Equality The Great Socialist Ideal
by
Jeff Thomas
International
Man
Recently
by Jeff Thomas: Election
Time
Defining
Equality
The free-market
system is, in one sense, equal. Anyone with ideas, abilities or
ambition has the opportunity to improve upon his lot in life. Therefore,
at any given time, there are people in a free-market society who
are at every level of economic success some on their way
up, some on their way down.
Beginning in
the early 19th century, some philosophers argued that this system
is in another sense, unequal, as there are many people who do not
possess those new ideas, do not have unique abilities and/or have
a lesser ambition. They argued that the free-market system is a
decidedly imperfect concept for this reason, and they were correct.
They asked, Is it not possible to create a system in which
all could prosper, rather than a select few?
The trouble
with socialism is not in the basic objective. The trouble is that
no one has actually come up with a workable means to achieve the
objective. The philosophers who created the socialist approach settled
for a plan that does not answer the question at all. It does, however,
seek to diminish and discourage those with ideas, abilities and
ambitions, in order to lower them to the level of those who do not
possess these attributes. The net result is an entire society that
operates on a lower level, eliminating advancement for all concerned,
as well as for society as a whole.
There is one
exception to this lack of advancement, however. Instead of the free-market
system, which has opportunity for anyone to increase his position,
socialism has, at its core, the leaders the people who enforce
the equality. They tend to be a relatively closed group who enjoy
a far higher standard of living, in addition to enjoying far greater
freedom of choice. (Equality for some; not for others back
to the original problem.)
Friedrich Von
Hayek, in his book, The
Road to Serfdom, states:
The choice
open to us is not between a system in which everybody will get
what he deserves according to some absolute und universal standard
of right
but between a system where it is the will of a
few persons that decides who gets what
.
The Great
Lie of Socialism
In order for
socialism to appeal to the masses, a great lie has been put forward:
the concept of the haves and the have-nots,
or the rich and the poor. Most any socialist
will refer to these categories regularly and is unlikely to characterise
himself as rich. Even celebrities, with incomes in the
seven-figure range will never refer to themselves as rich.
Rich is equated with evil. Therefore, a businessman
who may earn under $100,000 per year is one of the greedy
rich, whilst a celebrity whose annual income is in the millions
is one of the people.
How, then,
is rich defined by those of a socialist bent? Well,
in fact, it is unlikely that any socialist has ever put a number
on it, but there is a decided trend to suggest that, if my neighbour
has more than me, he is rich. Further, there is often the inference
that my neighbour needs to be taken down a peg by the authorities.
Perhaps a new tax on the rich, or a higher percentage of tax will
work. (Of course, should I become more prosperous next year, the
bar will need to be raised, so that I, once again, am below the
level that may be characterised as rich.)
For this reason,
the terms are kept vague, as no political aspirant who espouses
socialism could ever succeed if he actually put a dollar value on
rich. In practice, the term does not refer to a specific
level of income, but to an attitude about the method of government.
Only merchants, businessmen, bankers, etc. tend to be categorised
as rich.
It is this
very vagueness that gives socialism its appeal. In practice, socialistic
proposals from leaders do not truly raise anyone up. They, instead,
seek to drag others down. Those citizens who respond supportively
to such proposals are those whose thinking is subjective enough
that they imagine that all those to be dragged down will be those
above my economic level not me.
This Great
Lie is an intoxicant something we can take to assure us that,
whatever our personal shortcomings, be they a lack of talent, a
lack of ambition, or even outright laziness, our peers who do not
share these shortcomings will not be allowed to excel. We will not
be bypassed by others and made to feel small.
Socialistic
philosophy claims that the free-market system is a top-down system,
engineered to hold down the little man. It claims that, in order
to protect the little man, a bottom-up system is necessary and socialism
is that system. Yet, the opposite is true. Under socialism, the
decision as to what is produced comes from the small enforcer-class,
not from the entrepreneurs. It is therefore a top-down society,
directed by an Elite.
In a free-market
society, the decision as to what is produced is not (as socialist
philosophy claims) determined by the entrepreneurs, it is determined
by the masses, since they will only buy what they actually want.
The free-market system is therefore a bottom-up system, which, interestingly,
is the very object which socialism purports to create, but does
not.
As stated by
Ludwig von Mises in his book, Human
Action: A Treatise on Economics,
The entrepreneurs
and capitalists are not irresponsible autocrats. They are unconditionally
subject to the sovereignty of the consumers. The market is a consumers
democracy.
The Enduring
Nature of the Socialist Concept
Considering
all of the above, why, then, does socialism continue to appeal to
so many people? In a word, resentment. It is easy for us to build
up a resentment for the landlord who appears once a month, wanting
to take our hard-earned money from us. Or the merchant who demands
more for his goods than we feel is affordable. Or the employer who
pays us for our labour, whilst paying himself more than he pays
us.
Somehow, in
our vanity, we imagine that these acts are unfair, simply
because we wish to be paid more for our services and charged less
for the goods and services provided by others. Over time, these
people grow large in our perception as the greedy rich,
who somehow are holding us down keeping us from attaining
a higher economic standard. We grow to detest those who have achieved
more economically than we have, even as we envy their achievements.
We may not wish to invest the money and hard work necessary to become
a merchant, landlord or employer, but we do become jealous of the
fruits they have earned from their efforts.
This resentment
makes us easy marks for those political hopefuls who say, Elect
me and Ill eliminate the disparity between the haves and have-nots.
Ill legislate rent control. Ill demand employment benefits.
Ill create price controls. For those who are short-sighted
enough to fail to understand why there will always be those
who have more than we do, these promises seem not only plausible,
but entirely justified. They promise Equality for All. The trouble
is, they do not deliver equality, they merely do away with the bi-products
of ideas, abilities and ambitions and replace them with the arbitrary
policies of an enforcer class.
If I can leave
the reader with one thought regarding the concept of social engineering
to achieve equality, it would be this:
Socialism
claims to be the great equaliser. However, it does not lift those
at the lower levels to a higher economic level. Instead, it takes
from those that have achieved a higher economic level, discouraging
their ideas, abilities and ambitions, assuring a form of lower
equality for all, through the elimination of the motivation to
achieve.
Reprinted
from International
Man with permission.
November
16, 2012
Jeff
Thomas [send him mail]
is British and resides in the Caribbean. The son of an economist
and historian, he learned early to be distrustful of governments
as a general principle. He began his study of economics around 1990,
learning initially from Sir John Templeton, then Harry Schulz and
Doug Casey and later others of an Austrian persuasion.
Copyright
© 2012 International
Man
The
Best of Jeff Thomas
|