By Kevin D. Williamson
Wednesday, November 26, 2025
The comedian John Mulaney tells a funny—and
terrible—story about trying to cure himself of his cocaine addiction by
instructing his financial manager to keep cash out of his hands. No cash, no
coke—I guess his dealer didn’t take Venmo. What happened next was a predictable
series of shenanigans in which the comedian thought up ways to, in effect,
embezzle from himself, e.g., buying a $12,000 watch and selling it for $6,000
on the same day. Mulaney’s story of desperate addiction offers a good example
of one of the common mistakes we make in our current econo-political debate:
trying to use economic means to solve non-economic problems. Mulaney’s problem
was not economic: He has been very, very successful and probably could blow
$6,000 a day for a very long time without endangering the mortgage payment. His
problem was that he loved cocaine.
There are a great many modern pathologies and problems
that often are described as results of capitalism or as aspects of
capitalism—of “late capitalism,” as the pseudointellectuals sometimes put it.
For example, as formerly poor and hungry countries have become more prosperous
and better-fed, they have seen an increase in obesity and diabetes, and, in
some cases, they have seen higher levels of alcohol and tobacco use as
increased private incomes enable the consumption of what had been unobtainable
luxuries. Use of some other drugs has increased, in some places, with wealth:
You need a little bit of money to have John Mulaney’s former bad habits. There
are increased environmental pressures and externalities associated with
increasing wealth, too, as the newly affluent consume more energy, food, and
petroleum products (plastics, chemicals, pharmaceuticals—the list is long) than
they had. When poor people leave farming villages for higher-paying jobs in
urban environments, there are new pressures put on everything from utilities to
transportation networks to housing.
Capitalism becomes a go-to bogeyman, the witch behind
every contemporary malady: “Blame
capitalism for men’s loneliness,” etc.
There surely are some social evils that are the work of capitalists—as
Willi Schlamm famously put
it, the problem with capitalism is capitalists (but the problem with
socialism is socialism). But greed, dishonesty, and short-sightedness are human
qualities present in men and women under every economic arrangement. Socialists
steal, lie, and exploit, too.
In the same way, nearly all of the problems attributed to
capitalism are (or were) present in much more intense forms in non-capitalist
economies than in capitalist economies: See, for example, the environmental
record of Communist China or the results of forced industrialization in the
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Nutrition and health outcomes are not
great in North Korea or Venezuela. Municipal services in Cuba are ... also not
great.
It is not that the medical or environmental or cultural
problems of the rich capitalist world are not real or that they are
unimportant—it is that these are problems that are mainly non-economic in
origin and unlikely to be much improved by economic means. And where economic
means are employed, they often are simply a stalking horse for old-fashioned
state coercion, as in Barack Obama’s promise to “bankrupt”
coal-based businesses—a prohibition disguised as a fine or a tax is still a
prohibition. People who propose putting a $1,000 tax on a box of ammunition are
not actually engaged in tax policy. They are like John Mulaney trying to treat
a psychiatric problem through cash flow management.
But what about all that economic inequality
we hear about? Surely that is a problem that is economic in origin? That is, at
most, half right: economic—yes; a problem—no, not really.
An extraordinary thing has happened with the incomes and
total wealth of the tippy-top of the distribution since the 1990s and the
emergence of the internet and that vaguely defined collection of international
phenomena we call, for lack of a better word, globalization. The
fortunes acquired by such tech titans as Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk are indeed
remarkable. They have almost nothing to do with the economic situation of the
poor or the middle class, and they are not, in the main, the result of public
policy. That is not to say that public policy could not diminish those
fortunes (for instance, by simply seizing them, as many of my leftist friends
desire), but Amazon and Apple and such have not exploded in value the way they
have mainly because of government favoritism or political steering, though, the
world being a fallen place, these exist and are factors. (Critics here will
point to the subsidies enjoyed by Musk’s constellation of rent-collecting
enterprises, and they are not wrong to do so. But even with these subsidies in
mind, the broader point stands, for reasons that I hope the following lines
will make clear.) What has made Bezos’ splendid fortune is the growth and
integration of markets: If you have the most successful car dealership in
Plainview, Texas, then you probably do pretty well—but you do a lot better if
you have the most successful car dealership in Los Angeles. Same business,
bigger market, hence, bigger returns to small improvements in margins.
