Free Market Capitalism is an oxymoron...

User offline. Last seen 13 years 15 weeks ago.
HOO-HAA
Number 553
Conspirator for: 15 years 6 weeks
Posted on: August 2, 2010 - 3:33am

Excellent article by Mr Kevin Carson:

From: Center for a Stateless Society (http://c4ss.org/content/3202)

"Free Market Capitalism" is an Oxymoron

Posted by Kevin Carson on Jul 17, 2010 in Commentary31 comments

It's pretty much standard for the chattering classes - both liberal and conservative - to refer to something called "our free market system," also known as "free market capitalism."  To the extent that the right-wingers at Fox and CNBC or on the editorial page of the Wall Street Journal advocate some purer form of "free markets" in contrast to the existing economy, what they mean is essentially the present model of corporate capitalism without the regulatory or welfare state.

But the form taken by the existing capitalist system that we live under owes precious little to free markets.  From its beginnings in the late Middle Ages, it has been shaped by massive and ceaseless intervention and enforcement of privilege - much of it breathtakingly brutal - by the state.  To adapt a phrase from Orwell, the past has been a boot stamping on a human face.

The state played a central role in creating the defining characteristic of capitalism as we know it:  the wage system.  Had free markets been allowed to develop peacefully, with the peasant majorities remaining in control of their land and with free access to the means of subsistence, labor markets would likely have taken a much different form.  Employers would have had to compete with the possibility of self-employment, available to the vast majority of the population.  But thanks to Enclosures and similar land expropriations over a period of several centuries, the majority of the population was turned into a landless proletariat totally dependant on wage labor for its subsistence.

As if this weren't enough, the British state imposed totalitarian social controls on the working class in the early days of the Industrial Revolution to reduce the bargaining power of labor.  The Laws of Settlement, for example, acted as a sort of internal passport system, forbidding workers to leave their parish of birth in search of better terms of employment without permission.  The Poor Law authorities then came to the rescue of employers in the underpopulated industrial North, by auctioning off laborers - cheaply - from the parish workhouses of London.

Over a period of several centuries the European powers brought most of the Earth under their subjection and imposed similar land expropriations and social controls on the peoples of the Third World, and looted the mineral resources and raw materials of most of the world.

A wide range of thinkers, from the free market anarchist Lysander Spooner to the Marxist Immanuel Wallerstein, have pointed out historic capitalism's continuities with feudalism.  Capitalism, as a historic system of political economy, was really just an outgrowth of feudalism with markets grafted in and allowed to operate in the interstices to a limited extent.

The state also played a central role in the rise of corporate capitalism from the late 19th century on.  The railroad land grants created a single national market in the U.S., externalizing the costs of long-distance distribution on the taxpayer, and led to industrial firms and markets far larger than would otherwise have existed.  Patent law and assorted regulations passed during the Progressive Era served to cartelize markets under the control of a handful of oligopoly firms.

In the twentieth century, the state played a growing role in absorbing the surplus output of overbuilt industry or guaranteeing an overseas market for it.  The leading industrial sectors were state creations:  the automobile-highway complex, civil aviation, the miliitary-industrial complex and outgrowths like miniaturized electronics and industrial automation.

The neoliberal economy of the past twenty years is overwhelmingly dependent on the draconian enforcement of "intellectual property" law.  The dominant sectors in the corporate global economy - software, entertainment, biotech, pharma, agribusiness, electronics - are all almost entirely dependent for their profits either on "intellectual property" or direct subsidies from the state.  The central function of the U.S. national security state since WWII has been to make the world safe for corporate power through the overthrow of unfriendly governments.

Both the statist right and the statist left, for their own reasons, equate the "free market" to corporate capitalism, and promote the myth that corporate capitalism as we know it is what would naturally have emerged from a free market absent state intervention to prevent it.  The statist right want to defend the legitimacy of big business, and the statist left want to make you think you need them to defend you against big business.

But the exact opposite is true.  Big business has been a creature of the state from the beginning.  And genuinely free markets would operate as dynamite at the foundations of corporate power.

And that's exactly what those of us on the free market left want to do.

__________________


User offline. Last seen 11 years 45 weeks ago.
That Guy
Number 663
Conspirator for: 14 years 16 weeks
Posted on: August 27, 2010 - 10:21am #1

That is an interesting article.  I am curious how this utopian free market would have formed.  In the absence of any rules or referees people (especially the bad actors) would resort to might makes right.  I think that is exactly what we live under now.  You started with a relatively clean slate at some point.  People used might to gain resources which enabled more might for more resources.  At some point they needed collaborators to help manage the system and corporations were born that worked with government in a symbiotic relationship.  They are entertwined and work together.  That is why I am of the opinion that a free market absent an external referee will just devolve to might makes right and you will have some sort of government/corporate entitly over time.  What I see now with globalization and the focus on corporate mobility that is not tied to a nation is a more dystopian future.  Perhaps we will have a Tyrell corporation running the show.

__________________

"To befoul the unholy alliance between corrupt business and corrupt politics is the first task of the statesmanship of the day."
-- President Theodore Roosevelt


User offline. Last seen 11 years 49 weeks ago.
Copernicus
Number 636
Conspirator for: 14 years 27 weeks
Posted on: September 23, 2010 - 12:42am #2

Okay, it kind of sucks, I haven't got a reply button for the original post, so I'm sticking myself in here.

Hoo-Haa, I don't disagree with much of what is argued. I do think it's a mistake to confuse big with bad (as much as the phrase does roll off the tongue). I would have no problem with a monopoly in a market provided there was free entry into that market and poor service could be challenged by new producers. Surely I don't have to recite all the monopolies and oligopolies that have been overturned in the marketplace the last century or so. Indeed, as long as they're serving their customers, big can be very valuable, for economies of scale and wholesale purchasing power of inputs. Admittedly, with time, big tends to lead to slow and rigid, but, as long as there's free entry, that will be taken care of.

