That the currently dominant system has failed can hardly be contested
One of the sad
narratives of the financial meltdown of 2008 and its aftermath is that it was
and remains the result of unbridled capitalism. Too much freedom
spoiled the economic broth.
While doing
research for a current project I'm working on, I came upon a remarkable essay
by Ludwig von Mises. It turns out that Mises considered the question of whether
economic crisis is an indictment of laissez-faire capitalism
back in 1931 in the wake of the worst global economic downturn of the Twentieth
Century.
In an essay,
"The Economic Crisis and Capitalism," published in the German Neue Freie Presse(available in
English Translation in Selected
Writings of Ludwig von Mises, Vol. 2), he explains why
the answer to the question is a decided no!
It is almost universally asserted that the severe economic crisis under
which the world presently is suffering has provided proof of the impossibility
of retaining the capitalist system. Capitalism, it is thought, has failed; and
its place must be taken by a better system, which clearly can be none other
than socialism.
That the currently dominant system has failed can hardly be contested.
But it is another question whether the system that has failed was the
capitalist system or whether, in fact, it is not anticapitalist
policy--interventionism, and national and municipal socialism--that is to blame
for the catastrophe.
The structure of our society resets on the division of labor and on the
private ownership of the means of production. In this system the means of
production are privately owned and are used either by the owners
themselves--capitalists and landowners--for production, or turned over to other
entrepreneurs who carry out production partly with their own and partly with
others' means of production. In the capitalist system the market functions as
the regulator of production. The price structure of the market decides what
will be produced, how, and in what quantity. Through the structure of prices,
wages, and interest rates the market brings supply and demand into balance and
sees to it that each branch of production will be as fully occupied as
corresponds to the volume and intensity of the effective demand. Thus
capitalist production derives its meaning from the market.
Of course, a temporary imbalance between production and demand can occur, but the structure of market prices makes sure that the balance is reestablished in a short time. Only when the mechanism of the market is disturbed by external interventions is the effect of market prices on the regulation of production prevented; they are disturbances that no longer can be remedied by the automatic reactions of the market, disturbance that are not temporary but prolonged.
Of course, a temporary imbalance between production and demand can occur, but the structure of market prices makes sure that the balance is reestablished in a short time. Only when the mechanism of the market is disturbed by external interventions is the effect of market prices on the regulation of production prevented; they are disturbances that no longer can be remedied by the automatic reactions of the market, disturbance that are not temporary but prolonged.
In a free market
rooted in private property, the only way
entrepreneurs are able to sustain profits is by serving customers better than
anyone else. It is only when they receive special privileges through
preferential regulation, subsidies, bailouts and the like that they are able to
reap profits for which they have not sowed productive activity.
I was struck by
how much of what Mises said about the response of many to the Great Depression
applies closely to our current situation. Just like Mises, we must never tire
of explaining the fallacies in the thinking of those who think the Great
Recession is a clear case of the failure of capitalism. In fact, it is
a quintessential example of the failures of interventionism to bring about
anything other than economic destruction and relative impoverishment.
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