If Jeff Bezos were the most successful shopkeeper in New
York City, he’d be wealthier than if he were the most successful shopkeeper in
Little Rock or Indiana—as it happens, he is the most successful shopkeeper in
the world, serving hundreds of millions of users in more than 100 countries.
Where markets are very large, returns to profitable innovation, efficiency,
investment margins, excellence in corporate management—or luck!—also are very
large. When Saks & Company was just a shop on Fifth Avenue, there was no
way for its owners to make the kind of profits that a large, international
chain of department stores could—to say nothing of the kind of profits Amazon
can generate. But these profits are not, vulgar class-war rhetoric
notwithstanding, deductions from the common good or from the share of wealth
available for distribution—they are the result of wealth created, not
merely wealth distributed.
The poor are not poor because the rich are rich.
The poor are less poor because of the same economic factors that have
made some of our rich guys so shockingly rich. Creating wealth makes
societies—and the world—wealthier. Even with the returns going lopsidedly to a
relatively small number of investors, wealth creation of the kind that makes
billionaires also produces tons of economic benefits and secondary activity,
tax revenue, etc. The thing about richer societies is, they’re richer.
But, strangely, when my progressive friends talk about
economic inequality, they invariably talk about the incomes of the very
wealthy—and almost never about the poor. And there is a reason for that: The
story of the economic situation of the world’s poor does not offer very much
rhetorical fodder for the enterprising anticapitalist.
Most of the world’s population lived in extreme poverty
in 1800—about 80
percent of the human race. By 1980, that share was down to about 43
percent—a substantial improvement. By 2015, that number was down to around
9 percent, and today it is a little less than that. (NB: Estimates vary among
sources, of course, but every credible account has the share of the world
population living in extreme poverty radically reduced, by about the same
proportion in the same years.) By historical standards, very few people live in
extreme poverty today, and they are concentrated in sub-Saharan Africa, which
accounts for about two-thirds of the population living in extreme poverty.
A little capitalism goes a long way. When the government
of Narasimha Rao began its program of economic reform in India, the average
citizen of that republic died before age 60; today, the typical Indian lives
past 70. Left-wing anticapitalism is not the only kind of anticapitalism, and
right-wing anticapitalism has predictable results: In 1960, South Korea was
under a military dictatorship with its boot heel on a very regimented economy,
and the average life expectancy was 53.8 years; a steady program of liberalization
saw South Korean life expectancy grow
from about 63 years in the 1970s to 73 years in the 1990s to more than 83 years
today. North Korea, on the other hand, saw its average life expectancy
decline by a decade in the 1990s.
From the United States to the United Kingdom to Europe to
India to South Korea, the story is the same: Capitalism is good for people, and
it is very good for the poorest people. The reasons for that are obvious
enough: Relatively poor societies do not have very much to share with the
neediest among them, nor do they have the kind of resources that allow adequate
investment in big infrastructure projects that improve sanitation and access to
clean water, which are key to improving public health and life expectancy.
Often, these are a matter of public works rather than a matter of market goods
provided by for-profit entities. The thing to understand is not the libertarian
cliché that “free markets will take care of it,” maybe with an assist from
private charity, which is often true but not always.
Rather, the thing to understand is something that even
Karl Marx appreciated: Capitalism produces the level of economic development
and wealth that is necessary in order for a society to have adequate resources
to direct at such age-old problems as profound poverty, preventable diseases,
or the provision of public goods. Marx thought that the wealth of capitalism
would provide the fertile ground into which to plant the seed of socialism, but
he was not quite right: Socialism, for reasons having more to do with the use
of knowledge in society than with industrial production techniques or financial
incentives, always and everywhere fails on its own terms. What has instead
grown out of the rich soil of capitalism is ... more capitalism, more complex
capitalism, more global capitalism, more productive capitalism, together with a
variety of approaches to the design and implementation of social welfare
programs, which liberal-democratic countries (and some less than liberal and
not quite democratic) have adapted to their own local conditions with varying
degrees of success: Even within the richest nations of Europe, there are
radically different models of social welfare (e.g., Sweden vs. Switzerland),
while peoples rooted in different cultures have come up with reasonably
effective—sometimes extraordinarily effective—alternatives of their own, as in
Singapore and South Korea. But what Sweden and Switzerland and Singapore and
South Korea have in common is capitalism. What North Korea and Venezuela and
South Sudan have in common is the absence of capitalism. North Korea and
Venezuela offer two distinct flavors of socialist backwater, while in South
Sudan the state-run oil enterprise is something close to the entire economy.
