Democracy Is Destroying Your Wealth and Freedom
by Frank Karsten
Although
almost every democratic country suffers from bloated government,
over-regulation, heavy taxation and enormous public debts, few people
see a causal connection between these problems and the democratic
system itself. For many, the solution to these problems is more
democracy, not less.
Democracy tends
to be equated by many people with prosperity, equality, fairness,
togetherness and liberty. There is no evidence for any of this.
Democracy rests on three main principles: you have the right to
vote, you have the right to run for office, and the majority rules.
That’s it. Nowhere is it written for instance that democracy guarantees
the right to free speech, a right that many people link with democracy.
Nor is there any reason why democracy should lead to prosperity.
In fact, the
very principles of democracy give rise to processes that lead society
to the opposite of freedom and prosperity.
The most important
of these processes are the following.
1) Short-termism
As Hans-Hermann
Hoppe explained in his 2001 book Democracy,
The God That Failed, democracy leads to high time preference,
both among rulers and citizens. Since democratically elected politicians
are only temporarily in office, and since they are not the owners
of the resources at their disposal, they have a strong incentive
to spend money on projects that make them popular, with little regard
for the future. The problems they create along the way, such as
massive public debts, they leave for their successors to solve.
A democratic society is like a rental car – or worse: a car that
is owned by no one and used by everyone. It is quickly run down.
2) Parasitism
and social strife
Democracy is
a system in which people vote for politicians whom they hope will
favor them with handouts and privileges, for which the bill will
be sent to other people. It sets groups up against each other: farmers
versus urban dwellers, the elderly versus the young, immigrants
versus residents, employers versus employees, etc. This leads to
parasitical behavior and social strife. This is the result of the
democratic principle that all important decisions are subject to
majority rule, i.e. rule by the State, which makes everyone a cog
in the collective political system. In a free society, based on
individual rights, people with different views and goals do not
become each other’s potential enemies. They may cooperate with each
other, trade with each other, or leave each other alone – but they
have no coercive means to use others for their own ends.
3) Meddling
and interfering
Although many
people associate democracy with freedom, in reality no liberty is
safe from democracy. If the majority (or often some small influential
group) wants it, they can intervene into any kind of voluntary action,
transaction or relationship – and that’s what they do. They forbid
people to drink booze, burn flags, speak out against wars, watch
particular movies, ‘discriminate’, and so on. Democratic governments
continually intervene in voluntary transactions between sellers
and buyers, employers and employees, teachers and students, doctors
and patients, renters and landlords, service providers and customers,
et cetera. They also meddle in people’s personal choices: their
choice to smoke, to use drugs, to engage in a particular profession
(without a ‘license’), to ‘discriminate’ (i.e. to choose with whom
they want to associate), to make particular products (for which
others have been granted a ‘patent’, i.e. a government monopoly),
et cetera. There is no limit to how far this meddling can go. The
little freedom we still have in western societies we owe not to
democracy, but to our freedom loving heritage.
4) Collectivism
and docility
In pre-democratic
times rulers tended to be distrusted and every new tax was seen
as an infringement of liberty. But democratic decisions are seen
as fundamentally legitimate because they are supposed to have been
made by the people themselves. In monarchical times few could ever
hope to gain power, so most were suspicious of the ones in power.
But democracy leaves, at least in theory, the door open for everyone
to gain power. This makes people believe that they ought to subject
themselves to the rule of the majority. They might not agree with
specific laws and regulations but they feel they ought to abide
by them. But naturally they then will try to get a party in power
that adopts laws and doles out money for their own benefit. This
is how state spending grew from roughly 10% of GDP prior to the
First World War to almost 50% now in most democratic countries.
And why we have so many laws on the books now that it’s safe to
say there is a law for everything under the sun.

5) Corruption
and abuse
Although rule
by the majority is bad enough in itself, the reality of a democracy
is much more sordid. Since the elected government has virtually
unlimited power and controls virtually all of society’s resources,
all sorts of interests and lobby groups are at work behind the scenes
to influence government to bend laws to their advantage. One obvious
example are the banks and financial interests that together with
the government have set up a paper money system which they control
and manipulate to their own advantage. But there are many powerful
interests that use the system at the expense of the rest of the
people: labor unions, NGO’s, pharmaceutical companies, farmers,
the military-industrial complex. Individual citizens can do very
little about this. They usually don’t have the means or the time
to find out what is going on. All they can do is vote every once
in a while, but they cannot hold their rulers accountable for their
actions.
So the cause
of our economic and social ills is not that the wrong politicians
are in power. It’s the democratic system itself that causes the
problems. What we need to do is start changing the system so it
becomes less rather than more democratic. The most important way
to do this is by taking away the government’s powers and decentralizing
decision-making processes.
February
16, 2012
Frank Karsten
(send him mail) is
founder of the libertarian More Freedom Foundation in The Netherlands.
Together with Karel Beckman he wrote Beyond
Democracy, Why democracy does not lead to solidarity, prosperity
and liberty but to social conflict, runaway spending and a tyrannical
government.
This new libertarian book debunks 13 great myths with which
democracy is usually defended. It also offers an alternative: a
society based on individual freedom and voluntary social relations.
Order the book from Amazon in paperback
or Kindle
edition. More can be found on beyonddemocracy.net
Copyright
© 2012 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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