Capitalism’s
problems are often isolated as single issues to obscure the flaws of
the entire system. Many seek a capitalism with the rough corners
smoothed out, the utopian aspiration of a tamed capitalism.
Libertarianism
is the idea that in a completely free market society, the economy
would operate as millions of small producers in perfect competition.
As long as a person works hard and competes fairly, they will
succeed; if they are lazy, they will fail. Libertarians believe that
if only the government got its hands out of the affairs of private
enterprise, then a purer form of capitalist harmony would emerge. It
is a myth. In reality, the more “free” a market becomes, the more
the competition gets rigged. In capitalism, the main goal is to grow
and accumulate indefinitely. Competition is an effective way to drive
innovation and efficiency in theory. But as businesses grow into
large corporations and gain larger shares of the market, smaller
producers can no longer compete, and must either work for the
competition or exit the industry. Capitalism is a constantly evolving
social system. Getting rid of regulations and privatizing everything,
as libertarians propose, would not create a pure form of capitalism
where everyone has a fair shot — it would create a dystopia of
abusive and uncaring corporations without any accountability to the
public.
Libertarians
are not interested in eliminating capitalist private property nor the
authority, oppression and exploitation which goes with it. They make
an idol of private property and claim to defend "absolute"
and "unrestricted" property rights. In particular, taxation
and theft are among the greatest evils possible as they involve
coercion against "justly held" property. They call for an
end to the state, not because they are concerned about the
restrictions of liberty experienced by workers and tenants but
because they wish capitalists and landlords not to be bothered by
legal restrictions on what they can and cannot do on their property.
Thus they should be referred to as “propertarians.”
Libertarianism
is closely linked to the myths surrounding the origin of the
Constitution and the ideals of the Founding Fathers of America. But
far from being a revolutionary event that encouraged a genuine
development of democratic values, the War of Independence was a
strictly conservative affair. The colonial rebellion was not the work
of enraged peasants but of landed country gentlemen. It is clear that
the real beneficiaries of the break with Britain were the landowners
and wealthy traders who were able to expand their own wealth without
interference. Although Paine’s call to arms, based on abstractions
and ideals, appealed to the ordinary person, all the material
benefits went to the wealthy. Despite pretensions of being
“enlightened” – sweeping aside monarchy, aristocracy and the
established church – the new republic was never designed to be
anything other than an oligarchic state. The political institutions
and Constitution constructed an array of checks and balances
motivated by paranoia, suspicion of central government power that
laid the foundation for laissez faire economics. It is an
inconvenient truth for “libertarians” that their proposals for a
minimalist U.S. government grew out of the South’s institution of
human bondage, i.e. the contractual right of a white person to own a
black person, and from the desire of slaveholders to keep the federal
government small so it could never abolish slavery. That is why many
“libertarian” icons – the likes of Patrick Henry, George Mason,
Thomas Jefferson and the later incarnation of James Madison – were
slave owners who understood the link between the emergence of a
strong national government and the threat to slavery. This connection
between their supposedly freedom-loving ideology and slavery, but it
is historically undeniable. Any serious study of the U.S.
Constitution, its ratification and its early implementation reveals
intense Southern fears about the Constitution’s creation of a
vibrant central government and its eventual implications on slavery.
The
libertarian principal tenet of unregulated “free markets” has
been discredited again and again, through market crashes, economic
depressions and the trading of dangerous products to customers. There
is also the grand lie that “free markets” somehow can or will
address broader societal needs when capitalism is really about how to
maximize short-term profits regardless of the danger inflicted on the
environment or individuals. There also are legitimate concerns that
“libertarianism” would essentially ignore, such as how to care
for the elderly, how to educate the population for today’s economic
challenges, how to ameliorate the suffering of the poor, how to
maintain an effective infrastructure, etc. For instance, the private
sector can’t do transportation infrastructure very well. Thus,
governments have to step in with spending for roads, rail, airports,
etc. Capitalism also has little need for ageing, worn-out or sick
workers. So, the government is needed to avert a humanitarian
catastrophe. The Affordable Care Act represented the government’s
recognition that the profit motive behind private health insurance
had failed millions of Americans, forcing them to overburden hospital
emergency rooms and requiring some government intervention.
Libertarians
may be against state authority, but it is inconsistent to oppose
tyranny in the public sphere of government and leave it unaddressed
in the private sphere of work. The Libertarian view of the
benevolent nature of a market economy is a selective one. Their focus
is on exchange, as a mutually beneficial act. This is a real
“win-win” situation, where I give you my widget and get your
gadget in return. The reality is quite the opposite. What is left
out, however, are some of the strikingly war-like aspects of a
capitalist economy, starting first and foremost with the cut-throat
competition that goes on in the pursuit of profit. Nor do they dwell
on the class divisions inherent to such a system and the conflict
that that results. Never minding the fact that profits are squeezed
out of workers, thus depriving them of their own personal liberty!
It
is to simply trade one slavemaster for another. The logic goes
something like this: Free-market capitalism on its own would
naturally lead to a world of personal freedom and economic
prosperity, but this is thwarted by the power of the state, an
organism that grows robustly at times of war. Hence, war must be
opposed not only because of its own obvious evils, but as a way to
drive back the power of the state which is standing in the way of a
better life. For Libertarians capitalism is an inherently peaceful
system. They ridicule the idea that there is a connection between the
nature of capitalism and the wars that constantly break out under it.
