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Economic
Fascism and the Power Elite
by
David S. D'Amato
The state
the organization of the political means is the institution
that allows an idle, unproductive class of parasites to live at
the expense of ordinary, working people, whose means are industrious
activity and consensual exchange in the marketplace. We ought not
assume, however, that the indigent segment of society, those who
receive social welfare aid from the state, are necessarily foremost
among the parasites of the political means. Rather, free-market
libertarians from Albert Jay Nock to Murray Rothbard and Butler
Shaffer have demonstrated that in the statist economy of theft and
wealth redistribution, it is the elite powerful, entrenched
commercial players who most benefit. Historically and empirically,
this phenomenon of elite command of the apparatuses of government
is readily apparent and unmistakable in its expression, particularly
as regards the twentieth-century American economy. Economic historian
Robert Higgs has argued that the American economy developed into
a variant of corporatism or “tripartism,” an economic fascism defined
by formal collusion between certain key interests and various arms
of the state. “Corporatism,” writes Higgs, “faces the problem of
factions directly; in effect, it resolves the problem of the people
versus the interests by forthrightly declaring that the interests,
when properly organized and channeled, are the people”
(emphasis added).[1]
Like every permutation of the authoritarian idea, the corporatism
described by Higgs attempts to submerge the individual within the
anatomy of the leviathan state of which we must now regard
many nominally “private” actors as a part.
These firms,
in their partnership with the state, are “granted a deliberate,
representational monopoly”[2]
as payment for a level of control exercised by government. The iron
triangles that form the fascist tripartism detailed by Higgs recall
the thesis of C. Wright Mills’s groundbreaking sociological study,
The
Power Elite. In his masterwork, published first in 1956,
Mills gives an account of an intermeshed elite made up of a “political
directorate,” the “warlords” of the military establishment, and
“corporate chieftains” at the helm of Big Business bureaucracies.[3]
Hardly resulting from the legitimate free market defended by libertarians,
the social and economic problems and crises we see all around us
are in fact the moldering fruits of elite statism. And war, as both
the engine of an entire economic paradigm and its attendant psychological
and sociological substructure, has been the American state’s most
preferred expedient, burdening peaceful, productive society with
class rule. The permanent war economy, the unremitting exercise
in plunder that now makes up a terrifyingly large portion of the
economy at large, must necessarily poise itself upon antisocial
state-worship. As Vicesimus Knox wrote, “Fear is the principle of
all despotic government, and therefore despots make war their first
study and delight.”[4]
The existence of a corporate command-and-control economy, whose
configuration grows out of layered state interventions, depends
crucially on popular attitudes regarding the state. Only a public
trusting of elite judgment and expertise would abide a system built
on just the kinds of subjugation that the American ruling elite
hypocritically claimed to defy in two world wars.
Fundamentally
related to these insights into the practical relationships between
Big Business and Big Government, is the proposal of Rothbard’s short-lived
journal, Left and Right. Presenting the journal, Rothbard
said that the title “highlights our conviction that the present-day
categories of ‘left’ and ‘right’ have become misleading and obsolete.”[5]
Left and right designations become particularly troublesome when
we consider modern American conservatism as a “barren defense of
the status quo.”[6]
The concord of war statism reached by the political elite during
the twentieth century certainly wasn’t liberal in any coherent
or meaningful sense a near antithesis of the liberalism of
which Mises and Hayek regarded themselves as the legatees.
Mises and Hayek
inherited that consistent, comprehensive liberalism from, among
many others, Charles Comte and Charles Dunoyer, French political
thinkers writing in the early nineteenth century. During Comte and
Dunoyer’s time, many very different and contradictory ideas all
claimed liberalism; theirs was an “industrialist” rendering that
placed the state firmly and unambiguously in opposition to nonviolent,
economic society, the principles of which were not coercive, governmental
machinations, but harmonious trade. The “industrialisme”
of Comte and Dunoyer, then, was very much an antecedent to Oppenheimer’s
famous distinction between the political and economic means to wealth.
