Sunday, November 18, 2018

The Social Characteristics of Capitalism


In my last post, I mentioned that intellectuals are most likely to hold a Marxist world view and espouse Socialism as the ideal economic system.  Marx lived and wrote at the time when the dominant economic theory of Mercantilism was being replaced by a new theory that came to be called Capitalism.

In the world of Mercantilist economics, the entire wealth of the world was viewed as fixed.  Therefore, if one person or nation became wealthier, the increase had to come from someone else's becoming poorer.  The size of the economic pie was finite.  Economics was a zero sum game.  

In societies based on rank, status or caste, such as Europe through the mid-19th century, India, and some parts of Africa today, a person’s station in life is fixed.  He or she is born into a certain station and his position in society is rigidly determined by the laws and customs which assign each person either privileges and duties or disabilities.  Exceptionally good luck, such as saving the King’s life, may in rare cases raise someone into a higher rank.  Very bad luck, like getting caught stealing from a prominent person, can result in a person’s losing their status and being assigned to an even lower class.  But, as a rule, the conditions of the individual members of a definite rank or class can only improve or decline with a change in the conditions of the whole class.

In such societies, the individual is, primarily, not a citizen of a nation.  He/she is a member of his or her class or estate.  In coming into contact with a countryman belonging to another rank, there is no sense of community.  There is only the gulf that separates one from the other person’s status.

In Europe during the late Middle Ages, the diversity between classes was reflected not only in language, but also in dress.  The aristocrats spoke French.  The lower classes clung to their own native language, broken into local dialects, which the upper classes couldn’t even understand.  The various ranks also dressed differently.  No one could fail to recognize the rank of a stranger.

The main criticism leveled against the 18th century principle of  equality under the law was that it abolished the privileges of rank and dignity.  It has, said the critics, atomized society, dissolving the natural subdivisions into faceless masses.  These masses are now supreme, and their materialism, their desire for creature comforts, has superseded the respectable standards of days gone by.  Now, money is king.  Quite worthless people enjoy riches, while the meritorious and worthy go empty-handed.

This criticism implies that, under the old ways, the aristocrats were distinguished by their superior virtue and that they owed their rank and their revenues to their moral and cultural superiority.  While the progressive foes of Capitalism disagree with regard to to this evaluation of the old standards, they fully agree with condemning the standards of Capitalistic society.  As they see it, those who acquire wealth and prestige are not those who deserve well from their fellow citizens, but frivolous, unworthy people.  

Now, nobody ever contended that under free-market Capitalism, those who do best are those who ought to be preferred.  What the democracy of the market brings about is not rewarding people according to their true merits, their inherent morality or worth.  What makes a person more or less wealthy is not the evaluation of his contribution from any absolute principle of justice or fairness, but an evaluation on the part of his fellow men, who apply the yardstick of their own personal wants and desires.  This is what the democracy of the market means.  The consumer is king.  The consumer wants to be satisfied.

Millions of people like to drink Pepsi.  Millions like detective stories, mystery movies, tabloid newspapers, football, whiskey, cigarettes, chewing gum, etc.  The entrepreneurs who provide these things in the best and cheapest way succeed in getting rich.  What counts in the frame of the market is not academic or moralistic judgments of value, but the valuation actually manifested by people in buying or not buying.

To the grumbler who complains about the unfairness of the market system only one piece of advice can be given.  If you want to acquire wealth, then try to satisfy the public by offering them something that is cheaper or which they like better.  Try to supersede Pepsi by mixing another beverage.  Equality under the law gives you the power to challenge every millionaire.  In a market not sabotaged by government-imposed restrictions - it is exclusively your fault if you do not outstrip the chocolate king, the movie star, the computer software writer, or whoever.

But if, instead of the riches you might acquire by engaging in providing commercial goods or services, you prefer the personal satisfaction you might get from writing poetry or philosophy or music, you are free to do so.  Of course, you won’t make as much money as those who serve the majority of consumers.  Those who satisfy the wants of a smaller number of people collect fewer votes - dollars - than those who satisfy the wants of many.

It’s important to realize that the opportunity to compete for the prizes society has to allocate is a social institution.  It can’t remove or even alleviate the innate handicaps that nature has chosen to discriminate against many people.  It cannot change the fact that many are born sick or become disabled later in life. The biological equipment of people rigidly restricts the fields in which they can serve.  Danny Devito won’t ever be able to compete with Michael Jordan in basketball.

