The theory of class conflict
as a key to political history did not begin with Karl Marx. It began, as we
shall see further below, with two leading French libertarians inspired by J.B.
Say, Charles Comte (Say's son-in-law), and Charles Dunoyer, in the 1810s after
the restoration of the Bourbon monarchy. In contrast to the later Marxist
degeneration of class theory, the Comte-Dunoyer view held the inherent class
struggle to focus on which classes managed to gain
control of the state apparatus.
The ruling class is
whichever group has managed to seize state power; the ruled are those groups who are taxed and regulated
by those in command. Class interest, then, is defined as a group's relation to
the state. State rule, with its taxation and exercise of power, controls, and
conferring of subsidies and privileges, is the instrument that creates
conflicts between the rulers and the ruled. What we have, then, is a
"two-class" theory of class conflict, based on whether a group rules
or is ruled by the state. On the free market, on the other hand, there is no
class conflict, but a harmony of interest between all individuals in society
cooperating in and through production and exchange.