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- From: jmorriso@ee.ubc.ca (John Paul Morrison)
- Subject: The Morality of Capitalism
- Message-ID: <1993Jan28.073014.19845@ee.ubc.ca>
- Organization: University of BC, Electrical Engineering
- Date: Thu, 28 Jan 1993 07:30:14 GMT
- Lines: 590
-
-
- another interesting perspective. don't mind me, I'm just trying
- to gaurantee a minimum amount of CONTENT in this newsgroup.
- Eventually I may provoke some serious examination of Canadian economics.
-
-
- Moral Criticisms of the Market
-
- by Ken S. Ewert
-
- According to an author writing in a recent issue of The
- Nation magazine, "The religious Left is the only Left we've
- got." An overstatement? Perhaps. However, it points to an
- interesting fact, namely that while the opposition to free
- markets and less government control has declined in recent
- years among the "secular left," the political-economic views
- of the "Christian left" seem to remain stubbornly unchanged.
-
- Why is this so? Why are the secular critics of the
- market mellowing while the Christian critics are not?
-
- Perhaps one major reason is the different criteria by
- which these two ideological allies measure economic systems.
- The secular left, after more than half a century of failed
- experiments in anti-free market policies, has begrudgingly
- softened its hostility towards the market for predominantly
- pragmatic reasons. Within their camp the attitude seems to be
- that since it hasn't worked, let's get on with finding
- something that will. While this may be less than a heartfelt
- conversion to a philosophy of economic freedom, at least (for
- many) this recognition has meant taking a more sympathetic
- view of free markets.
-
- However, within the Christian camp the leftist
- intellectuals seem to be much less influenced by the
- demonstrated failure of state-directed economic policies.
- They remain unimpressed with arguments pointing out the
- efficiency and productivity of the free market, or statistics
- and examples showing the non-workability of traditional
- interventionist economic policies. Why? One likely reason is
- that the criteria by which these thinkers choose to measure
- capitalism are fundamentally moral in nature, so much so that
- socialism, despite its obvious shortcomings, is still
- preferred because of its perceived moral superiority. In
- their eyes, the justness and morality of an economic system
- are vastly more important than its efficiency.
-
- If indeed the Christian critics of the market are
- insisting that an economic system must be ultimately judged by
- moral standards, we should agree and applaud them for their
- principled position. They are asking a crucially important
- question: is the free market a moral economic system?
-
- Unfortunately, these thinkers have answered the question
- with a resounding "No!" They have examined the free market
- and found it morally wanting. Some of the most common reasons
- given for this indictment are that: the market is based on an
- ethic of selfishness and it fosters materialism; it atomizes
- and dehumanizes society by placing too much emphasis on the
- individual; and it gives rise to tyrannical economic powers
- which subsequently are used to oppress the weaker and more
- defenseless members of society.
-
- If these accusations are correct, the market is justly
- condemned. But have these critics correctly judged the
- morality of the free market? Let's re-examine their
- charges.
-
- I. Selfishness
-
- The market, it is suggested, is based on and encourages
- an ethic of selfishness. According to critics of the market,
- mere survival in this competitive economic system requires
- that we each must "look after Number One." Individuals are
- encouraged to focus on the profit motive to the exclusion of
- higher goals and as a result selfishness becomes almost a
- virtue. And this, it is noted, is in stark contrast with the
- self-sacrificial love taught by the Scriptures. Instead of
- rewarding love, compassion, and kindness towards others, the
- free market seems to reward self-orientation and self-
- indulgence. Instead of encouraging us to be concerned about
- our neighbor, the free market seems to encourage us to be
- concerned about ourselves. Individuals who might otherwise be
- benevolent, according to this view, are corrupted by the
- demands of an economic system that forces them to put
- themselves first. In the thinking of these critics, the
- market is the logical precursor to the "me generation."
-
- However, this charge is superficial and misleading in
- several respects. First, it is important to remember that
- while the free market does allow "self-directed" economic
- actions, it does not require "selfish" economic actions.
