A Libertarian Historian's Analysis
Ignores 'the Land Question'
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[Review of the book How Capitalism
Saved America, by Thomas J. DiLorenzo (Crown Forum, 2004)]
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Thomas J. DiLorenzo is a professor of economics in the Sellinger
School of Business and Management at Loyola College in Maryland and
a member of the senior faculty of the Mises Institute in Auburn,
Alabama.
Thomas J. DiLorenzo begins his recent book, How Capitalism Saved
America, with a central assertion: "Free-market capitalism,
based on private property and peaceful exchange, is the source of
civilization and human progress." A few sentences later he adds a
qualifier - that exchange must be "voluntary." Readers who
hold that nature is not and ought not to be treated as "private
property" will find his overall analysis wanting.
One objective of the book is to respond to anti-capitalist myths,
which the author states have been spread by "an entire class of
intellectuals
and others." Over time, the broad acceptance
of these myths has been to rely increasingly on government to
intervene in economic affairs. DiLorenzo describes the results:
"
the more regulations, controls, taxes,
government-run industries, protectionism, and other forms of
interventionism that exist, the poorer a country will be. Big
government invariably causes higher unemployment, higher prices,
shortages of goods and services, and myriad other problems that can
be eliminated only by more, not less, voluntary exchange on the free
market - that is, by capitalism."[p.4]
From here, the author takes us on a journey through history to
explore the evolution of the American System and examine what
has gone right or wrong, and why.
DiLorenzo looks back to Adam Smith, who, he tells us, identified the "the
most important elements of capitalism - the division of labor, social
cooperation, and free exchange." He might have added that it is
in the socio-political arrangements that promote or thwart social
cooperation that history is most clearly explained. It is in this
arena the author chooses to explore only the dynamics that support his
assertions and conclusions. Almost immediately, he ventures away from
the reality of the American System by asserting "one can
only earn money by providing one's fellow man with a good or service
"[p.11]
The major exception to this condition is, of course, the claim on
goods or services by the landed, who command such a claim by virtue of
their control over nature, such control orchestrated by the force of
law or merely by force. His statement is true, therefore, only under
circumstances where the system of law secures full liberty for every
individual. The problem is that no such system exists. The failure of
government in the United States has been the prolonged failure to
purge the American System of entrenched privilege and of
economic license as the basis for individual wealth accumulation.
DiLorenzo has accepted the libertarian construct of capitalism, from
which he examines the historical record. His failure to understand the
fundamental structure of the American System leads him to make another
gross assertion; namely, that "most exceptionally wealthy people
amassed their fortunes precisely because they provided valued products
to millions of people all around the globe."[p.12] What good or
service was provided by those who profited by exercising monopolistic
control over the nation's land and natural resource-laden lands?
He examines the careers of Bill Gates, John D. Rockefeller and other
successful entrepreneurs to support his case. To be fair, these
individuals built huge productive enterprises and delivered greatly
needed and desired goods to the market. But, full disclosure requires
acknowledgement of the laws granting them economic license to satisfy
their rent-seeking strategies as well. DiLorenzo might have grasped
this distinction had he looked at the career of John Jacob Astor and
other great land speculators.
The question not addressed by DiLorenzo is whether less government
(i.e., what so-called most libertarians and conservatives call for
under the chant of laissez-faire) would have resulted in
improved conditions for the millions people who came to the United
States as immigrants after the close of the frontier and after the
availability of free land disappeared. A full understanding of how
markets operate would direct the author to condition his forecast on
implementing a solution to the land question. Unfortunately,
he is oblivious to the fact that there exists a deep moral problem -
with social and economic consequences - associated with law that
allows the value of nature to be taken as private property.
DiLorenzo rightly champions "private ownership of the means of
production" but acknowledges no distinction between what we
produce with our labor and capital goods and nature
as the source of what we produce. His references to the wisdom of
Locke and Smith are, as is too often the case by libertarians, very
selective. Both Locke and Smith devoted extensive parts of their works
examining the moral basis for distinguishing between private versus
societal property. The case DiLorenzo attempts to make is two-fold:
first, government should own little or nothing; and, second,
government should impose no restrictions on those who do own property.
