Nelson
Mandela and Volunteerism
by
Bob Murphy
Recently
by Bob Murphy: The
Gold Standard: Myths and Lies
This week Nelson
Mandela celebrates his 93rd birthday. In honor of the event, the
Nelson Mandela Foundation is asking people to donate 67 minutes
of their time to public service. Although the foundation and the
media reporting on it undoubtedly mean well, the entire discussion
perpetuates the myth that paid work is somehow useless to
society.
But the truth
is just the opposite: If someone is actually getting paid
to do work, he or she knows that at least one person values it.
In contrast, volunteer work may or may not be useful, because it
lacks the feedback of market prices. My point in this article isn't
to denigrate volunteer work, but rather to rehabilitate paid work.
Nelson Mandela's
"Public Service"
A
CBS News report captures the typical coverage of Mandela's birthday:
In honor
of Nelson Mandela
International Day, the Nelson Mandela Foundation asks that
people around the world do a mere sixty-seven minutes of work
to better the community in honor of the sixty-seven years of service
Mandela has performed for the greater good. The inspiring South
African leader turns 93 today.
The Foundation
has sixty-seven suggestions
of simple things that each person can do to better the world,
among which are getting tested for HIV with a partner, reading
to someone who can't or helping out at an animal shelter. For
working folk, it's hard to dedicate sixty-seven minutes to breathing,
let alone helping others. Well, if you have a computer you don't
have an excuse.
There are
several sites which allow online participation in volunteer work
and a list of organizations that welcome that kind of help. Giving
a mere thirty minutes to an organization helping them to design
a flyer, edit a blog post, providing your business or legal expertise
or even just doing some good old fashioned research can make all
the difference in the world.
Most people
would have no objection to the above excerpt, and yet the cynical
economist can find problems. First of all, by focusing on Mandela's
67 years of "service
for the greater good," the
writer implies that more conventional forms of employment are not
for the greater good.
The Real
Public Servants
My real beef
with the article centers on this sentence: "For working folk,
it's hard to dedicate sixty-seven minutes to breathing, let alone
helping others." What in the world can that mean?
By definition,
"working folk" are helping others five days a week (at
least). It's typical to say that people in Congress are in the business
of "public service," but that's ridiculous. The politicians
in DC take my money against my will, and spend it on things that
I don't want and often consider downright criminal. That's not serving
me at all.
In contrast,
whenever I stop by a Cracker Barrel one of my favorite places
to grab a meal on road trips I interact with several people
who really do serve me. There's often a cheerful person who greets
me when I walk in the door, another person who takes down my name
and gives me an estimate (usually pretty accurate) of how long the
wait will be, and another person who escorts me to the table and
sets me up with a menu and silverware. Finally, the most obvious
person is the waitress who literally serves me she
brings tasty food within a few minutes after I request it.
Indeed, if
we didn't take profit-seeking restaurants for granted, they would
seem like a magical place, straight out of a fairy tale. Imagine!
I'm driving along the interstate down to the Mises Institute to
teach a summer seminar,
and all along the way there are identical buildings, each filled
with people who wear the same costumes. As far as I can tell from
their treatment of me, these people want nothing more in life than
to make my lunch or dinner as enjoyable as possible.
What did I
do to deserve such royal treatment? Did I stumble upon a genie's
lamp, and request to be king? No, what happens is that I do the
same in my own line of work, doing my best to "serve others"
by giving them speeches, blog posts, articles, books, and other
items that they desire.
Forget the
Brothers Grimm; my description of society now sounds less like a
fairy tale and more like a utopia pictured by Karl Marx. I spend
most of my waking hours trying to serve my fellowmen, while most
of them specifically, the "working folk" and not
those ostensibly in "public service" are doing
the same.
The Role
of Money
Of course,
the one feature I've omitted from my analysis is the crucial role
of money. The workers at Cracker Barrel aren't really just
serving me because it brings intrinsic happiness to them; they're
competing with other restaurants (and vendors in general) for my
money. By the same token, I don't shower my speeches and writing
indiscriminately on anyone who asks for them; one of the most important
criteria is how much a potential client is willing to pay me.
Although the
use of money strikes many people as dirty, it shouldn't. In the
treatment of Austrian economists such as Ludwig von Mises, we see
that money is an indispensable social institution that allows for
the more effective use of resources and the division
of labor. To put the matter bluntly, if we suddenly discontinued
the use of money, most people on Earth would soon starve to death.
The Limits
of Volunteerism
If everyone
quit his or her day job and went full-time into volunteering, the
total output of various goods and services would also crash. For
one thing, few people would volunteer for unpleasant tasks such
as garbage collection and bathroom mopping.
Even more important,
people would have no idea where their services were the most productive,
in the opinion of others. I spelled out the argument a bit fancifully
in an earlier article titled "Superman
Needs an Agent." The idea was that, even though Superman
is completely altruistic and wants nothing but to use his incredible
powers to help humanity, that particular objective isn't specific
enough. There are all sorts of ways he could spend his time making
particular people better off.
Let me deal
with one obvious objection. People might say, "Just because
rich people have a lot of money, that doesn't make them more worthy
of receiving assistance than others. That's the problem with the
profit motive."
Yet this isn't
the full story. Let's keep working with the example of Superman:
Even if his goal is to, say, feed as many hungry people as possible,
it does not follow that he should directly deploy his superpowers
to this end. It might make more sense to sell his labor to the highest
bidder, and then use the income (which would be in the billions
of dollars per year, easily) to fund antihunger initiatives.
Conclusion
There is nothing
wrong with volunteer work per se, especially for its ability to
change the person doing the volunteering. (I will never forget my
trip to Haiti, for example.) Yet it is simply sloppy thinking
to say that people who volunteer (or who go into politics!) are
"serving the public" in a way that paid workers are not.
The Austrian
School stresses the important coordinating function of market prices,
and in particular the crucial role money serves in modern society.
Only against a backdrop of monetary exchange do we have the luxury
of spending hours on noble volunteer activities.
Reprinted
from Mises.org.
June
27, 2011
Bob
Murphy [send him mail],
adjunct scholar of the Mises Institute,
is the author of The
Politically Incorrect Guide to Capitalism,
The
Human Action Study Guide,
and The
Man, Economy, and State Study Guide.
His latest book is The
Politically Incorrect Guide to the Great Depression and the New
Deal.
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