- There is an important distinction here. It should be obvious
- that all human action is self-directed. Each of us has been
- created with a mind, allowing us to set priorities and goals,
- and a will, which enables us to take steps to realize these
- goals. This is equally true for those who live in a market
- economy, and those who live under a politically directed
- economy. The difference between the two systems is not
- between self-directed action versus non-self-directed action,
- but rather between a peaceful pursuit of goals (through
- voluntary exchange in a free economy) versus a coercive
- pursuit of goals (through wealth transferred via the state in
- a "planned" economy). In other words, the only question is
- how will self-directed action manifest itself: will it take
- place through mutually beneficial economic exchanges, or
- through predatory political actions?
-
- Clearly the free market cannot be singled out and
- condemned for allowing self-directed actions to take place,
- since self-directed actions are an inescapable part of human
- life. But can it be condemned for giving rise to selfishness?
- In other words, does the free market engender an attitude of
- selfishness in individuals? If we define selfishness as a
- devotion to one's own advantage or welfare without regard for
- the welfare of others, it is incontestable that selfishness
- does exist in the free economy; many individuals act with only
- themselves ultimately in mind. And it is true, that according
- to the clear teaching of Scripture, selfishness is wrong.
-
- But we must bear in mind that although selfishness does
- exist in the free market, it also exists under other economic
- systems. Is the Soviet factory manager less selfish than the
- American capitalist? Is greed any less prevalent in the
- politically directed system which operates via perpetual
- bribes, theft from state enterprises, and political purges?
- There is no reason to think so. The reason for this is clear:
- selfishness is not an environmentally induced condition, i.e.,
- a moral disease caused by the economic system, but rather a
- result of man's fallen nature. It is out of the heart, as
- Christ said, that a man is defiled. Moral failure is not
- spawned by the environment.
-
- It is clear that not all self-directed action is
- necessarily selfish action. For example, when I enter the
- marketplace in order to earn wealth to feed, clothe, house,
- and provide education or medical care for my children, I am
- not acting selfishly. Likewise, if you or I want to extend
- charity to a needy neighbor or friend, we must first take
- "self-directed" action to create the wealth necessary to do
- so. Such action is hardly selfish.
-
- The point is this: the free market allows individuals to
- peacefully pursue their chosen goals and priorities, but it
- doesn't dictate or determine those priorities. It does not
- force an individual to focus on his own needs and desires, but
- leaves him or her at liberty to be self-centered or
- benevolent. My ultimate goal may be self-indulgence, or I may
- make a high priority of looking after others -- the choice is
- mine. As to which I should do, the market is silent. As an
- economic system, the market simply does not speak in favor of
- selfish or unselfish priorities.
-
- However, the free market, while not touching the heart of
- a man or eliminating selfishness, does in fact restrain
- selfishness. It channels self-centered desires into actions
- that are beneficial to others. This is so because in order to
- "get ahead" in the free economy, we must first please other
- people by producing something which is of use and value to
- them. In other words, the market disciplines each of us to
- look outwards and serve others. Only by doing so can we
- persuade them to give us what we want in exchange.
-
- We will return to this theme later, but for now the point
- is that in a very practical sense, the workings of the market
- persuade even the most self-indulgent among us to serve others
- and to be concerned about the needs and wants of his neighbor.
- True, the motivation for doing so is not necessarily pure or
- unselfish, but as the Bible so clearly teaches, it is only God
- who can change the hearts of men.
-
- Furthermore, the free market, because of the incredible
- wealth it allows to be created, enables each of us to
- practically live beyond ourselves. In order to tangibly love
- our neighbor (minister to his or her physical needs) we must
- first have the wealth to do so.
-
- We sometimes need to be reminded that wealth is not the
- natural state of affairs. Throughout most of history the
- majority of people lived under some sort of centrally
- controlled economic system and were forced to devote the
- mainstay of their energies to mere survival. Often all but
- the wealthiest individuals lacked the economic means to look
- much beyond themselves and aid others who were in need.
-
- But the productivity spawned by economic freedom has
- radically changed this. In a free market, we are not only
- able to choose unselfish values and priorities, but we are
- also able to create the wealth necessary to practically
- fulfill them.
