
As long as our tax dollars subsidize the irrigators, however, they have
little financial incentive to install drip sprinkler systems or other conser-
vation devices. As a result, less water is available for other uses, so prices
increase for everyone else. Without subsidies, irrigators would be motivated
to conserve, making more water available for domestic use.
ing nearly all of Alaska and Nevada.6 Land ownership is not an exclusive
government monopoly, but the sheer size of the government’s holdings and
the subsidies necessary for maintaining them, allow us to treat them as a
product of third-layer aggression.
Rather than exclusive licensing, aggressionthrough-government takes
the form of forcible prevention of homesteading. Lands in the United
States were originally settled by homesteading, a time-honored way of cre-
ating wealth.
Individual or groups find unused land and clear it for agriculture, fence
it for grazing, make paths for hiking, build a home, and so on. To own the
new wealth (farm land, ranch land, etc.) that they have made, creators lay
claim to the property on which it resides. When others settle nearby, they
choose different property on which to stake their claim.
Government holds land by forcibly preventing homesteading. Some-
times we condone this aggression to protect rangeland, forests, and parks
from abuse and destruction. By using aggression as our means, however, we
endanger the ends that we seek.
Natural Resources (Dallas, TX: National Center for Policy Analysis 1986) 20-1.
6 Baden 38.
408 | Mary ruwart
children and grandchildren must not have the problems we do just keeping
our next generation fed. If you don’t help us, sir, you’ll have trouble putting
food on your table too. We’ll find someone to run against you who knows
how to take care of the people he or she represents. We’ll make sure that
you’re defeated.”
The congressman sighs and gives in. After all, the ranchers gain im-
mensely if allowed to graze cattle on the land he controls. They have every
incentive to make good their threats and their promises. The person they
help elect might not even try to protect the environment. The congressman
reasons that he should give a little on this issue so that he, not some “yes
man,” can remain in office.
The congressman finds that his colleagues have constituents who want
the government to build a dam on public land or harvest the national for-
ests. He agrees to vote for these programs in return for their help in direct-
ing the Bureau of Land Management to rent the grazing land to his ranch-
ers. Naturally, these changes set precedents for many of the resources con-
trolled by the government, not just the ones in this congressman’s district.
Because of these skewed incentives, almost half of our public rangelands
are rented out to ranchers for grazing cattle at one-fifth to one-tenth the
rate of private land.7 By 1964, three million additional acres had been
cleared with environmentally destructive practices, such as “chaining,”8 to
create more rentable rangeland. Because the ranchers and their representa-
tives cannot profit by protecting the land, they have little incentive to do so.
As early as 1925, studies demonstrated the inevitable result: on overgrazed
public ranges, cattle were twice as likely to die and had half as many calves
as animals raised on private lands.9
Are the ranchers and their representatives selfish others whom we should
condemn for overgrazing the range? Not at all! Had ranchers been permit-
ted to homestead these lands in the first place, the rangeland would now be
receiving the better care characteristic of private grazing. Our willingness to
use aggression to prevent homesteading has taken the profit out of caring
for the environment. When this aggression is even partially removed, the
environment greatly improves.
For example, in 1934, Congress passed the Taylor Grazing Act to en-
courage ranchers to care for the public grazing land. By allowing ten-year
transferable leases, ranchers had control of the land for a decade. Ranchers
who improved the land were given the positive feedback of good grazing or
a good price when selling their lease. In essence, the lease gave them partial
ownership. As a result, almost half of the rangeland classified as poor was
upgraded.10
However, in 1966, leases were reduced to only one year, giving ranch-
ers little incentive to make improvements. After all, they could not be sure
that they would be able to renew their lease. As a result, private investment
in wells and fences in the early 1970s dropped to less than a third of their
1960s level.11
When vast tracts of public property are misused, the environment can
suffer great damage. Overgrazing of public rangeland was permanently de-
structive in many cases, contributing to the formation of a “dust bowl” in
the midwestern states.12
10 Libecap 46.
11 Libecap 76.
12 Murray N. Rothbard, For a New Liberty (New York: Macmillan 1973) 264.
410 | Mary ruwart
13 Peter Kirby and William Arthur, Our National Forests: Lands in Peril (Wash-
ington, DC: Wilderness Society/Sierra Club 1985) 4.