Market forces and self-interest will dictate behavior:
"Property owners who do not take good care of their
property bear the full cost of their actions when their property -
that is, their wealth - depreciates in value. The opposite is also
true: those who take care of and improve their property reap the
rewards when their property value goes up. This is why private homes
are so much better maintained than government housing projects, for
example, or why private lakes and streams are carefully maintained
while government-owned ones are often overfished and overused, or
why private forests that are harvested are often replanted with
trees that mature in twenty-five years while public forests are not."
The failure of government to serve as an effective steward of the
public domain is a fact. Government decisions are too often motivated
by political expediency and the influence of vested interests with
strong political connections. Mismanagement and corruption add to the
negative effects. However, the solution DiLorenzo seems to favor
(i.e., complete privatization) suggests that nature's only value is
economic. "Whenever the present value of using a resource in the
future is larger than the value of current use, that resource will be
preserved," he writes; but only when private ownership exists. On
the other hand, "political resource allocation under democracy
tends toward immediate gratification." If DiLorenzo believes that
our system of law is the result of effective participatory governance
rather than corruption and entrenched privilege, I suggest to him that
he seriously misunderstands our history. What is needed is more
effective democracy (i.e., greater citizen participation in
decision-making, in implementation of policies and in oversight and
accountability of government officials and employees).
Another issue not addressed in this book is our responsibility to
preserve the diversity of life by limiting the human footprint by
deliberate and thoughtful steps. These are by their nature global
issues that require enforcement of rules agreed to by the governments
of sovereign nations. Government must have the power to ensure its own
citizens act in accordance with these multi-national agreements.
Within the United States, our laws must come to terms with the moral
distinctions between private and public property, as well as
establishing reasonable restrictions on the use of such property.
These are values shared by many citizens but which are consistently
undermined by individuals committed to profit maximizing - or the
theft of public goods for private benefit -- by whatever means can be
employed, without regard to ethical considerations.
We have seen over the last half century that location decisions by
corporate executives consistently reveal a detachment from the
communities in which they operate. In fact, the very concept of
community is suffering because fewer and fewer businesses are locally
owned and operated. Adam Smith recognized that high wages created
rather than reduced business opportunities. Yet, today's corporate
executives are so focused on the short-term that they repeatedly
relocate production facilities to countries where labor costs are
insignificant, worker benefits are nonexistent and where corrupt
governments impose few, if any, restrictions on pollution or disposal
of toxic wastes. When a few companies do this, they may increase
profits for a time. When a large number of companies try this, the
very purchasing power they depend on for sales disappears. Moreover, a
growing body of scientific research is telling us that the
environmental costs of shipping goods around the globe will soon have
to be paid. The air and the seas cannot indefinitely continue to
absorb our toxic discharges. Should we, therefore, privatize the air
and the seas and allow private interests to charge for their use?
The rational limits of government, DiLorenzo argues, should be "spending
to protect property rights, enforce the law, and protect citizens from
foreign aggressors." He argues against "taxation, price
controls, regulation in general, and government control of production."
Nothing to argue with here. Taxation of true private property is
confiscation. (Issuance of paper currency by the central bank in
exchange for government debt instruments is also confiscation - of
purchasing power from holders of existing currency; but, that is a
subject DiLorenzo does not cover in this book.) The real problem with
his analysis is that DiLorenzo makes no distinction between income
flows that are earned or unearned. Widespread prosperity occurs when
equality of opportunity is broadly secured; and, this is a function of
just socio-political arrangements (i.e., politics dictates economic
outcomes).
DiLorenzo recognizes that societies differ by degree in the extent of
"economic freedom" permitted. There are no examples of a
society with the desired (and just) level of governmental
intervention. The greater the track record for upward mobility,
however, the greater the degree of economic freedom observed to exist.
In this regard, the American System - with all its flaws --
sets the standard.
Of those who do not appreciate the virtues of capitalist organization
(i.e., as he defines such organization), DiLorenzo agrees with
Friedrich Hayek conclusion that they just do not understand economics.
An important reason for this lack of understanding is the disposition
of intellectuals to socialism as the most equitable societal
structure. The socialist's faith in government - in centralized
planning - is not lessened by failures of government policies and
programs to achieve forecasted results. Yet DiLorenzo offers only
human nature and the differences in individual potential as the reason
for "material inequality," pointing out that such inequality
occurs in every society, regardless of its socio-political structure.
Such inequality is least, however, where there exists a "capitalist
economy" to encourage and reward individual initiative and
creativity. The problem is that this analogy is incomplete. Not since
the closing of the frontier has the American System produced a
full employment economy (unless one is willing to accept military
service and weapons manufactures during wartime as integral to the
market economy).