In the Libertarian’s mind, capitalism is—or should be—a world
made up of enterprising capitalists, minding their own business(es)
and interacting peacefully, without any need for the state to
intervene in these affairs or for wars to be waged overseas. Here we
are basically dealing with the viewpoint of the individual
capitalist, particularly the small-scale one, who experiences the
state as an unpleasant institution that appropriates his hard-earned
wealth through taxation, sometimes to pay for wars that bring him no
direct benefit. Remove this alien force, he reasons, and life would
immediately be much rosier. The “liberty” that Libertarians wax
so philosophical about is the freedom of this economic actor to chase
after his profit in peace.
Libertarians
claim we as workers enter a fee contract and “no one is forced to
do anything.” – But what planet are they on. The working class is
forced each and every day into wage slavery or does money in
capitalism grow on trees and all people need to do it pluck it from
the branches to pay for food clothing and shelter. No, we are,
collectively, compelled under the threat of poverty to sell our
capacity to work – our labor power – in order to get access to
those things. The modern slave-owner has no such interest in his
slaves. He neither purchases nor owns them. He merely buys so much
labor-power – physical energy – just as he buys electric power
for his plant. The worker represents to him merely a machine capable
of developing a given quantity of labor-power. When he does not need
labor-power he simply refrains from buying any. Wage slavery is the
most satisfactory form of slavery that has ever come into existence,
from the point of view of the masters. It gives them all the slaves
they require, and relieves them of all responsibility in the matter
of their housing, feeding and clothing.
Many
libertarians argue that wage-labor isn’t slavery “when free and
just conditions exist.” Ahh, if only that were the case. Workers
sell their labor power to capitalist enterprises for a wage as stated
above in earlier post . As a commodity, labor power has an exchange
value and a use value, like all other commodities. Its exchange value
is equal to the sum total of the exchange values of all those
commodities necessary to produce and reproduce the labour power of
the worker and his or her family. The use value of labour power is
its value creating capacity which capitalist enterprises buy and put
to work as labor. However, labor power is unlike other commodities in
that it creates value. During a given period it can produce more than
is needed to maintain the worker during the same period. The surplus
value produced is the difference between the exchange value of labor
power and the use value of the labor extracted by the capitalists. In
capitalism, however,the wage-worker is a “free” agent. No master
holds him as a chattel, nor feudal lord as serf. This modern worker
is free and independent: he has choices. He can dispose of his
services to this or that capitalist owner, or he can withhold them.
But this freedom is ephemeral. He or she must sell his or her working ability to
some one or other employer or face starvation. In a capitalist
society workers have the option of finding a job or facing abject
poverty and/or starvation. Little wonder, then, that people
“voluntarily” sell their labor and “consent” to
authoritarian structures! They have little option to do otherwise.
So, within the labour market workers can and do seek out the best
working conditions possible, but that does not mean that the final
contract agreed is “freely” accepted and not due to the force of
circumstances, that both parties have equal bargaining power when
drawing up the contract or that the freedom of both parties is
ensured. Slavery is cloaked under the guise of wage-labor.
If
libertarians seek real liberty then it is free access to goods and
services which will deny to any group or individuals the political
leverage with which to dominate others which has been a feature
intrinsic to all private-property or class based systems through
control and rationing of the means of life. This will work to ensure
that a socialist society is run on the basis of democratic consensus.
Free access to the common treasury and no monopoly of ownership , not
even by the producers who call for ownership of their own product,
(such as promoted by mutualists and syndicalists) can deprive
individuals in society of common ownership of the means of production
and distribution .
Libertarians
seeks to abolish what little services the state still provides for
its poor, hungry, and dispossessed. These services were paid for in
sweat and blood by activists who aimed to alleviate the stress and
misery of poverty for the American working class. Although against
reformism we cannot deny the reality that certain reforms such as an
eight-hour work-day or welfare assistance help those who cannot
endure the nature of our survival-of-the-fittest capitalist state.
Social and welfare services which have been forced upon the elite and
conceded to the working class during the New Deal and the Great
Society, amongst other epochs cannot be written off as unimportant.
Militant labour fought for concessions. Poor people now have social
programs. Libertarian ideals and visions are nothing more than the
resurrected dreams of robber barons of the past. They may be against
state authority, but it is inconsistent to oppose tyranny in the
public sphere of government and leave it unaddressed in the private
sphere of work. It is to simply trade one slavemaster for another.
Thus
we have “free” workers within a relationship lacking freedom.
Representing employment relations as voluntary agreement simply
mystifies the existence and exercise of power within the organisation
so created. Libertarians are ignoring the vast number of
authoritarian and co-ercive social relationships that exist in
capitalist society. In the labour market it is clear that the
“buyers” and “sellers” of labor power are not on an equal
footing. Under capitalism competition in labour markets is skewed in
favour of employers. Thus the ability to refuse an exchange weighs
most heavily on one class than another and so ensures that “free
exchange” works to ensure the domination and so exploitation of one
by the other. Inequality in the market ensures that the decisions of
the majority of people within it are shaped in accordance with that
needs of the powerful, not the needs of all.
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