The Statist Propositions of Protectionism
by
Gary North
Tea Party Economist
Recently
by Gary North: Panic
in the New World Order
"Where there
is free trade, foreign competition would even in the short run frustrate
the aims sought by the various measures of government intervention
with domestic business. When the domestic market is not to some
extent insulated from foreign markets, there can be no question
of government control. The further a nation goes on the road toward
public regulation and regimentation, the more it is pushed toward
economic isolation. International division of labor becomes suspect
because it hinders the full use of national sovereignty. The trend
toward autarky is essentially a trend of domestic economic policies;
it is the outcome of the endeavor to make the state paramount in
economic matters."
~ Ludwig
von Mises, Omnipotent Government (1944),
p. 4.
Free trade
is a crucial economic policy in the program to restrict the growth
of socialism. Mises never wavered from this view. He recognized
the threat of all arguments for protectionism: they help to expand
the power of the state. They move in the direction of central economic
planning.
I have known
for at least 50 years that the central dividing issue economically
in the right wing movement is the issue of protectionism. People
who believe that they are defenders of the principle of free enterprise
at some point face a moment of truth. They have to decide whether
they are in favor of tariffs or free trade. They have to face the
reality of the arguments in favor of free enterprise. Do they believe
in free enterprise, or do they believe in the mixed economy of the
modern welfare state?
In my recent
essays on tariffs, in which I have used the metaphors of badges
and guns and invisible lines known as borders, I have been attempting
to get people to think carefully about the underlying economic principles
of free enterprise. I am asking people to think through the presuppositions
and implications of their views regarding the way the economy really
works and the way the economy ought to work.
METHODOLOGICAL
COLLECTIVISM
The difference
between the statist and the libertarian has to do with methodology.
The statist begins his discussion of the economy from the perspective
of the collective enterprise known as civil government. He equates
the state (the monopoly of coercion) and society (voluntary institutions).
He also identifies the state and the nation. He sees the state as
the agency which alone legally represents the nation. In some cases,
he actually believes that the state is the same as the nation. Rousseau
is the best case. He argued for the existence of the General Will
collective humanity, but stripped of intermediate loyalties
and bonds which is represented by the state.
There is no
doubt that there is a legal entity called the United States government.
It is a judicial construct. It is marked by its proponents' assertion
that it has final jurisdiction over the use of badges and guns inside
its borders. It has a monopoly of violence that cannot legally be
challenged by any other entity. It has the final say over who gets
to point a gun at whose belly.
If we do not
think of the state in this way, we will not understand what the
state really is: legalized coercion. The state is the agency
that asserts and enforces its right to stick guns in people's bellies.
There is a great debate over the legal and moral foundations that
undergird this judicial assertion, but the right of lawfully holding
a gun and sticking it in somebody else's belly is the essence of
the state.
The case for
free trade is based on an assumption: that an individual has the
legal and moral authority to make an offer to somebody else to buy
what he owns. It is the legal right to make a bid. There
are many ways to defend the free market economy, including its efficiency,
but the starting place, according to libertarian theory, is the
moral and legal right possessed by an individual to own property,
which implies the right of an individual to disown property. It
is ownership and disownership that serve as the foundation
of libertarian social theory, and also serves as the foundation
of free-market economic theory.
The collectivist
begins with the concept of the state as the final authority. Libertarian
theory begins with the concept of the individual as the final authority.
In my view
of economics, I begin with God as the final authority, but as I
have spent the last 45 years attempting to show, the God of the
Bible is overwhelmingly the defender of private property rights.
This is encapsulated in the commandment: "Thou shalt not steal."
I keep contrasting this concept with the assertion of all modern
welfare-state economists: "Thou shalt not steal, except by majority
vote."
ADAM
SMITH
Adam Smith
is correctly regarded as the most successful defender in history
of the idea of free trade. This is one of the reasons why, in the
view of those who believe in free trade, that Adam Smith's acceptance
of the job as the senior collector of customs (tariffs) for the
British government is one of those classic ironies in history. Adam
Smith sold out his economic principles for the sake of a high income.
Murray Rothbard
has exposed what we can legitimately call the myth of Adam Smith. Smith was not the
greatest defender of free markets, nor was he anywhere near the
greatest defender of economic theory. But he was unquestionably
the most famous and most influential early defender of free trade
and free markets. As a publicist, he was the master. Why this should
be true, I do not understand. His book, The Wealth of Nations
(1776) is a bloated book, and rare is the person who sustains the
exercise of beginning on page 1 and finishing it.
