In lieu of the election of Socialist President Francois
Hollande and a Socialist Party collision as the majority in France’s
Parliament, the New
York Times recently asked “what does it mean to be a Socialist these
days, anyway?” According to The Grey
Lady, socialism today is “certainly nothing radical” and simply meant the “the
emancipation of the working class and its transformation into the middle class”
during its heyday. Essentially the
article categorizes the contemporary socialist as one who is a rigorous
defender of the welfare state. The piece
quotes French journalist Bernard-Henri Levy as saying “European socialists are
essentially like American Democrats.” It
even accuses center-right political parties in the West of being quite
comfortable with socialism’s accomplishments.
So is the New York
Times correct? Is socialism just a
boogeyman evoked by the “fringes” to scare the public into questioning the
morality and efficiency of the welfare state?
Going by the New York
Times definition, socialism is just another word for social democracy. But of course the word socialism never really
referred to just welfare entitlements.
Properly defined, socialism is a society where the complete means of
production and distribution of goods are solely in the hands of the state. It is also a system defined by the absence of
private property. According
to famed socialist and author Robert Heilbroner
If tradition cannot, and the market
system should not, underpin the socialist order, we are left with some form of
command as the necessary means for securing its continuance and adaptation.
Indeed, that is what planning means...
The factories and stores and farms and shops of a socialist socioeconomic formation must be coordinated...and this coordination must entail obedience to a central plan.
The factories and stores and farms and shops of a socialist socioeconomic formation must be coordinated...and this coordination must entail obedience to a central plan.
If capitalism and private property are the natural state of
free men, socialism is the violent overthrow of liberty. Outlawing of private property and free
enterprise is no easy task. It requires
a large amount of enforcement to see to it that nobody trades without the
state’s permission. And it is because of
its oppressive nature that it is only through totalitarian dictatorship can
socialism be fully realized. Economist
George Reisman explains
In sum, therefore, the requirements
merely of enforcing price-control regulations is the adoption of essential
features of a totalitarian state, namely, the establishment of the category of
"economic crimes," in which the peaceful pursuit of material self-interest
is treated as a criminal offense, and the establishment of a totalitarian
police apparatus replete with spies and informers and the power of arbitrary
arrest and imprisonment.
Socialism cannot be ruled for very
long except by terror. As soon as the terror is relaxed, resentment and
hostility logically begin to well up against the rulers.
The New York Times
paints socialism as a different picture.
The push for “democratic Marxism,” as the paper calls it, was
responsible for creating a vibrant middle class with measures such as
progressive taxation and a welfare safety net.
“Socialism and social democracy today are about a society with more
solidarity, more protection of people, more egalitarianism” is how once-student
revolt leader, now bureaucrat in the European Parliament Daniel Cohn-Bendit
describes it.
No doubt these descriptions make for good political
rhetoric. State officials love nothing
more than convincing the public they have brought them a standard of living
beyond their wildest imagination. Yet
these claims are also completely false.
Government produces
nothing; it can only redistribute using its implicit threat of violence. Welfare transfer payments can’t be provided
unless the private sector has produced wealth prior to confiscatory legislation. Just as production must always precede
consumption, government can’t rob Peter to pay Paul if Peter doesn’t first have
something to steal. No matter how hard
they try, politicians can’t create a free lunch. They can only order the citizenry around with
the trigger of a gun.
This truth doesn’t fit well with the NYT’s favorable view of socialism.
The famously left-leaning newspaper never baulks at the chance to champion
the newest scheme in government intervention.
Where the paper really misses the mark on actual socialism is the fact
that it can’t work and is bound to fail.
True worldwide socialism will never create a worker’s paradise; just misery
for all.
To proponents of incessant government control and
regulation, such a statement is nonsense; even sacrilegious. But in 1922 in his book “Socialism: An Economic and Sociological
Analysis,” Ludwig von Mises not only explained why a market economy with
private property is superior to socialism, he refuted the socialist doctrine
beyond anything the movement could even begin to disprove. Socialists at the
time had no answer for Mises’ critique.
The same holds true for socialists today.
What was Mises’ devastating theory? It’s actually quite simple. Under a market economy, economic calculation
is able to take place as long as there is private property and a pricing
system. Since prices act as signals between
producers and consumers, they provide the basis for the rational distribution
of resources. Producers can’t fulfill
the desires of consumers if they can’t calculate input costs and revenue. Without the possibility of profit, what
motive is there for producing in the first place? Or as Hans-Herman Hoppe summarizes:
If there is no private property in land and other
production factors (everything is owned by one agent), then, by definition,
there can also be no market prices for them. Hence, economic calculation, i.e.
the comparison, in light of current prices, of anticipated revenue, and
expected cost expressed in terms of a common medium of exchange—money— (permitting
cardinal accounting operations), is literally impossible. There can be no
“economizing” under socialism. Socialism is instead “planned chaos.”
So precise was Mises’ theory that when the Soviet Union
finally collapsed, Robert Heilbroner would go on to write in an article for the
New Yorker entitled “Reflections:
After Communism” that “socialism has been a great tragedy this century” and
“no one expected collapse.” After
decades of denying Mises’ refutation of socialism, he was finally forced to
admit “that Mises was right.”
To the working man, pure socialism only results in a state
of destitution. It is by no means the
“emancipation of the working class.” It
is a system of top-down enforcement where the masses are treated as cogs in
need of fine tuning. Socialism gained
traction only because leading intellectuals saw it as a possible utopia and did
their best to convince the ruling establishment of its merits. “Socialism has
never and nowhere been at first a working-class movement” as F.A. Hayek put it.
It has always been an economics system favored by those elitists who
hoped to find themselves crowned as central planners.
The New York Times
article ends by quoting Marc-Oliver Padis, editor of the academic journal Esprit, who asks “Is socialism really
more than pragmatism?” The answer is
no. Even in its moderated European form,
the socialist sees the state as the answer for all of society’s questions. He values violence over peace; compulsory over
voluntary, slavery over freedom, and submission over dignity. As long as France continues down the road to
socialism, its economic future is in grave danger. Judging by the amount of wealthy businessmen
who have begun to flee
France in favor of London, it would seem that people in the end generally
feel entitled to the sweat of their brow.
As Mises never tired of pointing out,
A society that chooses between
capitalism and socialism does not choose between two social systems; it chooses
between social cooperation and the disintegration of society. Socialism is not
an alternative to capitalism; it is an alternative to any system under which
men can live as human beings.

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