-
- II. Materialism
-
- Another moral indictment of the market, closely related
- to the charge of selfishness, is the belief that the market
- fosters materialism. The example most often used to
- demonstrate the market's guilt in this area is the perceived
- evil effects of advertising. It is contended that advertising
- creates a sort of "lust" in the heart of a consumer by
- persuading him or her that mere material possessions will
- bring joy and fulfillment. In this sense, the market is
- condemned for creating a spirit of materialism and fostering
- an ethic of acquisitiveness. The market in general, and
- advertising specifically, is a persistent temptress
- encouraging each of us to concentrate on the lowest level of
- life, mere material goods.
-
- This charge can be answered in much the same manner as
- the charge of selfishness. Just as allowing free exchange
- doesn't require selfishness, neither does it require
- materialism. It is true that when people are economically
- free, materialism is possible, and certainly there are
- materialistic people in market economies. But this hardly
- warrants a condemnation of the market. Materialism, like
- selfishness, can and will occur under any economic system. It
- is obvious that a desire for material goods is far from being
- unique to capitalism. Witness, for example, the response of
- shoppers as a store puts out a new rack of genuine cotton
- shirts in Moscow, or a shipment of fresh meat arrives in a
- Krakow shop.
-
- Although the role of advertising has been much maligned,
- it in fact provides a vital service to consumers. Advertising
- conveys information. It tells the consumer what products are
- available, how these products can meet his or her needs, and
- what important differences exist among competing products.
- The fact that this is a valuable function becomes apparent if
- you imagine trying to buy a used car in a world without
- advertising. Either your choice of cars would be severely
- limited (to those cars you happen to stumble upon, i.e. gain
- knowledge of) or you would have to pay more (in the form of
- time and resources used in seeking out and comparing cars).
- In either case, without the "free" knowledge provided by
- advertising, you would be much worse off.
-
- But the economic role of advertising aside, does
- advertising actually "create" a desire for goods? If it does,
- why do businesses in market-oriented economies spend billions
- of dollars each year on consumer research, to find out what
- customers want? Why do some advertised products not sell (for
- example, the Edsel), or cease to sell well (for example the
- hoola hoop)? In the market economy consumers are the ultimate
- sovereigns of production. Their wants and priorities dictate
- what is produced; what is produced doesn't determine their
- wants and priorities. Many bankrupt businessmen, left with
- unsalable (at a profitable price) products wistfully wish that
- the reverse were true.
-
- Moreover, the Bible consistently rejects any attempt by
- man to ascribe his sinful tendencies to his environment. If I
- am filled with avarice when I see an advertisement for a new
- Mercedes, I cannot place the blame on the advertisement.
- Rather I must recognize that I am responsible for my thoughts
- and desires, and that the problem lies within myself. After
- all, I could feel equally acquisitive if I just saw the
- Mercedes on the street rather than in an advertisement. Is it
- wrong for the owner of the Mercedes to incite my desires by
- driving his car where I might see it? Hardly.
-
- Just as God did not allow Adam to blame Satan (the
- advertiser -- and a blatantly false advertiser at that) or the
- fruit (the appealing material good) for his sin in the Garden,
- we cannot lay the blame for materialism on the free market or
- on advertising. The materialist's problem is the sin within
- his heart, not his environment.
-
- If we follow the environmental explanation of materialism
- to its logical conclusion, the only solution would appear to
- be doing away with all wealth (i.e. eliminate all possible
- temptation). If this were the appropriate solution to the
- moral problem of materialism, perhaps the moral high ground
- must be conceded to the state-run economies of the world after
- all. They have been overwhelmingly successful at destroying
- wealth and wealth-creating capital!
-
- III. Impersonalism and Individualism
-
- Another common criticism of the market economy is its
- supposed tendency towards impersonalism and what some have
- called "individualistic anarchy." According to many Christian
- critics, the market encourages self-centered behavior and
- discourages relational ties in society. The non-personal
- market allocation of goods and services is seen to be
- antithetical to the seemingly higher and more noble goal of a
- loving and interdependent community. Because of the economic
- independence that the market affords, the individual is cut
- off from meaningful relationships with his fellow human beings
- and divorced from any larger purpose than his own interests.