With regard to the U.S. economy, DiLorenzo presents the case for the
dismantling of almost all government interventions. "These
measures are always instituted for political reasons," he writes,
"and almost inevitably create even greater problems than the ones
they were supposed to fix."[p.46] There is, of course, an almost
endless list of examples proving his point. Where government is
concerned, the most powerful law at work is the law of unforeseen
consequences. Max Hirsch made much the same arguments over a
century ago in his book Democracy vs. Socialism. The function
of government as operated has never been to create what Henry George
called for as "a fair field with no favors." Even when the
size of government was small, new laws more often than not created
privilege and advantage. As time has gone on, liberalism and a desire
on the part of our elected leaders to leave behind a favorable legacy
in the history books has created the myth of public policy on behalf
of equality of opportunity. Yet, the form that law and regulation have
taken has been to protect entrenched privilege and reward "rent-seeking"
behavior. This is the version of the "free market"
championed by self-styled conservatives today.
DiLorenzo attacks minimum wage laws because they fail to recognize
the limited contribution to a business made by unskilled (often
teenage) workers who tend to fill these jobs. He also puts the
majority of environmental activists into a block who "try to use
politics to block the production of goods and services." These
two seemingly very different facets of our social organization involve
not just economic practices but important moral considerations. If one
accepts that DiLorenzo's version of capitalism will result in a full
employment society (i.e., more jobs looking for people than people
looking for jobs), then employers will be forced to compete with one
another for workers by offering higher wages and good benefits. That
is not the case today, resulting in the fact that many workers are
forced by circumstances to accept a wage that does not allow them to
live a decent, human existence. Millions of low-income workers must
work 60 to 80 hours a week and still are not able to meet the cost of
basic living expenses.
Where the environment is concerned, neither DiLorenzo nor very many
environmentalists have bothered to factor in "rent theory"
to the equation. Every parcel of land has some potential rental value
in the market. This rental value is affected by whatever restrictions
on use are imposed by the community. The fewer the restrictions, the
greater will be the rental value. While the private owner of the land
might exercise restraint in order to preserve the quality of the land,
there is little incentive to install production methods that eliminate
waste, pollutants or toxins if these can be dumped into the commons.
DiLorenzo suggests the solution is to enact "sound liability laws"
to seek payment for damages. The problem with such remedies is that
they come to late for individuals whose health is destroyed and may
not come at all because of the other laws (e.g., bankruptcy
protection). The list of business owners is long who have dumped toxic
chemicals in the air, into streams and rivers or even on their own
property, then eventually abandoned the entire site when profits fell
or markets contracted - leaving remediation to the community.
Effective regulation with periodic inspections and the imposition of
penalties for noncompliance are needed. If the community collected the
rental value of land via taxation, at least there would be funds to
cover the costs of such regulation and for remediation when preventive
measures failed. DiLorenzo correctly points to state-socialist
societies as having the worst environmental record of all. "Under
communism, these sources belonged to the state; in other words, they
belonged to no one," he writes. Under democracy, however,
citizen groups exert direct and indirect pressure on public officials
to fulfill their assigned responsibilities. Public hearings, required
disclosures by agencies of their decisions and follow-thru, as well as
the establishment of due process under law all contribute to better
(but far from optimal) stewardship of the environment. The worst
offenses have historically occurred where secrecy and national
security prevail - with the military - and with the public utilities.
For markets to operate as DiLorenzo suggests, not only "sound
liability law" but the community collection of rent is required
in conjunction with well-managed oversight.
Without realizing it, DiLorenzo stumbles across an important
principle as he describes the transition in colonial Virginia that
freed workers from indentured obligations to the Virginia Company and
gave them ownership of small plots of land to farm. Although I have
not examined other sources to confirm additional details, common sense
tells us that the colonists had to have access to tools, to seed and
to domesticated farm animals in order to make their farmsteads
successful. Either they obtained these necessaries directly from the
Virginia Company or were provided with credit by the British
government. In return for the land grants (and whatever else was
provided), the colonists were required "to work no more than one
month per year
to pay the colony a lump-sum tax
"[p.55]
Thus, their ownership of landed property was conditional upon a
payment to the community treasury out of total production. Although
not determined by market forces, this payment was essentially the "rent"
that rightfully belonged to the community in return for the privilege
extended. So long as land of equal potential productivity remained
open to settlement, the new structure of private landholdings
established a high degree of equality of opportunity. Yet, as we know,
in but a few generations access to land along the Atlantic coast was
no longer open to all newcomers. The communities became dominated by
landed interests who saw to it that sources other than landed property
were looked to for funding of public goods and services.
