By John Browne
Sunday, June 15, 2014
The French economist Thomas Piketty has achieved
worldwide fame by promoting a thesis that capitalism is the cause of growing
economic inequality. Unfortunately, he is partially right. However, the
important distinction missed by Piketty and all of his supporters is that state
capitalism, not free market capitalism, has reigned supreme in recent decades
in the world's leading democracies. It is this misguided attempt to wed the
power of the state to the private ownership of capital that has led to the
mushrooming of economic inequality. If the public cannot be made aware of the
distinction, we risk abandoning the only system capable of creating real
improvements for the vast majority of people.
In his book entitled 'Capital in the 21st Century', Piketty,
like Karl Marx in 'Das Kapital,' places the hinge of economic tension at the
supposed opposition between the competing interest of labor and capital. He
believes that "capitalism automatically generates arbitrary and
unsustainable inequalities that radically undermine the meritocratic values on
which democratic societies are based." However, this can only become true
if free markets become controlled, or distorted, by the establishment of
monopolies, be they private or state owned.
In the early twentieth century, U.S. Governments were
alert to the destruction of free markets by monopolistic cartels and enacted
strong anti-trust laws to curb their power. The United States thereafter
achieved strong economic results in the first three decades of the 20th
Century. In contrast, the socialist governments of post WWII Britain used
public funds to establish state owned monopolies, similar to those existing in
the Soviet Union. This resulted in dramatic economic declines, that continued
into the 1980s when the U.K. was rescued by the free market policies of
Margaret Thatcher. Her central strategy was to restore individual freedom by
breaking state owned monopolies and reducing the coercive control of trade
unions. Her actions unleashed a resurgence of prosperity in Britain that was
imitated in many other countries. Her policies were adopted with particular
enthusiasm by countries, like Poland, which had only recently shaken off the
yoke of Soviet Communism. Poland is now one of the strongest economies in Europe.
History provides ample evidence that when allowed to
function properly free market capitalism generates massive national prosperity
with high employment, a strong currency and rising standards of living. It is
only when the state manipulates and over regulates free markets that capitalism
fails. However, capitalism usually takes the blame for the failures of statism.
Piketty asserts that capitalism is "inherently
unstable because it concentrates wealth and income progressively over time,
leaving behind an impoverished majority. ..." He proscribes even an
international wealth tax and higher income taxes, above 80 percent, to
redistribute rather than to invest savings. This would essentially create a
state monopoly on wealth. But again, history tends to demonstrate that state
monopolies create poverty for all but the politically connected elite.
Even the Soviet Union, a military superpower, was brought
to its economic knees by state monopolies. Communist Party Secretaries,
Andrapov and Gorbachev, were forced to the recognition that free markets should
be introduced within Russia. This led to 'Perestroika' and 'Glasnost' and the
freeing of markets in Russia.
By concluding that capitalism, even if it is confined to
just a few countries, will lead to increasing poverty among the masses around
the world, many cynical observers may conclude that Piketty is laying out a
carefully planned case towards global socialism along the lines first attempted
by the Bolshevik Commintern. Some conclude that such a move could be
spearheaded by international institutions like the UN and IMF.
To achieve inherently unpopular global power, national
elites must cooperate to bring about such levels of economic chaos and human
suffering that people, despairing of ineffective democracy, will look for
strong, global government as a welcome solution. To achieve this end the
economic problems and human suffering must be extreme and seemingly beyond
solution by any national government. By continuing to debase and destroy fiat
currencies while preventing the markets from healing themselves, central banks
around the world are doing their part to create these conditions.
However, those who look towards strong global government
must realize that likely it will lead to a world of extreme global inequality
in which any effective opposition will be impossible. This is the fascistic
face behind the cuddly and concerned image that has made Piketty the economic
North Star of a new generation. These faulty bearings must be corrected or the
world's poor will suffer far more than they need to.
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