"'The rich should pay their fair share.'
"This term, 'fair share,' is an anti-concept. It's rationally unusable term designed to replace and obliterate some legitimate concept.
"One legitimate concept is: the purpose of government.
"Another is actual fairness. Fairness is when you get what you deserve. But in this catch-phrase, fairness is when you're harmed by the right amount...."What does fair mean [in this statement]? It means more. More than they currently pay. Then more than that. Then more again. A blank check until the rich are drained of all blood."
~ Keith Weiner
Monday, 10 May 2021
'The rich should pay their fair share' ?
Thursday, 6 May 2021
New packaging for an age-old weasel word
"The 21st century rebranding of equality of outcome into the shinier and more malleable term equity, with its redolence of ownership and fairness, gave activists a linguistic workaround to what had previously been a public relations obstacle of utopian unattainability. You can't and probably shouldn't just wave a magic wand to erase observed inequality. But inequity? That sounds to the ear more like an immediate and surmountable wrong, deserving of intervention."
~ Matt Welch, from his article 'The Equity Mess'
Friday, 1 March 2019
"The taxation review has been trumpeted as being all about 'fairness.' But how fair is it to tax the residual value of a business which has had to survive in an unsympathetic, highly regressive & often ideologically-hostile environment ... only to find that at the end of a difficult journey, a rapacious government will requisition 33% of their realisation, in the name of 'fairness'?" Bonus #QotD
"Our Prime Minister assures farmers and small business owners that they have 'nothing to fear’ from a proposed capital gains tax.
"But they have much to fear.
"Why? Because small businesses already have to deal with an overwhelmingly onerous, highly regressive, taxation compliance regime, to which they must conform, at considerable cost ,with significant financial and personal penalties if they do not.
"These include: company tax; income tax on salaries and drawings; fringe benefit tax; goods and services tax(GST); ACC levies; resident withholding tax on investments or dividends such as a shareholding in a partnering business; imputation tax issues; employer subsidy contributions; the cost of filing annual returns; franchise fees. The list goes on and on.
"The cost of complying with these government requirements is already astronomical for small businesses. The Cullen-led Tax Working Group appears to be both ignorant of and unsympathetic to the fact that these compliance costs are hugely regressive. The cost of compliance as a proportion of turnover is far higher for small businesses than for larger businesses.
"Small businesses account for 50-60%of all employees. They provide us with personal services, shops, restaurants, and trades, to name just a few.
"Imagine your community without these facilities? ...
"The taxation review has been trumpeted as being all about 'fairness.'
"But how fair is it to tax the residual value of a business which has had to survive in an unsympathetic, highly regressive and often ideologically-hostile environment requiring owners to expend huge personal effort, time and money over many years, only to find that at the end of a difficult journey, a rapacious government will requisition 33% of their realisation, in the name of 'fairness'?"
~ Professor Martin Devlin, emeritus professor of management from Massey University, from his post 'Small Businesses Beware'.
Friday, 22 February 2019
Thursday, 22 February 2018
Quote of the Day: Rand v Rawls
NB: If you don't know, John Rawls is widely considered the most influential political philosopher of the late twentieth century, with the effects you can see all around you.
"[In] Rand’s view: The more rational you each are, the more you have to gain from each other and the less your interests conflict.
...."For Rawls, it is the opposite: Another man’s rationality is a threat to you. The more rational we all are, the more our society is dog-eat-dog. The more rational your neighbour is, the bigger threat he is to you, and we need government to protect us from the rational actions of others... This presumption of a fundamental, inescapable, metaphysical conflict of interest among rational human beings underlies everything in Rawls—-the original position, the veil of ignorance, the two principles, the difference principle, the basic structure, the criteria of stability, justice as fairness, . . . everything...
...."For Rand, the more rational your neighbour is, the less of a threat he is to you, and we need government to protect us from the irrational actions of others....