British Mercantilism eventually imposed heavy burdens on the
descendants of the early colonial families and the flood of new
colonists arriving each year. Yet, historian Charles Andrews described
the long period from settlement of Jamestown and Plymouth until the
years immediately following the end of the Seven Years' War (or,
French and Indian War) as a period of "salutary neglect."
The landed class of Britain recoiled at having to absorb the full cost
of defending colonial property and interests during the war. This
resulted in the passage of a series of revenue acts, objected to by
the propertied colonials. At first, the colonials responded by
resorting to widespread avoidance, smuggling and the boycotting of
British goods. Eventually, unified political action was thought
necessary, and the first "American continental congress" met
to discuss how to best put their grievances before the King. When this
proved to be ineffective, the colonials drifted from protest to armed
resistance.
And so, we moved to the establishment of republican governance and
the adoption of a written Constitution, a document acknowledged to
incorporate "strong property rights protections." DiLorenzo
makes passing reference to the analysis by Charles Beard, who
suggested in his book, An Economic Interpretation of the
Constitution, that the form of government structured by the
framers had as much to do with vested interest as with philosophical
principles. DiLorenzo concludes that even
"[i]f the founders were merely acting in their own
vested interests in protecting property rights in the Constitution,
then that should be considered a blessing to all future generations
of Americans."[p.72]
Again, what is ignored in the debate is any distinction between land
and what people produce from land using their labor and capital goods.
To take from producers what is the rightful product of their effort is
confiscation of wealth - whether by government taxation or by private
appropriation. Even as early as the late eighteenth century, the stage
was set for a never-ending pattern of private appropriation. Only when
circumstances became so blatantly intolerable - when the nation's
older cities were disintegrating under the weight of industrial
pollution and grinding poverty - did those in government reluctantly
begin to confiscate an ever-increasing amount of wealth from its
producers. The part of the story ignored by DiLorenzo was succinctly
captured by one of the great philosophers of individualism, Albert Jay
Nock:
"With America opening as the land of unprecedented
monopolistic opportunity, men would of course be impelled to get out
of the producing class and into the exploiting class as quickly as
possible. It was not hard to foresee a time when, for instance, the
greatest producing industry of the country, agriculture, would be
exploited to the point of bankruptcy as an industry, leaving the
rise in land-values as the only source of profit to the
agriculturalists."*
Much of this was already in evidence prior to the Seven Years' War.
Those who controlled large plantations along the Atlantic coast called
for restrictions against opening of the interior to maintain their
control over the supply of labor and, therefore, over wages that had
to be paid. When these measures failed, the landed resorted to the
introduction of Africans to work the land as slaves, allowing the
continuation of their leisurely existence as they confiscated the
products of a captured labor force.
With an enormous continent to populate, govern and manage, what
emerged during the early nineteenth century was a debate over whether
government ought to take responsibility for making "internal
improvements." And, one of the men most responsible for the
American System was Henry Clay, "the great proponent of
subsidies to canal, road, and railroad building corporations."[p.81]
All of these subsidies made the interior more accessible to population
migration and created a demand for land yielding enormous profits to
those who were granted title to so much of the public domain as part
of their subsidy deals. DiLorenzo argues that none of this was
necessary to induce private investment in roadways or canals or
railroads. For one thing, "[l]andowners would see their property
values rise
"[85] - an acknowledgment that these increases
in land values resulted not from what individual landowners did but
from aggregate investment (mostly by others).
Absent the enormous gifts provided by government, development of the
continent would have certainly proceeded in a more orderly manner,
allowing time for citizens to reach consensus over management of the
public domain. Economic theory supports the expectation that public
appropriation of rent would have been a great asset as the nation grew
in population. Fewer people living in the East would have felt
compelled to move inland or to the West Coast in search of opportunity
or improved quality of life. Producers rather than land speculators
and the old "landed" families would have been rewarded
financially. The history of the American continent in the nineteenth
and early twentieth century would have been much different.