- In short, the free market is accused of breeding a pathetic
- and inhumane isolationism.
-
- But does the market encourage impersonal behavior?
- Certainly not. It is important to understand that the
- presence of economic freedom does not require that all
- transactions and relationships take place on an impersonal
- level. For example, many people have good friendships with
- their customers, suppliers, employees, or employers. While
- these relationships are economic, they are not merely economic
- and they are not impersonal.
-
- Furthermore, while the market leaves us free to deal with
- other people solely on the basis of economic motives, we are
- not required nor even necessarily encouraged to do so. We are
- completely free to deal on a non-economic basis. Suppose that
- I am in the business of selling food, and I find that someone
- is so poor that he or she has nothing to trade for the food
- that I am offering for sale. In the free market I am
- completely free to act apart from economic motives and make a
- charitable gift of the food. I have in no way lost my ability
- to act in a personal and non-economic way.
-
- So the market is not an inherently impersonal economic
- system. Nor is it hostile to the formation of community
- relationships.
-
- An excellent example of a community which exists within
- the market system is the family. Obviously I deal with my
- wife and children in a non-market manner. I give them food,
- shelter, clothing, etc., and I certainly don't expect any
- economic gain in return. I do so joyfully, because I love my
- family and I value my relationship with them far above the
- economic benefits I forgo. Another example is the church. I
- have a non-economic and very personal relationship with people
- in my church. And there are countless teams, clubs,
- organizations, and associations which I can join, if I choose.
- If I want, I can even become part of a commune. The market
- economy doesn't stand in the way of, or discourage, any of
- these expressions of community.
-
- But now we come to the heart of this objection against
- the market: what if people will not voluntarily choose to
- relate to each other in personal or community-type
- relationships? What if they choose not to look beyond their
- own interests and work for some purpose larger than
- themselves? The answer to this is the rather obvious
- question: who should decide what is the appropriate degree of
- relationship and community?
-
- True community, I submit, is something which must be
- consensual, meaning it must be voluntarily established. Think
- of a marriage or a church. If people do not choose to enter
- into these relationships when they are free to do so, we may
- judge their action to be a mistake, but by what standard can
- we try to coerce them into such relationships? Even if there
- were some objective standard of "optimum community," it is not
- at all clear that we could create it by robbing people of
- their economic freedom. There is no reason to believe that
- individuals living under a system of economic "planning" are
- less isolated or have more community by virtue of their
- system. The fact that individuals are forced into a
- collective group hardly means that a loving and caring
- community will result. Love and care are things which cannot
- be coercively extracted, but must be freely given.
-
- Moreover, the free market actually encourages the
- formation and maintenance of the most basic human community --
- the family. As the utopian socialists of past centuries --
- including Marx and Engels -- recognized, there is a vital
- connection between private property and the integrity of the
- family. Destroy the one, they reasoned, and the other will
- soon disintegrate.
-
- Their motives were suspect but their analysis was
- correct. When the state fails to protect private property and
- instead takes over the functions traditionally provided by the
- family (such as education, day care, health care, sickness and
- old-age support), the family unit is inevitably weakened.
- Family bonds are undermined as the economic resources which
- formerly allowed the family to "care for its own" are
- transferred to the state. There is little doubt that the
- disintegration of the family in our country is in large part
- due to state intervention. Instead of turning towards and
- receiving personal care from within the family, individuals
- have been encouraged to turn towards the impersonal state.
- The result has been the disintegration of family bonds. It is
- state economic intervention -- not the free market system --
- which is inherently impersonal and antithetical to true human
- community.
-
- IV. Economic Power
-
- The objection to the market on the grounds of
- impersonalism is based on the same fallacy as were the
- previously discussed charges of selfishness and materialism.
