By Anthony de Jasay
Marxists and most Frenchmen hold that since all value
is produced by labour, all of it should be paid out in wages except the part
taken by the state, a body which by rights ought to belong to the workers
anyway. All private profit is stolen from the working class. It is incumbent on
the state to claw it back from the capitalists.
Class warfare is the mode of clawing back the profit,
through complete success requires actual revolution. For the hard Left, this is
the true aim of class warfare. For the soft Left, well-drilled labour unions in
closed shops squeezing profits by tough collective bargaining are fighting the
good fight. A more formidable arm of class war as practised by the soft Left is
the collective mandate an electoral majority hands to the state to "slice
the national cake" by transfer payments and public goods, so that its
distribution will be more favourable to the working class than the original
distribution intended by those who had arranged the baking of the cake in the
first place.