Smith did make
one claim that, in his day, was the most important claim that he
made. It laid the foundation of modern economic theory. He claimed
that the free market system is autonomous. It would exist apart
from legislation by the state. He called this "the system of natural
liberty." He described how the free market would work if the state
did not intervene to pass special-interest legislation that benefited
one group or another. What Rousseau claimed for the General Will,
Smith claimed for the free market. But Rousseau's General Will needed
a representative institution to express itself. Smith's theory of
the free market was its own interpreter.
The system
of natural liberty would maximize the wealth of nations, he said,
but far more important, it would maximize the wealth of individuals.
The central idea of Adam Smith's book is this argument: the pursuit
of individual self-interest, when pursued by all the residents of
the nation, will result in an increase of the wealth of the nation.
His link between the pursuit of individual self-interest
and the maximization of the wealth of their nation is the
essence of Smith's logic, and it is also the essence of the argument
of most free enterprisers.
This is surely
the single most important idea that socialists always reject. The
essence of the socialist outlook is this: individual self-interest
cannot be trusted, because it leads to exploitation of the weak.
In order to defend the weak, the socialist claims that the civil
government must interfere with private property rights, and plan
society from the point of view of the nation as a whole, or the
people as a whole, or the vanguard of the proletariat, or whatever
group is identified as representing the best interests of the nation.
The socialist
wants to capitalize the word "nation." The Nation is his starting
point, and it is also his ethical end. He equates the state with
the nation, and he insists that the proper way to look at the economy
is to see it as an extension of the state, which somehow incorporates
the nation.
MERCANTILIST
WOLVES IN DOMESTIC SHEEP'S CLOTHING
Free enterprisers
say that they reject this outlook. So do most political conservatives.
They say that they do not believe that the state is the same as
the nation. The problem is, most of them still operate in terms
of the collective entity known as the nation. They still cling to
the idea of the nation-state as the final source of guidance for
the economy.
This outlook
in the West has been associated with mercantilism. Mercantilism
is the system in which politicians gain control over the state,
and then use the state to grant monopolies of trade to special interest
groups. It was against this outlook that Adam Smith wrote his book.
To the extent
that people say they believe in Adam Smith's concept of the free
market, they ought to oppose mercantilism. The problem is this:
the mercantilist mentality is best represented in the defense of
tariffs. Tariffs are sales taxes imposed on imports of foreign-made
goods. Yet most people who insist that they are defenders of the
free market, meaning defenders of Adam Smith's economics, are overwhelmingly
in favor of tariffs. They think they are free marketers, but they
are mercantilist. They think they are defenders of private property,
when they are in fact defenders of the welfare state.
The reason
why conservatives say they oppose the welfare state is that the
state interferes with the free market. But when you press them to
defend the free market, and ask them to oppose all tariffs except
as revenue-generating devices, they refuse to do this. They insist
that the tariff system is necessary to defend the free market. What
failure? Unfair competition from across the invisible line: the
national border.
Then, when
you show them that Adam Smith's logic was applied against tariffs
and mercantilism, they may backtrack from his view. They may say
that the benefit of the tariff system is to make the nation wealthier.
Once again, the anti-mercantilist points out that this idea of wealth
through sales taxes on imports was the essence of mercantilism.
Then the defender
of tariffs says his critics are anti-patriotic and want to destroy
the high incomes of American workers. They want to destroy the jobs
of high-paid Americans. They want to reduce Americans to the economic
level of Third World peasants.
This is mercantilism.
It has always been mercantilism. It is statism. It is welfare statism.
It is a gun in your belly in order to benefit the income of a minority
group that wants to extract wealth on the basis of violence. This
is the essence of the welfare state. This is "thou shalt not steal,
except by majority vote."
Protectionists
seek to find economic arguments to justify tariffs. They also seek
an ethical defense of this position. So, they insist that the state's
authorized agents should have the right to stick a gun in your belly
and collect a sales tax in the name of the People.
Their concept
of the People is inherently collectivist. They see the People as
best represented by the state. They see the state as having an obligation
to impose sales taxes on imports in order to benefit inefficient
producers of goods that most customers do not want to buy at the
prices asked by the sellers.
CLICHES
OF PROTECTIONISM
The mercantilist
will adopt any argument at hand to defend himself. Here are a few
of them:
The
nation has the obligation to protect its people against [terrifyingly
efficient] slave laborers.
The nation
has the obligation to protect its producers against export subsidies,
just like the ones our government provides, by foreign nations.
The nation
has the obligation to defend itself against goods produced in
nations that do not have higher environmental standards than ours
are.
The nation
has the obligation to defend itself against economic warfare by
other states.
The nation
[not the military] has the obligation to protect industries that
might be needed in a war against an exporting nation.
The nation
has the obligation to. . . .
Hold it! I
have some questions.
What
do you mean, "the nation"? What is this nation?