- Each of these claims indicts the market for ills which in fact
- are common to all mankind -- faults that would exist under any
- economic system. Impersonalism, selfishness, and materialism
- are the consequence of the fall of man, not the fruit of an
- economic system which allows freedom. If these sinful
- tendencies are an inescapable reality, the question that must
- be asked is: "What economic system best restrains sin?"
-
- This brings us to a fourth moral objection to the market
- which is often espoused by the Christians of the left: that
- the market, which is often pictured as a "dog-eat-dog" or
- "survival of the fittest" system, leaves men free to oppress
- each other. It allows the economically powerful to
- arbitrarily oppress the economically weak, the wealthy to
- tread upon and exploit the poor. According to this view,
- wealth is power and those with wealth will not necessarily use
- their power wisely and justly. Because the nature of man is
- what it is, this "economic power" must be checked by the state
- and restrained for the public good.
-
- But does the market in fact allow individuals to exploit
- others? To begin with, there is a great deal of
- misunderstanding about this thing called "economic power."
- The term is in fact somewhat of a misnomer. When we speak of
- power, we normally refer to the ability to force or coerce
- something or someone to do what we desire. The motor in your
- car has the power to move the car down the road; this is
- mechanical power. The police officer has the power to arrest
- and jail a lawbreaker; this is civil power. But what of
- economic power? If I possess a great deal of wealth, what
- unique ability does this wealth confer?
-
- In reality what the critics of the market call economic
- power is only the ability to please others, and thus "economic
- power" is not power in the true sense of the word. Regardless
- of a person's wealth, in the free market he can get what he
- wants only by pleasing another person through offering
- something which the other deems more valuable. Wealth
- (assuming it is not used to buy political power) doesn't
- bestow the ability to apply force to, or domineer over,
- another individual.
-
- Take for example the employer of labor, an individual who
- is often considered to be the embodiment of economic power and
- an exploiter of those less powerful than himself. It is often
- forgotten that an employer can get what he wants -- employees
- for his business -- only by offering something which pleases
- them, namely a wage which they consider better than not
- working, or better than working for someone else. He has no
- power to force them to come and work for him, but only the
- power to offer them a better alternative.
-
- What ensures that he will want to make them a pleasing
- offer? The fact that doing so is the only way to get what he
- is interested in, namely their labor, provides a very strong
- incentive. But suppose the prospective employee is in very
- desperate straits and almost any wage, even one which seems
- pitifully low, will please him enough to work for the
- employer. In this situation, it seems as if the employer can
- get away with paying "slave wages" and exploiting the
- economically weaker employee.
-
- This scenario, however, ignores the effects of the
- competition among employers for employees. In the market
- economy, employers are in constant competition with other
- employers for the services of employees. They are
- "disciplined" by this competition to offer top wages to
- attract workers. Because of competition, wages are "bid up"
- to the level at which the last employee hired will be paid a
- wage which is very nearly equivalent to the value of what he
- produces. As long as wages are less than this level, it pays
- an employer to hire another employee, since doing so will add
- to his profits. Economists call this the marginal
- productivity theory of wages.
-
- But what if there were no competing employers? For
- example, what about a "one-company town"? Without
- competition, wouldn't the employer be able to exploit the
- employees and pay "unfair" wages?
-
- First of all, it is important to remember that in the
- free market, an economic exchange occurs only because the two
- trading parties believe that they will be better off after the
- exchange. In other words, all exchanges are "positive sum" in
- that both parties benefit. Thus if an employee in this one-
- company town is willing to work for low wages, it is only
- because he or she places a higher value on remaining in the
- town and working for a lower wage than moving to another place
- and finding a higher paying job. The "power" that the
- employer wields is still only the ability to offer a superior
- alternative to the employee. In choosing to remain and work
- for a lower wage, the employee is likely considering other
- costs such as those of relocating, finding another job,
- retraining, as well as non-monetary costs, such as the
- sacrifice of local friendships or the sacrifice of leaving a
- beautiful and pleasant town.
-
- Moreover, this situation cannot last for long. If the
- employer can pay wages that are significantly lower than
- elsewhere, he will reap above-average profits and this in turn
- will attract other employers to move in and take advantage of
- the "cheap labor." In so doing, these new employers become
- competitors for employees. They must offer higher wages in
- order to persuade employees to come and work for them, and as
- a result wages eventually will be bid up to the level
- prevailing elsewhere.