Capitalism is one part of the magic formula—it goes along
with liberalism and democracy, and, just as there are different versions of
capitalism appropriate to different cultures, there are different versions of
liberalism and democracy. Swiss democracy is not very much like American
democracy, and American liberalism is not precisely the same as the liberalism
of Germany or that of Singapore. The rich world is not an Erector set with
standardized parts. It is more like a cake recipe with ingredients that may
vary in both their composition and their relative proportions, according to
taste: democracy, political accountability, the rule of law, independent
courts, a free press, etc. The capitalism bit of that comprises property
rights, freedom of exchange, freedom of contract, trade, a stable money supply,
etc. These things together have produced remarkable results in everything from poverty to education to food
production to health to occupational safety to peace to every other factor
my friends over at Human Progress track.
In 1800, most of the world was desperately poor.
In 1980, nearly half the world was desperately poor. Today, something like 9
percent of the world is desperately poor—and what most of that 9 percent most
desperately needs is access to capitalism, to its tools and opportunities. That
progress did not happen by accident, and it was not the result of some
committee of experts thinking deep thoughts in Washington or Brussels or Davos.
(Much less Beijing or Moscow.) And while I am sympathetic to a lot of that
all-the-way libertarian stuff, you don’t have to pretend that this is some kind
of anarcho-capitalist fairy tale in which government plays no role, inasmuch as
conventional modern capitalism expects—and counts on—government to play some
role: Property has to be protected, contract disputes have to be litigated,
public goods need to be provided. Sometimes private actors and market-based
players can get a lot of that done, and that’s great. But, in the modern,
developed-world experience, capitalism works best with competent government
based on liberal democratic traditions.
There is nothing more nonsensical than hearing some
ingrate—Bernie Sanders, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, J.D. Vance, Sohrab
Ahmari—insist that we need to reimagine capitalism or revamp it or remake it
from the inside out. Capitalism works just fine—let that golden goose
be. What we should be talking about is much more in-the-weeds and much less
grand: What kinds of real-world reforms are needed in our tax system and public
finances? What should we do about the persistent lack of price transparency in
health care? Why do we get such poor results from our public schools even as we
spend more and more money on education? How should we go about preventing
financial disaster in the public pension systems? How do we honor democratic
norms and local political accountability while getting rid of the political
sclerosis that has arrested so much infrastructure development and housing
construction? Those are real questions. None of them requires “reinventing
capitalism” or whatever dumb catchphrase the politicians are using this year.
Capitalism—the thing that happens when property rights
are protected and the freedom to exchange is honored—not only has a record of
raising people out of poverty, it is the only economic system with a record of
doing so. Even in regimented and autocratic systems such as that of China, it
is the zones of relative liberalism that have produced the wealth that has
relieved extraordinary poverty. That China remains an autocratic police state
is not an indictment of capitalism—it is another example of the fact that
economic policies solve economic problems but generally are not much good for
non-economic problems. John Mulaney could not cure his cocaine addiction by
managing his money—though surely it is the case that his considerable
wealth provided him with resources to support his efforts at cleaning up his
life when he worked up the will to do so. That approximates the role of
capitalism in a complex society: Capitalism does not cause or cure diabetes or
obesity or environmental degradation or urban dysfunction—but it does provide
us with resources that give us the ability to make better choices, once we have
worked up the will, under conditions that are much more favorable than those we
would endure if we had a Cuban economy or a Venezuelan economy or a North
Korean economy. The proverb attributed to Deng Xiaoping is true but not the whole
truth: “It is glorious to get rich.”
If you doubt that, ask someone who used to be poor.
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