"For Rawls, we need to protect ourselves from people who would act rationally. For Rand, we need to protect ourselves from people who would act irrationally....
...."[Furthermore] if Ayn Rand is right that there is no conflict of interests among rational men—-however strange that may sound—-then all of Rawls’ edifice collapses. "
~ John McCaskey, from his post 'A Dog-Eat-Dog World: Rand vs. Rawls'
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Wednesday, 16 September 2015
Inequality
"There is in fact a manly and legitimate passion for equality that spurs all men to
wish to be strong and esteemed. This passion tends to elevate the lesser to the
rank of the greater. But one also finds in the human heart a depraved taste for
equality, which impels the weak to want to bring the strong down to their level,
and which reduces men to preferring equality in servitude to inequality in freedom"
~ Alexis de Tocqueville.
So you’re interested in equality?
Let’s test that.
Are you more interested in economic inequality or political inequality?
What if you had to choose between them? Which one of the two would you prefer?
Answered that one yet? Okay.
So what if I told you that you do have to choose between them; that it’s simply not possible to have both.
Because enforcing economic equality makes you the enemy of political equality.
Political equality is a moral ideal because it is the foundation of economic progress, it is the foundation of economic mobility—and it is the foundation of fairness in political and economic affairs.
However …
Political equality and the opportunity it unleashes have always gone hand-in-hand with enormous economic inequality. There is no contradiction in that fact.
Political equality has to do with how individuals are treated by the government. It says that the government should treat all individuals the same—black or white, man or woman, rich or poor. But political equality says nothing about the differences that arise through the voluntary decisions of private individuals. Protecting people’s equal rights inevitably leads to enormous differences in economic condition, as some people use their freedom to create modest amounts of wealth while others reach the highest levels of success. It also leads to differences in opportunity.
To be sure, political equality does provide a level playing field, in the sense that everyone plays by the same rules. Each of us is free to use our talents and resources to pursue happiness and success, without interference by others. But it is obviously true that some people will find the struggle to succeed harder than others. If you’re born to loving, educated, and affluent parents, you will likely find it easier to achieve your aspirations than someone born in less desirable circumstances…
The key thing to keep in mind is that the opportunities enjoyed by some people don’t hold others back. On the contrary, part of the reason why people flock to the [west] is precisely because …people are wealthier, better educated, and more productive than in their home countries.
So how would you make everyone economically equal? As Ayn Rand used to say, you can either raise everyone to the mountaintops, or undertake to raze the mountains. Doing the former requires removing barriers to opportunity …
There are genuine barriers to opportunity, and the deck is becoming stacked against us—but not because “the rich” are too rich and the government is doing too little to fight economic inequality. The real threat to opportunity … is increasing political inequality…
The real source of this problem is that we have granted the government an incredible amount of arbitrary power: to intervene in our affairs, to pick winners and losers, to put roadblocks in the way of success, to hand out wealth and other special favours to whatever pressure group can present itself as the face of “the public good.” Some of these injustices do increase economic inequality, but it isn’t the inequality that should bother us—it’s the injustices.
Cronyism, occupational licensing laws, mandated youth wages and the minimum wage, the welfare state, central banking—all increase political inequality and economic inequality both: those with political pull get the favours; those without are locked out. The answer is not more of the same; the answer is to remove the injustices.
The inequality alarmists tell us [however] that the problem is not how much arbitrary power the government has, but whom the government uses that power for. They say that by handing the government even more power, and demanding that it use that power for the sake of “the 99 percent” rather than “the 1 percent,” everyone will be better off
We believe that only when the government is limited to the function of protecting our equal rights can people rise through merit rather than government-granted privilege, and that the cure for people seeking special favours from the government is to create a government that has no special favours to grant.
What’s required to save the [everyone’s dream of success] is not to wage war on economic inequality, but to recommit ourselves to the ideal of political equality.
We need to liberate the individual so that each of us is equally free to pursue success and happiness. The alarmists’ program to fight economic inequality will only make that harder.