How does
special-interest legislation favoring a handful of domestic manufacturers
defend the vaguely defined entity called the nation?
How is it
that the interests of a handful of manufacturers that cannot persuade
customers to buy from them, for whatever reason, are the best
interests of the nation?
Why is it
that the interests of this collective entity known as the nation
are best understood by a group of politicians who have the support
of a small minority of manufacturers who are in direct competition
with manufacturers outside the country? We are not talking about
most manufacturers. As recently as 1970, only about 5% of the
United States gross domestic product was a result of international
trade. Today, it is closer to 25%, but any way that you define
it, the vast majority of Americans do not work for companies
that are in direct competition with foreign manufacturers.
How is it
that the relatively few special-interest groups that are in competition
with foreign manufacturers possess a special position as representatives
of the collective entity known as the nation, despite the obvious
fact that the vast majority of people who live in the nation do
not work for these companies, invest in these companies, own these
companies, or even know the names of these companies? Who has
designated them as the representatives of the people? Politicians,
of course.
What is it
about special-interest legislation in the name of the nation that
persuades people who say they believe in the free market to rally
behind the programs recommended by these special interest groups
namely, the imposition of sales taxes on imported goods, so as
to hike the price of those goods, so as to force customers inside
the nation to buy from these inefficient producers, who could
not otherwise persuade customers to buy from them?
BAIT
AND SWITCH
There is a
true bait-and-switch operation going on here. Defenders of tariffs
present themselves as defenders of the nation, when in fact the
nation, from the point of view of economics, is not a collective
entity. The nation, from an economic standpoint, is simply a convenient
name that we give to people inside invisible judicial lines known
as national borders. These people own property, and they make bids
to buy other people's property. The defender of sales taxes comes
in the name of the nation, and claims that the nation's real economic
needs are best obtained by imposing sales taxes on imported goods.
But the whole idea of the nation, from an economic standpoint, rests
on the concept of the right of private property and exchange. How
is it that anyone speaks for this nation someone who wants
to impose the threat of violence in order to keep property owners
from using their property as they see fit?
The defender
of tariffs is a collectivist. There is no escape from this. He is
a collectivist because he wants to use the state's power of coercion
to interfere with the decisions of property owners. He does so in
the name of a supreme entity: the nation. The nation is sovereign.
The nation exists, economically speaking, as an entity above and
beyond the outcomes of a series of exchanges. The defender of tariffs
begins with the concept of the supreme sovereignty in economics
of a collective entity: the nation.
Protectionism
is a bait-and-switch operation. The defender of tariffs says he
believes in the free market, but he begins with a mercantilistic
concept of the nation. He begins, not with the concept of private
ownership, but with the sovereignty of the state over the terms
of exchange. He does not begin with the individual, as Adam Smith
did. He begins with the concept of the state and nation that Adam
Smith opposed in his book.
What amazes
me is the extent of the self-delusion of free enterprisers who call
for tariffs in the name of the nation, and then insist that they
believe in libertarianism. If you begin conceptually and methodologically
with the sovereignty of the state over economic affairs, you are
at best a mercantilist, at worst a communist, and always a statist.
You are a welfare statist, because you believe in the forced redistribution
of wealth by the state. You believe in this principle: "Thou shalt
not steal, except by majority vote."
But it is worse
than this. The protectionist really means this: "Thou shalt not
steal, except by hoodwinking the voters."
In what way
does the protectionist hoodwink the voters? By coming to the voters
in the name of the nation, when he in fact is an advocate for inefficient,
uncompetitive manufacturers who cannot persuade customers to buy
their goods.
A few of these
advocates are actually on the payrolls of trade groups whose members
cannot compete, and who therefore seek favors from the government.
But most of them are simply self-deluded individuals, who never
understood what mercantilism was, and who never understood the arguments
that Adam Smith presented against mercantilism. They have not learned
after over 200 years of economic writing that intervention by the
state reduces the wealth of those customers who are no longer
allowed to buy the goods that they want to buy.
The mercantilist
looks at these excluded customers, and he thinks this: "They do
not count." Really, he is thinking this: "They should not count,
but they do, so we have to cut them off at the border." The fact
of the matter is this: customers are a majority of people inside
the nation, and if this were not true, there would be no need
to impose sales taxes on imported goods in order to reduce trade.
The only reason why the sales taxes are imposed, other than to collect
revenue, is because the special-interest groups that are unable
to compete in the free market are well aware of the fact that most
customers do not want to buy what they want to sell on the terms
that they want to sell it. The special-interest groups need
tariffs because they do not represent the nation.