14 Baden 10.
15 Thomas Barlow, Gloria E. Helfand, Trent W. Orr, and Thomas B. Stoel, Jr.,
Giving Away the National Forests (New York: NRDC 1980) Appendix 1.
16 Baden 14.
17 Edmund Contoski, Makers and Takers: How Wealth and Progress Are Made
and How They Are Taken Away or Prevented (Minneapolis, MN: American
Liberty 1997) 305.
18 Katherine Barton and Whit Fosburgh, Audubon Wildlife Report 1986 (New
York: Audubon 1986) 129.
19 Contoski 302.
aggression and the environment | 411
Slaughtering Wildlife
Governments often prevent individuals from claiming wildlife just as
they prevent homesteading on land. In essence, wildlife management has
become a public monopoly.
Tax subsidies to “manage” wildlife give it the characteristics of third-
layer aggression. Subsidies have often paid for the killing of wildlife, some-
times to the point of near extinction.
State governments encouraged the shooting of hawks. Some, like Penn-
sylvania paid hunters a tax-subsidized bounty. Aghast at this slaughter, Mrs.
Rosalie Edge bought one of the hunters’ favorite spot with voluntary con-
tributions from like-minded people and turned it into a sanctuary. Hawk
Mountain, in the Pennsylvania Appalachians, has been protecting hawks
since 1934.22
In 1927, the owner of Sea Lion Caves, the only known mainland breed-
ing and wintering area of the Stellar sea lion,23 opened it to visitors as a
naturalist attraction. Meanwhile, Oregon’s tax dollars went to bounty hunt-
ers who were paid to shoot sea lions. The owners of Sea Lion Caves spent
much of their time chasing hunters off their property. Although the own-
ers of Sea Lion Caves and Hawk Mountain Sanctuary were protecting the
wildlife on their land, they were also forced to pay the taxes that rewarded
hunters who endangered it!
Not everyone in a group wants resources treated in the same way. When
all people use their property as they think best, one owner’s careless deci-
sion is unlikely to threaten the entire ecosystem. When bureaucrats control
vast areas, however, one mistake can mean ecological disaster.
Power Corrupts
The above example succinctly illustrates the dangers of third-layer ag-
gression. Subsidies give few bureaucrats the power to trade public assets for
28 Tom Blood, “Men, Elk, and Wolves,” The Yellowstone Primer: Land and Re-
source Management in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, ed. John A. Baden
and Donald Leal (San Francisco: Pacific 1990) 109.
29 “Special Report” 368.
30 Richard L. Stroup and John A. Baden, Natural Resources: Bureaucratic Myths
and Environmental Management (San Francisco: Pacific 1983) 49-50.
31 Anderson and Leal 51-52.
414 | Mary ruwart
personal gain. Unlike the personal power that comes from wisdom, inner
growth, and hard work, this power comes from the point of a gun. This
power of aggression corrupts those who use it, impoverishes those who have
little, and destroys the earth that supports us…
47
Rad Geek People’s Daily (n.p., May
17, 2010) <http://radgeek.com/
gt/2010/05/17/the-clean-water-act-vs-
clean-water/> (aug. 22, 2011).
1 See, for example, Kevin A. Carson, “Monbiot: One Step Back,” Mutual-
ist Blog: Free Market Anticapitalism (n.p., Jan. 1, 2006) <http:/mutualist.