DiLorenzo tells us that another myth about capitalism is that workers
have been exploited by employers. In most cases, he states, working
conditions in the factories "were a significant improvement over
the conditions the working class had previously endured."[p.94]
For the millions of landless and propertyless peasants and unemployed
poor reaching the newer American cities from the Old World, this was
undoubtedly the case. Yet, when they arrived in New York, or Boston,
or Philadelphia, their lives were often as wretched or worse than
before. The American System has not succeeded in breaking with
its past; many immigrant workers must endure severe working and living
conditions at the bottom of the economic ladder. DiLorenzo believes
government interference has thwarted the full potential of the market
system to generate demand for more workers than are available. Had the
Federal Constitution - and the state constitutions -- stipulated that
government expenditures must be funded from revenue obtained by the
taxation of land values (i.e., by annual rental values as determined
in the market) and made unconstitutional the taxation of incomes
gained from the production and sale of goods or services performed, or
of the market value of assets such as personal homes, other buildings,
equipment, etc. - then the American System would be a more
complete form of capitalism. And, DiLorenzo's vision would
materialize. As it stands, a more descriptive term than capitalism
for the system that exists today is, I suggest, agrarian and
industrial landlordism.
DiLorenzo does not even sense there is still a "land question"
to be addressed. Yet, there is overwhelming evidence that we have
failed to act to solve the land question. The solution requires a
well-enforced change in how government raises its revenue; and, this
requires changes in existing law. The full potential of capitalism
cannot be realized until this is achieved. Even though over two-thirds
of all households in the United States live in homes they own
(subject, of course, to varying degrees of mortgage debt), most "land
value" is held by a relatively small percentage of the population
- between 3-5 percent. Federal, state and local governments control
roughly half of the nation's land area but only a fraction of its land
value. Another practice of government that creates entrenched
privilege - one not mentioned by DiLorenzo -- is the leasing of public
lands to private interests at fees far below what would be yielded
under competitive bidding conditions. Access to the nation's remaining
mineral-laden lands, its forests and grazing lands has been
practically given away for more than a century.
Of particular interest is the book's chapter on the cause of the "Great
Depression" of the 1930s. As the chapter began, I thought to
myself, would DiLorenzo discuss the extensive credit-fueled
speculation in Midwestern farmland or in Florida? He points to the
social engineering, interventionist mentality of Herbert Hoover as
important causes for the downturn. Hoover's support for labor and the
use of Federal funds on public works projects prevented markets from
adjusting to falling profits. The government needed additional revenue
to pay for these projects, which "took money out of the private
sector, extracted through taxes."[p.168] Nonetheless, "[b]y
1931 Hoover's uncontrolled government spending had created a $2
billion deficit, which induced him to sign the calamitous Revenue Act
of 1932, one of the largest tax increases in American history up to
that point."[p.168] All across the board, DiLorenzo points out,
Hoover either failed to do what was needed, or prevented markets from
adjusting to the changing reality: agricultural price supports were
followed by the Smoot-Hawley tariff and the contraction of
international trade.
DiLorenzo correctly states that the Great Depression "was caused
by government, not capitalism."[p.177] However, he accepts the
conclusion by von Mises and the Austrians that inflationary monetary
policy was a first cause, ignoring the role played by dysfunctional
land markets and the increasing share of production claimed by landed
interests, the acceleration of such claims fueled by cheap credit. In
his discussion of the Roosevelt years, DiLorenzo correctly challenges
Roosevelt's neo-Keynesian attempts at spending the country back into
prosperity, pointing out that "despite the fact that the federal
budget more than doubled in eight years, the Depression did not end
and, indeed, unemployment was higher in 1938 than it was in 1931."[p.199]
However, so much had gone wrong leading up to 1933 that none of the
measures initiated by Roosevelt ever had a chance. Among the handful
of economists who actually understood what needed to be done to
stabilize and correct the operation of land markets - so that "price"
would actually clear these markets in the same way it cleared markets
for labor, capital and credit - none had any influence in the halls of
the Congress or the Administration.
In the end, what is most amazing is that we have prospered to the
extent we have. DiLorenzo covers half but only half of the reasons why
we have not prospered more. He brings together in a readable format
much information that effectively challenges the American System.
Unfortunately, he joins a long list of critics who hold to a very
selective study of history and the writings of the great political
economists of the last three centuries.
* Albert Jay Nock. Jefferson. 1926,
p.274.
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