Whether it is dramatically raising taxes, doubling down on the bloated regulatory state, capping CEO pay, raising the minimum wage, or giving more political power to unions, their agenda consists of propping up those at the bottom and chopping down those at the top—always at the expense of the person who desires the opportunity to build a successful life for himself through his own thought and effort.
The alarmists don’t oppose people gaining the unearned or losing what they have rightfully earned—they merely want to change who gets sacrificed and who gets unearned rewards so as to make us more economically equal. This is what they refer to as “social justice.”
The result of which is the opposite of the stated goal.
The [dream today] is under attack, but the threat is not economic inequality. It is the war on political equality. To win this debate, that is the ideal we need to champion.
READ: ‘Turning the Tables on the Inequality Alarmists’ by Don Watkins & Yaron Brook.
SEE: For a full case against the inequality alarmists, see the forthcoming book by Don Watkins & Yaron Brook in which these excerpts appear: Equal Is Unfair: America’s Misguided Fight Against Income Inequality, available for pre-order at Amazon.
Wednesday, 1 April 2015
Why is the Angry Left so angry?
Why are so many leftists so often so angry?
Say something that upsets religious conservatives, and they pray for you. Upset the left, and you get angry, personal denunciations. Why the the difference? Why is the Angry Left so angry? …
Robert Tracinski has a theory. His answer is surprisingly simple. Whereas the religious nut has his focus on his imaginary utopia upstairs, to change the world your secular leftist needs to change you, and you’re refusing to cooperate. You arsehole!:
For the secular leftist, the end state is social and necessarily political. It is all about getting everybody else on board and herding them into his imagined utopia. There are so many “problematic” aspects of life that need to be reengineered, so many vast social systems that need to be overthrown and replaced. But the rest of us are all screwing it up, all the time, through our greed, our denial, our apathy, our refusal to listen to him banging on about his tired socialist ideology…
If the whole focus of your life is on getting everybody else to agree with you on every detail of your politics and adopt your plans for a perfect society, then you’re setting yourself up to be at war with most of the human race most of the time.
Which means an awful lot for the Angry Left to get angry about.
Commenting on Tracinski’s post, Jason Monaghan reckons the even deeper truth is that
their "ultimate truth" doesn't just put them at endless conflict with the non-conforming elements in society, it puts them at war with reality itself. Their ideas are beyond reproach so it is clearly human nature and the world around them that must be at fault.
“It's not just that their hoped-for Revolution depends on other people,” agrees Tim Sandefur,
it's that their whole reality depends on other people. They think that the evil in the world is the result of social structures (everything in [their] world is the result of social structures) that are ultimately within our control if only we'll exercise sufficient will power. Yes we can! sounds inspiring, only until it turns into Why won't you?! And it always does.
For example, crime or discrimination are the result, for the leftist, of institutions, not spontaneous orders, and therefore are caused by somebody's sin. If you don't act to change things, therefore, you're part of the problem. Poverty? We can cure it by raising the minimum wage. Because poverty is caused by greedy people being stingy. And if you oppose us, you're helping cause poverty!
But as Sandefur says, if your whole political theory is essentially a classist conspiracy theory arguing human nature is endlessly at fault – “if you think politics is ultimately a conspiracy of the evil Koch Brothers against the People's True Path to equality -- then naturally you're going to be angry” –
if you're ignorant about justice and think inequality or unfairness are the same thing as injustice, then you're going to think that nature itself is unjust, since nature distributes her gifts unequally. If you go through life believing that reality is ultimately about other people instead of being ultimately about your interaction with nature, then you're going to think all the bad stuff is ultimately caused by other people, and that's going to make you hate other people, even while you profess to love humanity in the abstract.
Yet because their idea that reality is ultimately about changing people instead of changing things in reality—“what Rand called "social metaphysics" or "second-handedness"” – the leftist revolt against bourgeois virtues is ultimately futile.