In the same manner, the class of those who have the ability to think for themselves is separated by an unbridgeable gulf from the class of those who can’t.  In a society based on caste, the individual can credit fate to the conditions of life beyond his or her control.  He is a slave because the supernatural powers that determine what people will become have assigned him to his rank.  It’s not his doing or a result of any mistakes he made and, therefore, there is no reason for him to be ashamed of his humble station in life.

His wife can’t find fault.  If she were to complain to him: “Why aren’t you a duke?  If you were a duke, I would be a duchess,” he would simply reply: “If I had been born the son of a duke, I wouldn’t have married you, a slave girl, but I would have married the daughter of a another duke.  Your not being a duchess is your own fault; why weren’t you more clever in choosing your parents?”

It’s another thing entirely under Capitalism.  Here everybody’s station in life depends on their own doing, the choices they make.  Everybody whose ambitions have not been gratified knows very well that they have missed chances, or made mistakes, and that they have tried and been found wanting by their fellowman.  If his wife criticizes him:  “Why do you make only $150 dollars a week?  If you were as smart as our next door neighbor, Joe, you’d be a foreman by now and I would enjoy a better life,” he becomes conscious of his own inferiority and feels humiliated.

The much maligned unfairness of Capitalism consists in the fact that it handles everybody according to their contribution to the well-being of their fellowman, as judged by their fellowman.
The dominance of the principle “to each according to his accomplishment” rather than the Marxist principle “to each according to his need”, doesn’t allow any excuse for personal shortcomings.
Everybody knows very well that there are people like herself who succeeded where she herself failed.
Everybody knows that many of those whom she envies are self-made people who started from the same point that she started from.  Worse than that, she knows that everyone else in her circle of friends knows it too.

What makes many feel unhappy under Capitalism is the fact that the economic system grants to each the opportunity to attain the most desirable positions.  Of course, these can only be attained by a few.
Whatever a man may have gained for himself, it is mostly a fraction of what his ambition has motivated him to win.  Right before his eyes, there are people who have succeeded where he has failed.  There are those who have outstripped him and against whom he nurtures, at least subconsciously, a feeling of resentment.

This is the attitude of the tramp against the person with a regular job, the factory hand against the foreman, the middle-manager against the vice-president, the vice-president against the company’s president, the person who makes $50,000 a year against the millionaire and so on.  Everyone’s sense of self-assurance and self-worth is undermined by the sight of those who have given proof of greater ability.  It’s human nature for everyone to overrate their own worth and what they consider their just rewards.

This suffering from frustrated ambition is peculiar to people who live in a free society.  It’s not caused by the freedom everyone has to compete, but by the fact that, in such a society, the inequality of people with regard to intellectual abilities, will power, motivation, and energy become clearly visible.  The gulf between what a person is and achieves, and what they think of their own abilities and achievements, is starkly revealed.  Day-dreams and demands for a fair world which would treat them according to their real worth are the refuge of all those afflicted by their lack of self-knowledge.

Therefore, it’s no wonder that the very success of economic and political freedom under Capitalism in the United States, reduced its appeal to later thinkers.  The narrowly limited government of the late 19th century possessed little concentrated power that endangered the ordinary person.  The other side of that coin was that it also possessed little power that would enable good people to do good.  And, in an imperfect world there were, and are, still many evils.

In fact, the very progress of society made the evils that were left seem worse.  This was the milieu in which Marx lived and wrote.  It was society on the cusp, transitioning from Mercantilism to Capitalism. Marx saw poverty and naturally concluded that it must be the result of ill gotten gains on the part of the bourgeoisie.  But, Marx was nothing but a clerk who came in in the middle of the movie.  He saw the factories of the Industrial Revolution in the hands of private owners, while those who worked in those factories struggled for their very survival.  Never did he consider the risks involved in building the factories, inventing and building the machines, or any of the other a priori
requirements that made the whole thing run.

Listening to Marx and his labor theory of value, people took the favorable developments for granted.  They forgot the danger to freedom from a strong government.  Instead, they were attracted by the good that a stronger government could accomplish—if only the government was in the right people’s hands.

These ideas began to influence government policy in Great Britain by the beginning of the 20th century.  They gained more and more acceptance among intellectuals in the U.S. during what is called the Progressive Era, but they had little effect on government policy until the Great Depression.
Contrary to popular notions, the depression was produced by a failure of the government in one key area - money - where the government had exercised exclusive authority since the ratification of the Constitution.  However, the government’s responsibility for the depression was not - and is still not -recognized.  Instead, the depression is still widely interpreted as a failure of free market Capitalism.
That myth led the public to join the intellectuals in a complete change of view about the relative responsibilities of individuals and government.