Protectionists
insist that they are acting on behalf of of the nation. They do
not respond to the arguments of defenders of the free market, who
argue that individuals should be left alone to make whatever exchanges
they want. The free market's defender denies that there is any collective
entity called the nation that in some way best represents people
who make voluntary exchanges. The defender of the free market begins
with the right to private property. The defender of protectionism
begins with a collective entity which supposedly represents the
people, and which passes special-interest legislation against private
individuals who want to make purchases. How is it that the best
interests of the nation are best represented by special-interest
groups that cannot compete in the free market?
How is it that
people who claim to be free market advocates, and who even claim
to be libertarians, join with the special-interest groups to persuade
Congress to pass sales taxes on imported goods? How is it that all
of this is done in the name of the free market, when it is clearly
a form of mercantilism, which was the target of Adam Smith's critique
in 1776? How is it that modern mercantilists have deluded themselves
to such an extent that they deny that they are mercantilists, and
insist they are defenders of the free market, when in fact they
hold the position that Adam Smith rejected? (As for someone who
argues this way in the name of Austrian school economics, my mind
boggles. But there is at least one such person.)
This is intellectual
schizophrenia. These people do not know how to think straight. They
start their analysis such as it is with a collective
entity known as the nation, yet they think of themselves as defenders
of the free market. Yet the logic of free market economics does
not rest on the collective entity known as a nation.
PROPOSITIONS
OF PROTECTIONISM
The entire
concept of protectionism depends on a series of propositions, none
of which is true, and which few if any protectionist are willing
to defend in a clear and forthright manner. These false propositions
include the following:
The
nation is best represented by the nation-state.
The right
of private property is not the foundation of the free market.
The supreme
sovereignty of the state is the foundation of the free market.
Special-interest
groups that cannot compete effectively understand the needs of
the vast majority of citizens far better than property owners
do.
Special-interest
groups that pay off politicians to vote for tariffs are acting
on behalf of the nation.
Politicians
best understand the needs of the vast majority of citizens.
There is
some way for a politician to assess accurately the costs and benefits
of voluntary exchange.
Politicians
can add up the national benefits and add up the costs, and then
will usually vote in favor of whatever maximizes the net national
benefits.
Politicians are not self-interested at the expense of a majority
of property owners.
The opinions
of customers who want to buy from foreigners should be ignored.
Badges plus
guns plus sales taxes increase the wealth of nations.
Protectionists
never start their analysis with acting individuals. They always
start with the collective entity known as the state. They insist
that the collective entity known as the state best represents the
interest of the collective entity known as the nation. (This idea
goes back to Plato, but it was most powerfully argued by Rousseau.)
They never
define what the nation is, and they never show how special interest-legislation
on behalf of inefficient manufacturers increases the wealth of a
nation.
Millions of
conservatives who insist that Congress is not to be trusted to assess
the economy domestically also maintain this exception: Congress's
collective ability to impose sales taxes on imports. Here, they
say, voters can and should trust Congress.
Here is the
assumption of all defenders of tariffs as protection. The pursuit
of profit by self-interested individuals leads to national poverty
when they pursue their self-interest across a national border. Inside
the borders, Adam Smith's logic is sound, they say. The pursuit
of self-interest does increase the wealth of nations. But this principle
does not apply across national borders.
Smith argued
for the extension of the logic of his system of natural liberty
across all borders. Protectionists, in his day and now, refuse to
accept this. They say that his logic stops at a national border.
CONCLUSION
I do not expect
to change the mind of any protectionist. But I would like those
people who are the targets of protectionists' taxation program to
recognize that the person making the argument for sales taxes on
imports is a mercantilist and a welfare statist.
The protectionist
will not admit this to himself, and he surely will not admit it
to anyone considering his arguments. He will staunchly deny that
he is a mercantilist or a welfare statist, but his arguments are
those of mercantilism and welfare state economics, so his denials
should not be taken seriously.
I
want protectionists to come clean. I want them to admit that they
are defending mercantilism and therefore defending the welfare state.
I want them to admit that they do not believe in the right of property
owners to make voluntary exchanges across national borders without
paying a sales tax. I want them to fess up to the fact that they
believe in this formula: badges plus guns plus sales taxes increase
the wealth of nations.
Most of all,
I want them to stop claiming that they are believers in Austrian
school economics and are staunch defenders of libertarianism.
The protectionists
often include this sentence in their responses: "But what about
. . . ?" Here is my answer: "Put away your badge, put your gun in
your holster, and stop trying to tax me." Or, more philosophically:
"You do not speak for the nation." Or, more personally: "Stop acting
as a shill for a small group of businesses that can't meet the standards
imposed by customers."
June
26, 2012
Gary
North [send him mail]
is the author of Mises
on Money. Visit http://www.garynorth.com.
He is also the author of a free 20-volume series, An
Economic Commentary on the Bible.
Copyright ©
2012 Gary North
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