Your goal as a leftist, then, is ultimately the transformation of all of actual society into something “equal” and “fair,” but since this is impossible and even meaningless [and ignores that human prosperity must actually be created], it's a perpetual exercise in futility. The leftist, understandably given his basic assumptions, assumes that this failure is caused by lack of faith. Yes we can! so Why haven't we?! Because we're evil, that's why.
Tuesday, 30 September 2014
Lowering Taxes Is the Only Decent Tax Reform
Tax reform being on the agenda this last election, this guest post by Laurence Vance suggests there is only one decent tax reform that should be considered:
The best tax is always the lightest.
— Jean-Baptiste Say
There cannot be a good tax nor a just one;
every tax rests its case on compulsion.
— Frank Chodorov
There can be no such thing as “fairness in taxation.” Taxation is
nothing but organised theft, and the concept of a “fair tax” is
therefore every bit as absurd as that of “fair theft.“
— Murray RothbardSince the very fact of taxation is an interference with the free
market, it is particularly incongruous and incorrect for
advocates of a free market to advocate uniformity of taxation.
— Murray Rothbard
The real issue is total spending by government, not tax reform.
— Ron Paul
When it comes to the subject of taxes, many conservatives, some libertarians [and supporters of virtually all political parties] just don’t get it.
Monday, 1 September 2014
Fairness
You hear it all the time.
That’s fair /that’s not fair.
Life’s fair / life’s not fair / life’s good, but not fair at all.
So WTF does “fairness” actually mean, why is there so much confusion about it, and why is there so much politics that takes advantage of this confusion?
Philosopher Stephen Hicks analyses fairness, politics, ethics … and tennis.
Fairness is a key concept of ethics but if you ask three philosophers what it means, you will get four different answers. Many of our ongoing public policy debates turn on competing conceptions of what is and is not fair.
- Insider trading: If the seller of a stock knows something the buyer doesn’t and couldn’t know, does that make the trade unfair?
- Telecommunications and the “Fairness Doctrine”: If a radio station criticises a public figure, in the name of fairness should government regulators require the station to give airtime for the public figure’s response?
- Campaign finance: If one political candidate raises significantly more funds than her competitor, will the election be fair?
Thursday, 28 August 2014
Experiments in Economics: Playing “Fair”
Here’s your info on what the Auckland Uni Economics Group is getting up to tonight …
Hi all,
This week are pleased to be joined by Professor Ananish Chaudhuri, Professor of Experimental Economics and Head of the Department of Economics, who will discuss the topic of Experiments in Economics: Playing Fair, including
- the role of experiments in economics;
- how experimental economics became a part of the mainstream; and
- a brief overview of his own experimental work exploring the role of “fairness” in economic transactions.
Wednesday, 20 August 2014
Quote of the day: On what can’t be given to you by politicians
“Remember ever the old words—as true today as when they were first spoken—'What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?' If you lose all respect for the rights of others, and with it your own self-respect, if you lose your own sense of right and fairness, if you lose your belief in liberty, and with it the sense of your own worth and true rank, if you lose your own will and self-guidance and control over your own lives and actions, what can all the buying and trafficking, what can all the gifts of politicians give you in return?”
- Auberon Herbert[Hat tip The Objective Standard]
Tuesday, 22 July 2014
Capitalism vs. crony capitalism
Guest post by Richard Ebeling
In the minds of many people, the term “capitalism” carries the idea of unfairness, exploitation, undeserved privilege and power, and immoral profit making. What is often difficult to get people to understand is that this misplaced conception of “capitalism” has nothing to do with real free markets and economic liberty, and laissez-faire capitalism, rightly understood.
During the dark days of Nazi collectivism in Europe, the German economist, Wilhelm Röpke(1899-1966), used the haven of neutral Switzerland to write and lecture on the moral and economic principles of the free society.
“Collectivism,” he warned, “was the fundamental and moral danger of the West.” The triumph of collectivism meant, “nothing less than political and economic tyranny, regimentation, centralization of every department of life, the destruction of personality, totalitarianism and the rigid mechanization of human society.”