I certainly do not disagree though that a very great deal of theft took place in the early accumulation phase of capitalism. The question is what to do about it. I've always been a bit unclear about Rothbard's position on this. It seems like he wants some kind of reparations, returning of property to the surviving heirs of those robbed. This, though, is an immensely complicated and costly task, working out all kinds of nuance. Who is going to pay for it and who is going to be the final arbitrator of whom gets what? This always sounds to me like Rothbard is going to actually need the very state he starts off wanting to get rid of.

I understand his objection to having state sanctioned property rights accepted at face value as problematic. I just don't think his solution is possible or even desirable. Instead, i think a better (not perfect) solution is squatter homesteading. If someone is actually using their property, the owners will know, soon enough, someone is squatting on it. It will then be their responsbility to defend their property. If they aren't using it, not, as Locke would say, mixing their labour with nature, then they don't actually own it. And, given enough time, squatters will have a homesteading claim. I understand that "given enough time" is vague. I don't claim to have all the answers. I do believe though that they lie in this direction.

B.C.iing you

Copernicus

 

 


User offline. Last seen 13 years 20 weeks ago.
Citizen X
Number 519
Citizen X's picture
Conspirator for: 15 years 17 weeks
Posted on: September 1, 2010 - 4:49am #3

@ That Guy,

Absolutely. Human interaction need rules by which to abide. Who do you think should make and enforce those rules? How are the rules enforced? What gives the entity who makes and enforces the rules the legal and moral authority to engage in this activity? Thanks.

__________________

The great non sequitur committed by defenders of the State, including classical Aristotelian and Thomist philosophers, is to leap from the necessity of society to the necessity of the State.--Murray N. Rothbard


User offline. Last seen 10 years 10 weeks ago.
LysanderSpooner
Number 234
Conspirator for: 16 years 17 weeks
Posted on: September 3, 2010 - 5:05pm #4

I haven't read the article but I found Joe Sobran's discussion on the misuse of the English language interesting.   In particular he discusses the misuse of oxymoron.

 

 

http://www.fgfbooks.com/Sobran-Joe/Sobran080904.html

__________________

Liberty lies in the hearts of men and women; when it dies there, no constitution, no law, no court can save it

Learned Hand

In the past men created witches: now they create mental patients.
Thomas Szasz

Relinquish liberty for the purposes of defense in an emergency?
Why? It would seem that in an emergency, of all times, one needs
his greatest strength. So if liberty is strength and slavery is weakness,
liberty is a necessity rather than a luxury, and we can ill afford
to be without it—least of all during an emergency.

F.A. Harper


User offline. Last seen 13 years 32 weeks ago.
Ron_Rutherford
Number 667
Ron_Rutherford's picture
Conspirator for: 14 years 15 weeks
Posted on: September 4, 2010 - 11:14pm #5

Well that was a bunch of Poo.

The last sentence explains it all to me...

And that’s exactly what those of us on the free market left want to do.

 

Basically it was more of the mindless dribble from the left that people like Polyvomit spews endlessly without a bit of logical thought.

 

Sorry.


User offline. Last seen 11 years 45 weeks ago.
That Guy
Number 663
Conspirator for: 14 years 16 weeks
Posted on: September 21, 2010 - 10:49pm #6

Well, I think that once you reach a critical mass of people some form of state will evolve.  That state can have many forms, but it is a state and the members in it will be forced to abide by it's rules.  I don't think there is a way around it.  The Libertarian Enforcement Theory is a good reason why a state will form.  If you do not have a state then might will make right.  Look at Somolia for a good example of a stateless anarchist society.  It is all free market, no rules, you are on your own and you have to be the toughest S.O.B to thrive.  That is, unfortuneatly, the result of a stateless society I fear.


User offline. Last seen 9 years 22 weeks ago.
FUR3jr
Number 468
FUR3jr's picture
Conspirator for: 15 years 29 weeks
Posted on: October 11, 2010 - 12:05am #7

@that guy

I don't really know all that much about Somaliland.  What I do know is that it is largely a society based on connections.  Basically family or clan connections.  If one has family connections, then one can do fairly well there without fear of gangland attack.  There are a number of interesting articles by Jim Davidson's book "Being Sovereign" which are definitely worth reading.  One of the most fascinating ones that I read was about Somaliland.


User offline. Last seen 13 years 20 weeks ago.
Citizen X
Number 519
Citizen X's picture
Conspirator for: 15 years 17 weeks
Posted on: September 22, 2010 - 7:04pm #8

I don't think Somalia was exactly a great place to live when there was a "functioning" government as, like many third world governments, it was mostly a kleptocracy.  Here's a bit of a different take

States normally do not emerge organtically, but are the result of a military take-over.  That was the case to some extent here in the U.S.  I understand your concerns about rival gangs fighting for power, but it seems to me what we have with a centralized state is one big gang with a monopoly.


User offline. Last seen 12 years 6 weeks ago.
Jackie Fiest
Number 727
Jackie Fiest's picture
Conspirator for: 13 years 34 weeks
Posted on: September 22, 2010 - 7:20pm #9

"kleptocracy"

Haha! I like that. Sounds about like the US to me.

__________________

--
Jackie Fiest


User offline. Last seen 9 years 22 weeks ago.
FUR3jr
Number 468
FUR3jr's picture
Conspirator for: 15 years 29 weeks
Posted on: October 11, 2010 - 12:08am #10

Kelptocracy is also what some greeks call "their" government.