Industry and exchange were to be venerated as the defining hallmarks
of a free and just social and economic system, one loosed from the
old privileges of ruling classes extending back through history.
As Rothbard put it, in contrast to the productive classes (comprising
“workers, entrepreneurs, producers of all kinds”), the nonproductive
classes used “the state to levy tribute upon the producers.”[7]
Very much a rebuke of the established order, the free market ideas
of Comte and Dunoyer’s industrialist journal Le Censeur européen
had radical and thus very unconservative implications:
a hope to completely replace government with “the administration
of things”[8] (a
phrase coined by Comte and only later used by Saint-Simon). Just
as did Rothbard hundreds of years later, Comte and Dunoyer folded
economic analyses inherited primarily from Jean-Baptiste
Say in with historical and philosophical narratives, fashioning
a unique and libertarian notion of class. Their economic propositions
emerged from a holistic, methodological approach, tracing a historical
divide between “the devouring” (“the hornets”) and “the industrious”
(“the bees”).[9]
Indeed, Comte and Dunoyer championed a classless society, though
not in the sense of absolute equality or the end of private property.
If the free market truly was the means of “dissolving the ruling
classes,”[10]
then it was privilege and monopoly, upheld by the coercive power
of the state, and not legitimate property and trade, that were to
be opposed.
The political
means may not be as plain to see, as glaring or as straightforward
as they were in Comte and Dunoyer’s time. Central banking under
the Federal Reserve System, today’s government subsidies, and regulatory
barriers to entry are perhaps not as easily ascertainable to the
layman as were affronts against the free market as they existed
in Comte and Dunoyer’s day. But these interconnected instruments
for binding and exploiting the society that is their host are just
as menacing, if not more so. Where those living under the tyranny
of old monarchical systems could be expected to understand full
well the class nature of the statist rule around them, most today
are misdirected by the democratic rhetoric that clothes the American
state. Rothbard’s Wall
Street, Banks, and American Foreign Policy would prove
an instructive read for those in, for example, the Occupy crowd
who misguidedly ascribe our current economic predicament to the
free market. The ties between the war economy, the Federal Reserve’s
central banking system, and the powerful Wall Street banks are,
as demonstrated in Rothbard’s monograph, a defining feature of the
state monopoly capitalism that has prevailed.
In the present
day, following the maturation of the connections identified by Mills,
Rothbard, Higgs and others, the economy has been “centralized .
. . into a highly structured bureaucracy under the effective direction
and control of leading business interests.”[11]
We can in no way be said to have a free market, as the ties between
powerful interests and the federal government are as strong as ever.
Politics is an expensive, high-stakes game of favors and bribery,
a fact that libertarians like Comte and Dunoyer saw clearly hundreds
of years ago.
Notes
[1]
Robert Higgs, Against
Leviathan, page 178.
[2]
Philippe Schmitter in Higgs, Against Leviathan, page 179.
[3]
Laurance S. Moss, "The Power Elite Revisited", Left
and Right.
[4]
Vicesimus Knox, The
Spirit of Despotism, page 68.
[5]
Murray Rothbard, The General Line.
[6]
Sidney Lens quoted in Leonard Liggio, Why
the Futile Crusade.
[7]
Murray Rothbard, Economic
Thought Before Adam Smith, page 386.
[8]
The work of Comte and Dunoyer therefore shares at least one similarity
with that of the socialist anarchist Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, of
disrepute among many libertarians for the declaration, “Property
is theft.” Many don’t know that Proudhon also extolled the idea
of contract as opposite that of government, advocating “the reign
of contract, the industrial or economic system,”
as substituted for “ military rule.” To paraphrase him,
Proudhon sought the eventual and gradual dissolution of the governmental
system within the economic system.
[9]
Ralph Raico, Classical
Liberalism and the Austrian School, page 193.
[10]
Economic Thought Before Adam Smith, page 386.
[11]
Butler Shaffer, In
Restraint of Trade, page 22.
Copyright
© 2013 by the Ludwig von Mises Institute.
Permission to reprint in whole or in part is hereby granted, provided
full credit is given.
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