-
- What is true for the employer in relation to the employee
- is true for all economic relationships in the free market.
- Each individual, though he may be a tyrant at heart, can
- succeed only by first benefiting others -- by providing them
- with an economic service. Regardless of the amount of wealth
- he possesses, he is never freed from this requirement.
- Economic "power" is only the economic ability to please and as
- such it is not something to be feared. Far from allowing
- men to oppress each other, the free market takes this sinful
- drive for power and channels it into tangible service for
- others.
-
- It is also important to consider that the only
- alternative to the free market is the political direction of
- economic exchanges. As the Public Choice theorists have so
- convincingly pointed out in recent years, there is no good
- reason to suppose that people become less self-interested when
- they enter the political sphere. In other words, to
- paraphrase Paul Craig Roberts, there is not necessarily a
- "Saul to Paul conversion" when an individual enters
- government. If he was power-hungry while he was a private-
- market participant, he likely will be power-hungry after he
- becomes a "public servant."
-
- But there is an important difference. In contrast with
- economic power, political power is truly something to be
- feared because of its coercive aspect. The power-seeking
- individual in government has power in the true sense of the
- word. While in the market he has to please those he deals
- with in order to be economically successful, the same is not
- true, or is true to a far lesser degree, in the political
- sphere. In the political sphere he can actually abuse one
- group of people but still succeed by gaining the favor of
- other groups of people.
-
- A classic example is a tariff. This economic
- intervention benefits a small group of producers (and those
- who work for or sell to the producers) at the expense of
- consumers who have to pay higher prices for the good in
- question. The politician gains in power (and perhaps wealth)
- because of the significant support he can receive from the
- small but well-organized group of producers. Other examples
- of the use of political power to clearly benefit some
- individuals at the expense of others are government bail-outs,
- subsidies, price supports, and licensing monopolies. The fact
- that these types of legislation continue despite the fact that
- they harm people (usually the least wealthy and most poorly
- organized) demonstrates the tendency of mankind to abuse
- political power.
-
- In fact, virtually every state intervention into the
- economy is for the purpose of benefiting one party at the
- expense of another. In each of the cases mentioned above,
- some are exploited by others via the medium of the state.
- Therefore, if we are concerned about the powerful oppressing
- the weak, we should focus our attention on the abuse of
- political power. It, and not the so-called "economic power"
- of individuals acting within the free market, is the true
- source of tyranny and oppression. Our concern for the
- downtrodden should not lead us to denigrate economic freedom
- but rather to restrain the sphere of civil authority.
-
- V. Conclusion
-
- The free market is innocent of the charges leveled at it
- by its Christian critics. Its alleged moral shortcomings turn
- out to be things which are common to mankind under both free
- and command economic systems. While it is true that the free
- market restrains human sin, it makes no pretense of purging
- people of their selfishness, materialism, individualism, and
- drive for power. And this, perhaps, is the true sin in the
- eyes of the market's critics.
-
- The market is explicitly non-utopian. It doesn't promise
- to recreate man in a new and more perfect state, but rather it
- acknowledges the moral reality of man and works to restrain
- the outward manifestations of sin. In this sense the free
- market is in complete accord with Biblical teachings.
- According to Scripture, man cannot be morally changed through
- any human system, be it religious, political, or economic, but
- moral regeneration comes solely through the grace of God.
-
- If the Christian critics of the market expect an economic
- system to change the moral character of people, they are sadly
- mistaken. Such a task is clearly beyond the ability of any
- human institution or authority. We must be content to
- restrain the outward expression of sin, and this is something
- which the free market does admirably.
-
- [ by Ken S. Ewert ]
-
-
- --
- __________________________________________________________________________
- John Paul Morrison |
- University of British Columbia, Canada |
- Electrical Engineering | .sig file without a cause
- jmorriso@ee.ubc.ca VE7JPM |
- ________________________________________|_________________________________
-