Emphasis on the responsibility of the individual for his own fate was replaced by an emphasis on the individual as simply a cog in the great wheel of life, a pawn being thrashed about by forces beyond his control.  The earlier view that government’s role is to serve as an umpire to prevent individuals from coercing one another was replaced by the view that government’s role is to serve as a parent, charged with the duty of coercing some to give aid to others.  The hatred of Capitalism by intellectuals, and their embrace of Marxism, is directly related to the earlier discussion of how Capitalism, as a system, reveals the failure of people to conduct their pursuits with an eye toward meeting the demands of the consumer.

Intellectuals, such as doctors, lawyers, artists and writers, scientists, professors and teachers, etc., resent Capitalism precisely because it assigns to some a position that they themselves would like to have.  The so-called common man, as a rule, doesn’t have the opportunity to associate with people who have succeeded better than he.  He or she moves in the circle of other common people.
He or she never meets his boss socially.  They never learn from personal experience how different an entrepreneur, or an executive, is with regard to those abilities which are required for successfully serving the consumer.  Therefore, their envy and resentment are not directed against another living person, but against abstractions like management, capital, and Wall Street.  One can’t hate such an abstraction with the same bitterness that one may bear against a fellow human that one associates with daily.

It’s different with those in which the special conditions of their occupation or their family ties bring them into personal contact with the winners of the prizes that they believe should have been given to them.  With them, the feelings of frustrated ambition become especially piercing because they engender hatred of concrete human beings.  This is the case with people who are commonly termed intellectuals.  Let’s take, for instance, doctors.

Their daily routine and experience make every doctor cognizant of the fact that there exists a hierarchy in which all medical men are graded according to their merits and achievements.
Those who are more famous and skilled are those that the regular doctor must follow in terms of their methods and innovations.  He must learn and practice those methods to keep up-to-date and these eminent doctors he must follow were his classmates in medical school, they served with him as interns, and they attend the same medical meetings he does.  Some are his friends and they all address him with the utmost cordiality. 

But they tower above him in the appreciation of the public and also in the amount of income they earn.  When he compares himself to them, he feels humiliated.  But, he must be careful not to let anyone notice his resentment and envy.  So he diverts his anger toward another target.  He blames the system and the evils of Capitalism.  If it weren’t for the unfairness of the system, his abilities and talents would have brought him the riches he deserves.

It’s the same with many lawyers and teachers, artists and actors, writers and journalists, engineers and chemists.  People who are commonly called intellectuals.  They are angry, too, by the rise of their more successful colleagues and their former schoolmates.  The anti-capitalistic bias of the intellectuals is a phenomenon that is not limited to the U.S.  But it is more bitter here than it is in the European countries.  To understand why you must understand the basic difference between Society in Europe and society in America.

In Europe, (capital S) Society includes all those who are prominent in any field.  Statesmen and government leaders, the heads of civil service departments, publishers and editors, prominent writers, scientists, artists, actors, lawyers, and doctors, as well as members of the aristocratic families all make up what is considered the good society.  They come into contact with one another at dinners and teas, charity balls.  They go to the same restaurants, hotels and resorts. Access to European society is open to anybody who has distinguished themselves in any field.  It may be easier for people of noble ancestry and great wealth, but neither riches nor titles can give a member of this set the rank and prestige that comes with personal distinction in their field.

(Little S) society, in this sense, is foreign to Americans.  What is called society in America almost exclusively consists of the richest families.  There is little, if any, social interaction between the successful businessmen and the authors, actors, artists and scientists, no matter how famous the latter may be in their field.  Most of the socialites are not interested in books and ideas.  When they get together, they usually gossip about other people and talk about sports like polo and tennis.  But even those who do like to read consider writers, scientists, and artists as people with whom they do not want to associate.  There is almost an insurmountable gulf which separates society from the intellectuals.  Consequently, American authors, scientists, and professors are prone to consider the wealthy businessman as a barbarian, someone exclusively intent on making money.

The professor despises the alumni who are more interested in the college's football team than in its scholastic achievement.  He is insulted if he learns that the coach gets a higher salary than a professor of philosophy.  Those whose research has given rise to new methods of production hate the businessman who they view as simply interested in the cash value of the research, rather than its intellectual value.  Therefore, it’s significant that a large number of American professors sympathize with socialism.

If a group of people secludes itself from the rest of the nation in the way American socialites do, they naturally become the target of the hostile criticism from those they keep out.  What they fail to see is that their self-chosen segregation isolates them and kindles animosities which make the intellectuals even more inclined to favor anti-Capitalistic policies.