blogspot.com/2006/01/monbiot-one-step-back.html> (March 13, 2011);
Kevin A. Carson, “Fred Foldvary on Green Taxes,” Mutualist Blog: Free
416 | Charles W. Johnson
the basic problem with the Clean Water Act, like all statist environmental
regulations, is that it isn’t about standards of justice; it’s about compliance
with regulatory standards, and from the standpoint of an environmental
regulator the important thing is (1) that government has to be able to single
out somebody or some group to pigeonhole as the People In Charge of the
site; and (2) whoever gets tagged as “taking charge” of the site, therefore,
gets put on the hook for meeting the predetermined standards, or for facing
the predetermined penalties, no matter what the facts of the particular case
and no matter the fact that they didn’t do anything to cause the existing
damage.3
The obvious response to this should be to repeal the clause of the Clean
Water Act which creates this insane condition, and leave the people with a
stake in the community free to take positive action. Unfortunately, the best
that government legislators can think of is to pass a new law to legalize it
– i.e., to create yet another damn bureaucratic “permit,” so that shoestring-
budget community groups can spend all their time filling out paperwork
and reporting back to the EPA instead. Meanwhile, the State of the Debate
being what it is, even this weak, hyperbureaucratic solution is being op-
posed by the lobbying arms of several national environmental groups:
All of which perfectly illustrates two of the points that I keep trying to
make about Anarchy and practicality. Statists constantly tell us that, nice as
airy-fairy Anarchist theory may be, we have to deal with the real world. But
down in the real world, walloping on the tar baby of electoral politics con-
stantly gets big Progressive lobbying groups stuck in ridiculous fights that
elevate procedural details and purely symbolic victories above the practical
success of the goals the politicking was supposedly for – to hell with clean
water in Silverton, Colorado, when there’s a federal Clean Water Act to
be saved! And, secondly, how governmental politics systematically destroys
any opportunity for progress on the margin – where positive direct action
by people in the community could save a river from lethal toxins tomorrow,
if government would just get its guns out of their faces, government action
takes years to pass, years to implement, and never addresses anything until
it’s just about ready to address everything. Thus Executive Director Natalie
Roy, on behalf of More Than 1,250 Environmental And Other Public-
Interest Groups, is explicitly baffled by the notion that the people who live
by these rivers might not have time to hold out for the decisive blow in
winning some all-or-nothing struggle in the national legislature.
The near-term prospects of Udall’s half-hearted legalization bill don’t
look good. The conclusion from the Atlantic is despair:
But I think if you realize that the problem is built in, structurally, to
electoral politics, the response doesn’t need to be despair. It can be motiva-
4 Nijhuis.
5 Nijhuis.
the Clean Water act versus Clean Water | 419
tion. Instead of sitting around watching their rivers die and waiting for
Senator Mark Udall Of Colorado to pass a bill to legalize their direct ac-
tion, what I’d suggest is that the local environmental groups in Colorado
stop caring so much about what’s legal and what’s illegal, consider some
countereconomic, direct action alternatives to governmental politics, and per-
form some Guerrilla Public Service.
I mean, look, if there are places where it would be simple enough just to
go up there with a shovel and redirect the water, then wait until nightfall,
get yourself a shovel and go up there. Take a flashlight. And some bolt cutters,
if you need them. Cement plugs no doubt take more time, but you’d be sur-
prised what a dedicated crew can accomplish in a few hours, or a few nights
running. If you do it yourself, without identifying yourself and without asking
for permission, the EPA doesn’t need to know about it and the Clean Water
Act can’t do anything to punish you for your “halfway” clean up.
The Colorado rivers don’t need political parties, permits, or Public-In-
terest Groups. What they need are some good honest outlaws, and some
Black-and-Green Market entrepreneurship.
48
Cato unbound (Cato institute, June 18,
2010) <http://www.cato-unbound.
org/2010/06/18/sheldon-richman/
context-keeping-and-community-organiz-
ing/> (aug. 8, 2011).
CoNtext-keepiNG
aND CoMMuNitY
orGaNiziNG
SHELDON RICHMAN
(2010)
t he strongest libertarian casei can iMagine for title ii of the civil rights act
of 1964, the provision against racial discrimination in public accommo-
dations, rests on the key point – which I fully embrace – that the Southern
states operated the equivalent of a “white supremacist cartel” in restaurants
and hotels. Before explaining my criticism of Title II, I’d like to elaborate
on this point.
Standard libertarian criticism of Title II appears to treat the targeted res-
taurants and hotels as purely private businesses that, however odious their
racial policies, were unjustifiably imposed on by government policies that
violated private property rights. But this account misses something crucial.
Outwardly those businesses looked like private enterprises, but the sub-
stance was different. The social-legal environment in the pre-1964 South,
when Jim Crow reigned, was hardly what any libertarian would envision as
422 | sheldon richman
efficient: whole groups of offenders would relent at one time after an in-
tense sit-in campaign. There was no need to win over one lunch counter
at a time.
Title II, in other words, was unnecessary. But worse, it was detrimental.
History’s greatest victories for liberty were achieved not through lobby-
ing, legislation, and litigation – not through legal briefs and philosophical
treatises – but through the sort of direct “people’s” struggle that marked the
Middle Ages and beyond. As a mentor of mine says, what is given like a gift
can be more easily taken away, while what one secures for oneself by facing
down power is less easily lost.