If the Western world were to be saved, Röpke said (and after the war, he did more than most to save it), it would require a “renaissance of [classical] liberalism” springing “from an elementary longing for freedom and for the resuscitation of human individuality.”
What is the Meaning of Capitalism?
At the same time, such a renaissance was inseparable from the establishing of a capitalist economy. But what is capitalism? “Now here at once we are faced with a difficulty,” Röpke lamented, because, “capitalism contains so many ambiguities that it becoming every less adapted for an honest spiritual currency.”
As a solution, Röpke suggested that we “make a sharp distinction between the principle of a market economy as such . . . and the actual development which during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries has led to the historical foundation of market economy.”
Röpke went on, “If the word ‘Capitalism’ is to be used at all this should be with due reserve and then at most only to designate the historical form of market economy . . . Only in this way are we safe from the danger . . . of making the principle of the market economy responsible for things which are to be attributed to the whole historical combination . . . of economic, social, legal, moral and cultural elements . . . in which it [capitalism] appeared in the nineteenth century.”
In more recent times it has become common to use the term “crony capitalism,” implying a “capitalism” that is used, abused, and manipulated by those in political power to benefit and serve well connected special interest groups desiring to obtain wealth, revenues and “market share” that they could successfully acquire on an open, free and competitive market by offering better and less expense goods and services to consumers than their rivals.
Corrupted Capitalism vs. Free Market Capitalism
This facet of a corrupted capitalism is, unfortunately, not new. Even as the classical liberal philosophy of political freedom and economic liberty was growing in influence in Europe and America in the nineteenth century, many of the reforms moving society in that freer direction happened within a set of ideas, institutions, and policies that undermined the establishment of a truly free society.
Thus, the historical development of modern capitalism was “deformed” in certain essential aspects virtually from the start. Before all the implications and requirements of a free-market economy could be fully appreciated and implemented in the nineteenth century, it was being opposed and subverted by the residues of feudal privilege and mercantilist ideology.
Even as many of the proponents of free market capitalism and individualist liberalism were proclaiming their victory over oppressive and intrusive government in the middle decades of the nineteenth century, new forces of collectivist reaction were arising in the form of nationalism and socialism.
Three ideas in particular undermined the establishment of the true principles of the free market economy, and as a result, historical capitalism contained elements totally inconsistent with ideal of laissez-faire capitalism – a free competitive capitalism completely severed from the collectivist and power-lusting state.
The Ideas of “National Interest” and “Public Policy.”
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the emergence of the modern nation-state in Western Europe produced the idea of a “national interest” superior to the interests of the individual and to which he should be subservient. The purpose of “public policy” was to define what served the interests of the state, and to confine and direct the actions of individuals into those channels and forms that would serve and advance this presumed “national interest.”
In spite of the demise of the notion of the divine right of kings and the rise of the idea of the rights of (individual) man, and in spite of the refutation of mercantilism by the free-market economists of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, democratic governments continued to retain the conception of a “national interest.”
Instead of being defined as serving the interests of the king, it was now postulated as serving the interests of “the people” of the nation as a whole. In the twentieth century, public policy came to be assigned the tasks of government guaranteed “full employment,” targeted levels of economic growth, “fair” wages and “reasonable” profits for “labor” and “management,” and the politically influenced direction of investment and resource uses into those activities considered to foster the economic development viewed as advantageous to “the nation” in the eyes of those designing and implementing “public policy.”
Capitalism, therefore, was considered to be compatible with and indeed even requiring activist government. In nineteenth century America it often took the form of what were then called “internal improvements” – the government funded and subsidized “public works” projects to build, roads, canals, and railways, all which transferred taxpayers’ money into the hands of business interests interested in getting the government’s business rather than that of consumers in the marketplace.
It also manifested itself through trade protectionism meant to artificially foster “infant industries” behind high tariff walls. Selected businesses ran to the government insisting that they could never grow and prosper unless they were protected from foreign competition, at the expense, of course, of the consumers who would then have fewer choices at higher prices.
Today, it still includes public works projects, but also manipulation of investment patterns through fiscal policies designed to target “start-up” companies considered environmentally desirable or essential to “national security.” It also takes the form of pervasive economic regulation that controls and dictates methods of manufacturing, types and degrees of competition, and the associations and relationships that are permitted in the arena of commerce and exchange both domestically and in international trade.
In the misplaced use of the phrase “American free market capitalism” there is little that occurs in any corner of society that does not include the long arm of the highly interventionist state, and all with the intended purpose and resulting unintended consequences of political power being applied to benefit some at the expense of many others.
Perversely, the interventionist state in the evolution of historical capitalism has come to mean in too many people’s eyes the inescapable prerequisite for the maintenance of the market economy in the service of an ever-changing meaning of the “national interest.”
Central Banking as Monetary Central Planning
Whether in Europe or the United States, the application and practice of the principles of a free market economy were compromised from the start with the existence of monetary central planning in the form of central banking.
First seen as a device for assuring a steady flow of cheap money to finance the operations of government in excess of what those governments could extract from their subjects and citizens directly through taxation, monopolistic central banks were soon rationalized as the essential monetary institution for economic stability.
But the German economist, Gustav Stopler, clearly explained many decades ago in his book,This Age of Fable (1942), the government’s control of money undermines the very notion of a real free market economy:
“Hardly ever do the advocates of free capitalism realize how utterly their ideal was frustrated at the moment the state assumed control of the monetary system . . . A ‘free’ capitalism with governmental responsibility for money and credit has lost its innocence. From that point on it is no longer a matter of principle but one of expediency how far one wishes or permits governmental interference to go. Money control is the supreme and most comprehensive of all governmental controls short of expropriation.”
Once government controls the supply of money, it has the capacity to redistribute wealth, create inflations and cause economic depressions and recessions; distort the structure of relative prices and wages so they no longer reflect the values and choices of the buyers and sellers in the market; and generate misallocations of labor and capital throughout the economy that brings about imbalances of resource uses inconsistent with a market-based pattern of consumer demands for alternative goods and services.
Then, in the face of the market instabilities and distortions caused by the government’s mismanagement of the money supply and the banking system, the political authorities rationalize even more government intervention to “fix” the consequences of the boom-bust cycles their own earlier monetary central panning policies created.
The “Cruelty” of Capitalism and the Welfare State
The privileged classes of the pre-capitalist society hated the market. The individual was freed from subservience and obedience to the nobility, the aristocracy, and the landed interests.
For these privileged groups, a free market meant the loss of cheap labor, the disappearance of “proper respect” from their “inferiors,” and the economic uncertainty of changing market-generated circumstances.
For the socialists of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, capitalism was viewed as the source of exploitation and economic insecurity for “the working class” who were considered dependent for their livelihood upon the apparent whims of the “capitalist class.”
The welfare state became the “solution” to capitalism’s supposed cruelty, a solution that created a vast and bloated welfare bureaucracy, made tens of millions of people perpetual wards of a paternalistic state, and drained society of the idea that freedom meant self-responsibility and mutual help through voluntary association and human benevolence.
A “capitalist” system with a welfare state is no longer a free society. It penalizes the industrious and the productive for their very success by punishing them through taxes and other redistributive burdens under the rationale of the “victimhood” of others in society who are claimed to have not received their “fair” due.
It weakens and then threatens to destroy the spirit and the reality of individual accomplishment, and spreads a mentality of “entitlement” to what others have honestly produced. And it restores the fearful idea that the state should not be the protector of each citizens individual rights but the compulsory arbiter who determines through force what each one is considered to “rightfully” deserve.
Peaceful and harmonious free market competition in the pursuit of excellence and creative improvement is replaced by the coerced game of mutual political plunder as individuals and groups in society attempt to grab what others have through a redistributive system of government force.
Free Market Capitalism was Hampered and Distorted
The ideal and the principle of the free market economy, of capitalism rightly understood were never fulfilled. What is called “capitalism” today is a distorted, twisted and deformed system of increasingly limited market relationships, as well as market processes hampered and repressed by state controls and regulations.
And overlaying the entire system of interventionist “crony” capitalism are the ideologies of eighteenth century mercantilism, nineteenth century socialism and nationalism, and twentieth century paternalistic welfare statism.
In this warped development and evolution of “historical capitalism,” as Wilhelm Röpke called it, the institutions for a truly free-market economy have either been undermined or prevented from emerging.
As the same time, the principles and actual meaning of a free-market economy have become increasingly misunderstood and lost. But it is the principles and the meaning of a free-market economy that must be rediscovered if liberty is to be saved and the burden of “historical capitalism” is to be overcome.
The socialists and “progressives” twisted and stole the good and worthy concept of liberalism as a political philosophy of individual rights and freedom, respect and protection of honestly acquired private property, and peaceful and voluntary industry, production and trade. It was usurped and made into the “modern” notion of liberalism as paternalistic Big Bother government controlling every aspect of life in the name of the “social good.”
Restoring the Ideal of Free Market Capitalism
The word “capitalism” was used as a term of abuse by the socialists almost from the beginning. But it also meant a system of creative and productive enterprise and industry by free and self-guiding individuals, each pursuing their peaceful self-interests through honest work, saving, and investment. The “self-made” man of capitalism was an ideal and model for the youth of America. The man who was motivated by his own independent self-responsible vision, who built something, new, better, and greater as a reflection of the potential of the reasoning and acting human being who sets his mind to work.
His wealth, if successfully accumulated, was honorably earned in the marketplace of ideas and industry, not plundered and stolen by force and political power. No individual is robbed or exploited on the truly free market, since all trade is voluntary and no man could be forced into an exchange or association not to his liking and consent.
Free competition sees to it that everyone tends to receive and earn a wage that reflects the estimation of his productive worth to others in society. Each individual is free to improve his talents and abilities to make his services more valuable to others over time, and earn the commensurate higher wages from possessing more marketable skills.
Wealth accumulated enables investment and capital formation for the production of new, better and more goods and services wanted by the consuming public, the majority of whom are the very wage-earning workers employed in the production and manufacture of those goods under the market-determined guiding hands of successful businessmen and entrepreneurs.
Free Market capitalism makes the consumer “king” of the marketplace who determines whether businessmen earn profits or suffer losses, base on what they decide to buy and how much they are willing to pay.
It is free market capitalism that helps make each man and woman a “captain” of their own fate, with the freedom about what work and employment to pursue, and the liberty to spend the income they earn in their own personal, desiring way to live the life they value and want, and that gives meaning and purpose to their own life.
No person need put up with humiliation, abuse or disrespect from a bureaucrat or political official who has control over their fate through the power of government planning, regulation and redistribution.
Free market capitalism offers people opportunities and choices as consumers, workers and producers, with the liberty to change course whenever the benefits from doing so seem to outweigh the costs in the eyes of the individual.
Free market, or laissez-faire, capitalism makes this all possible because it rests on a deeper political philosophical foundation based on the idea and ideal of the right of the individual to his own life, to be lived as he desires and chooses, as long as he respects the equal right of others to do the same.
Free market capitalism insists that there is no higher “national interest” above the individual interests of the separate citizens of a free society. In a system of free market capitalism government should no more control money and the banking system than a limited government should control the production and sale of shoes, soap, or salami.
And free market capitalism calls for each individual’s peacefully earned property and income to be respected and protected from plunder and theft, and that includes any created rationale and attempted justification to rob Peter to redistribute to Paul through the coercive power of government.
The good name of “capitalism” has to be recaptured and restored, just as the good name and concept of “liberalism,” rightly understood, should be returned to the advocates of individual liberty and free enterprise.
But this task requires friends of freedom to explain and make clear to others that what we live under today is not “capitalism” as it could be, should be and properly really means.
The reality of that “historical capitalism,” about which Wilhelm Röpke spoke, is the “crony capitalism” that must be rejected and opposed so that free men may some day live under and benefit from the truly free market capitalism that is the only economic system consist with a society of human liberty.
Richard M. Ebeling is a professor of economics at Northwood University. He was formerly president of The Foundation for Economic Education (2003–2008), was the Ludwig von Mises Professor of Economics at Hillsdale College (1988–2003) in Hillsdale, Michigan, and served as vice president of academic affairs for The Future of Freedom Foundation (1989–2003).
Monday, 19 October 2009
It’s the old us-against-them again, Guv
A guest post from the pens of . .
“Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard.”
- H.L. Mencken
The ACC debacle shows again what happens when politics and business mix: something called group-eat-group. Every good government-created crisis needs a scapegoat – and having found this particular crisis this government has set one group up to take the rap.
With the economic crisis it’s executive salaries chosen to take the heat off the real perpetrators. With the ACC crisis, it’s bikers who’ve been set up as targets.
The bikers about to bear the enormous increase in road and rego fees are quite justifiably aggrieved; so are the rest of us…um, but you’d never know it would ya? Aside from the usual New Zealand way of “lay down and take it good and hard” whenever government decides we deserve it, there is a more sinister back issue at work here, the issue being how successfully governments are at setting people against each other. Let me explain what I mean.
First, since the government owns the monopoly shambles known as ACC, it therefore has no interest in providing a quality & affordable product. We can’t just reject their services and go elsewhere is if we don’t like what they’ve offered, I f we don’t like it, tough!
This being so, it gives the minister in charge at the time near absolute power to raise prices, reduce services, and have you and me foot the bill when the grey-ones of the bureaucracy mess things up – messing things up, on this occasion, the tune of 4 billion dollars. That’s a four with nine noughts after it (a long row of zeroes being a suitable symbol for the thinking involved here).
Now, in the interests of being seen to be fair, the minister will split the tab between everyone; but of course it’s never ‘fair’ is it? When a product and its price is set by government decree rather than a market’s voluntary supply/demand principle, there’s always a gain for one man at the expense of another. Governments like this. In fact, there’s nothing they like better than the chance to play one group off against another.
So emerging out of this particular mess we see the likes of the bikers getting themselves together to protest the unfairness of the new increased tax. The problem of course is that they are not opposed to government monopoly insurance cover, their grizzle is only that they have to pay what they consider is unfair. But if they had not been the ones so hard hit, and the tax increase had have been put on another group, then you’d not have heard a murmur from them.
Where were they when the truckers’ road user charges were peremptorily whacked up last year? First they came for the truckers, after which group was set upon group as they successfully picked off one at a time.
I expect they – i.e., the bikers, whose turn it is to get it in the neck – will mount a wee protest which will, as is normal for New Zealanders who work for a living, fizzle away in confusion as they lose hope, and everyone else forgets who really caused the mess and joins in bagging the selfish motorcyclists.
And in the unlikely event that they are successful to any degree, the government will simply shift accede to some of their demands (thus making themselves look like the heroes) and shift the cost to another group, or across all of us.
In a better world, one in which the bikers recognised the common cause and were the beginning of a principle-based protest against state profligacy, incompetence, & malfeasance - an “enough is enough” protest if you will - and we all got in behind them, and we stuck the course with them, then in a world like that the government would perhaps be forced to save itself by doing the right thing: which is winding up this government-created disgrace.
The battle, you see, is not us against each other, it’s us against them. It’s not against what is ‘unfair’ to one group or other, it is all of us against the nanny state! The battle, in other words, is one of principle.
Let’s get to it.
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