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FEATURE ARTICLE |
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TGIF: Government Undermines Social Cooperation
Sheldon Richman Date: 0000-00-00 Subject: Communities I should know better than to take seriously the insipid words of
presidential speechwriters, especially those who composed an inaugural
address. Still, I can’t let some of the words President Obama read at
Monday’s inauguration pass without comment. For example, Obama said this: Preserving our individual freedoms ultimately requires
collective action. For the American people can no more meet the demands
of today’s world by acting alone than American soldiers could have met
the forces of fascism or communism with muskets and militias. No single
person can train all the math and science teachers we’ll need to equip
our children for the future, or build the roads and networks and
research labs that will bring new jobs and businesses to our shores.
Now, more than ever, we must do these things together, as one nation,
and one people. What’s left out? The “collective action” of voluntary civil society,
which includes the market as well as all peaceful noncommercial
activities (such as mutual-aid associations). To listen to Obama, you’d
never know there was community life apart from the state, which, let us
never forget, is founded on the power to inflict force on nonaggressors.
(The power to tax " the appropriation of private property under threat
of violence " is the fundamental power without which no government power
can exist.) Politicians say such things hoping the average person is too dulled
by the government’s schools and the slavish news media to notice the
missing piece. The liberal (libertarian) vision of the free society
never posited the isolated individual as the source of progress. Not
wanting Indeed, Mises’s chapter eight, “Human Cooperation,” begins, Society is concerted action, cooperation.… The total
complex of mutual relations created by such concerted actions is called
society. It substitutes collaboration for the " at least conceivable "
isolated life of individuals. Society is division of labor and
combination of labor. In his capacity as an acting animal man becomes a
social animal. Mises of course was a hard-core advocate of laissez-faire. Government
would have barely been noticeable in his ideal society. The thought of
raising living standards through individual isolation would have struck
him as absurd. Human beings progress through cooperation and only
through cooperation. He explicitly broadened David Ricardo’s law of
comparative advantage and dubbed it the “law of association.”
The principle explains not only why free trade benefits all
participating countries, but also why individuals do better by working
together than by acting alone: The law of association makes us comprehend the tendencies
which resulted in the progressive intensification of human cooperation.
We conceive what incentive induced people not to consider themselves
simply as rivals in a struggle for the appropriation of the limited
supply of means of subsistence made available by nature. We realize what
has impelled them and permanently impels them to consort with one
another for the sake of cooperation. Every step forward on the way to a
more developed mode of the division of labor serves the interests of all
participants. In order to comprehend why man did not remain solitary,
searching like the animals for food and shelter for himself only and at
most also for his consort and his helpless infants, we do not need to
have recourse to a miraculous interference of the Deity or to the empty
hypostasis of an innate urge toward association. Neither are we forced
to assume that the isolated individuals or primitive hordes one day
pledged themselves by a contract to establish social bonds. The factor
that brought about primitive society and daily works toward its
progressive intensification is human action that is animated by the
insight into the higher productivity of labor achieved under the
division of labor. For the record, Mises acknowledged that “Ricardo was fully aware of
the fact that his law of comparative cost [or advantage] … is a
particular instance of the more universal law of association.” One of the stalwarts of the liberal tradition, Frédéric Bastiat, made
quite a big deal of this point in the opening chapter of his economics
treatise, Economic Harmonies (1850). Noting the average person’s access to a vast array of goods in mid-19th-century France, Bastiat observed, It is impossible not to be struck by the disproportion,
truly incommensurable, that exists between the satisfactions this man
derives from society and the satisfactions that he could provide for himself if he were reduced to his own resources. I make bold to say that in one day he consumes more things than he could produce himself in ten centuries. [Emphasis added.] What makes the phenomenon stranger still is that the same thing holds
true for all other men. Every one of the members of society has
consumed a million times more than he could have produced; yet no one
has robbed anyone else. Like all advocates of individual liberty, Bastiat understood that the choice is not between isolated action and government social engineering. So when Obama says “the American people [cannot] meet the demands of
today’s world by acting alone,” he attacks a straw man. Who proposes
such a thing? Note the ambiguity in the sentence. By “acting alone,”
does he mean individuals acting in isolation with no division of labor
in the market? Or does he mean people acting cooperatively, by consent,
and without government involvement? If the second, then he is simply
wrong. People acting cooperatively through the market can indeed “meet
the demands of today’s world.” The clumsy bureaucracy and the “private
sector” cronies it serves need only leave us alone. But Obama apparently means individuals literally acting alone,
because he immediately says, “No single person can train all the math
and science teachers we’ll need to equip our children for the future, or
build the roads and networks and research labs that will bring new jobs
and businesses to our shores.” Who writes this nonsense? Who thinks that a “single person” could do
any of those things? Does Obama (or his speechwriters) even know what
opponents of government social engineering stand for? They must think
they can distract people from the libertarian alternative with a false
picture of the choice we face. Get people to think the choice is between
government social engineering and literal individual self-sufficiency,
and the libertarian ideal of voluntary social cooperation through the
freed market will present no threat to the privilege-laden status quo. |