The social campaign for equality that was desegregating the South was
transmogrified when it was diverted to Washington. Focus then shifted
from the grassroots to a patronizing white political elite in Washington that
had scurried to the front of the march and claimed leadership. Recall Hill-
ary Clinton’s belittling of the grassroots movement when she ran against
Barack Obama: “Dr. King’s dream began to be realized when President
Lyndon Johnson passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964… It took a president
to get it done.”
We will never know how the original movement would have evolved –
what independent mutual-aid institutions would have emerged – had that
diversion not occurred.
We do know, as Professor Bernstein reminds us, that Title II became a
precedent for laws forbidding all types of private “discrimination” that were
in no way rooted in government-sanctioned cartels. Bernstein may see the
South’s social system as providing a “limiting principle” for when antidis-
crimination laws are permissible, but this overlooks the perverse dynamic
of the political world. Simply put, after 1964 there just was no way that
antidiscrimination laws were going to be confined to Jim Crow-type cases.
Libertarians need not shy away from the question, “Do you mean that
whites should have been allowed to exclude blacks from their lunch coun-
ters?” Libertarians can answer proudly, “No. They should not have been al-
lowed to do that. They should have been stopped – not by the State, which
can’t be trusted, but by nonviolent social action on behalf of equality.”
The libertarian answer to bigotry is community organizing.
CoNtriButors
Benjamin Tucker was the dean of nineteenth-century American individu-
alist anarchists. He served as editor of the influential anarchist periodical
Liberty; many of his essays are collected in Instead of a Book: By a Man
Too Busy to Write One (1897). The text of Liberty is available on-line; see
<http://travellinginliberty.blogspot.com> for an index.
Brad Spangler is the director of the Center for a Stateless Society <http://
www.c4ss.org>.
Dyer Lum was an anarchist theorist and campaigner. He briefly edited The
Alarm (1892-3). A radical labor activist and sometime partner of Voltairine
de Cleyre, he was the author of books on Mormonism, trade unionism, and
anarchism, notably The Economics of Anarchy (1890).
Gary Chartier is Associate Dean of the School of Business and Associate Pro-
fessor of Law and Business Ethics at La Sierra University. He holds a PhD from
the University of Cambridge and a JD from the University of California at Los
Angeles. He is the author of over thirty scholarly articles in publications includ-
426
ing the Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, Legal Theory, the Canadian Journal of
Law and Jurisprudence, and the Law and Philosophy, and of three books: The
Analogy of Love (2007); Economic Justice and Natural Law (2009); and The Con-
science of an Anarchist (2011). He is a member of the Alliance of the Libertarian
Left and of the advisory boards of the Center for a Stateless Society and the
Moorfield Storey Institute. He blogs at <http://www.liberalaw.blogspot.com>.
Karl hess was an influential anarchist theorist and activist and a vocal pro-
ponent of local empowerment. A former speechwriter for US senator Barry
Goldwater, he became associated with the New Left in the mid-1960s. He
was the author or co-author of books including Dear America (1975), The
End of the Draft: The Feasibility of Freedom (1970), Neighborhood Power:
The New Localism (1975), Community Technology (1979), A Common Sense
Strategy for Survivalists (1981), and Mostly on the Edge (1999).
roy a. Childs, Jr., was a political theorist, historian, and journalist who
served as the editor of the Libertarian Review from 1977-81. He was espe-
cially well known as an incisive book reviewer. Many of his essays are avail-
able in a posthumous collection, Liberty against Power (1994).
Sheldon richman is the editor of The Freeman: Ideas on Liberty and the au-
thor of books including Tethered Citizens (2001) and Separating School and
State (1994). He blogs at <http://sheldonfreeassociation.blogspot.com>.
voltairine De Cleyre was a feminist and anarchist writer and speaker who
defended “anarchism without adjectives.” Collections of her essays and
speeches include The Voltairine de Cleyre Reader (2004); Exquisite Rebel: The
Essays of Voltairine De Cleyre – Anarchist, Feminist, Genius (2005); and Gates
of Freedom: Voltairine De Cleyre and the Revolution of the Mind (2005).
Forthcoming: