Friday, October 18, 2019

How to See the Unseen


I am in the process of editing my book "Has Capitalism Failed?" and changing the title to something more provocative. The following is an edited chapter from this book.

I was recently re-reading Henry Hazlitt’s “Economics in One Lesson” and was inspired by his discussion of the advantage that liberals have when they recommend large spending programs:

“…there is a…factor that spawns new economic fallacies every day. This is the persistent tendency of men to see only the immediate effects of a given policy, or its effects only on a special group, and to neglect to inquire what the long-run effects of that policy will be not only on that special group but on all groups. It is the fallacy of overlooking secondary consequences.

“In this lies the whole difference between good economics and bad. The bad economist sees only what immediately strikes the eye; the good economist also looks beyond. The bad economist sees only the direct consequences of a proposed course; the good economist looks also at the longer and indirect consequences. The bad economist sees only what the effect of a given policy has been or will be on one particular group; the good economist inquires also what the effect of the policy will be on all groups.”[1]

Hazlitt accuses progressives of pointing to a problem and then recommending government spending as the solution; focusing on the problem but ignoring the “unintended consequences” of government action. He says elsewhere that you can easily point to the job or money that the government beneficiary receives but you cannot point to what was lost - because it no longer exists. The loss is in the products the taxpayer could not buy and the job that was not created because the money went to the government or the beneficiary.

I would like to suggest a way that you can see the unseen consequences of government action as they affect you personally. But first you have to understand that re-distribution is a form of altruism. You’ll also have to acknowledge the role of abstractions in human understanding. You will recall Marx’s axiom “from each according to his ability to each according to his needs.” This is a statement of altruism and it establishes the enslavement of ability for the sake of the needy, the person who cannot survive by means of his own effort. This Marxist axiom is a call for re-distribution, and because re-distribution is altruism, it represents a loss (the unseen) for the productive and a gain for the recipient of altruism who has not earned it. The unseen, here, is the effects or taking from the productive, and once we understand this, we can begin to recognize that every form of re-distribution is destructive of human values.

Notice that Hazlitt’s formulation here does not take cognizance of this altruistic element and this blinds him to the real cause of the broken window fallacy which is the desire to affect re-distribution by means of altruistic taking from the able to the needy. It is not merely that the loss to the able is unseen, it is unseen because altruism is considered good. It is blindly thought that the result of altruism is good which is a false notion that justifies every looting politician and gives him the sanction of a false morality. So, one could say that the broken window fallacy not only creates unseen consequences but those consequences can only be seen by observing that altruism is implicit in any act of re-distribution.

Take a look at your latest tax filing form and identify how much money you paid through out the year on taxes. Then ask yourself what you would have bought with that money. Then take a trip to a store where that item is sold and find it on the store shelf. Now you can see with your own eyes what you have lost, what you do not have. Then you will understand what altruistic “giving” has done to your life. Now notice that the poor are still poor.

Would it have been immoral for you to have that item? Is it a new Recreational Vehicle, a new Home Theater, hundreds of books you could have read or even a new Jacuzzi? Look at them in the store; spend a few minutes contemplating what you would be doing if you had that item in your possession right now; how much better your life would now be with that item. Then realize that this item has been taken from you by the government because it holds to the principle of altruism, that your goal in life is not to enjoy your earnings but to give them up for someone else. Feel better? Those people who take your money and spend it on something else don’t seem to have much concern for you and your needs – yet you are the one working to make their spending possible.

If you want to get even more wistful, look at the latest report you received from the Social Security Administration detailing how much you have paid into that program. Depending on the number of years you’ve paid into the system, I’ll bet you could have bought a much nicer house; or perhaps several vacations over the years, maybe even a real pension that isn’t threatened by extinction. Remember that Social Security came from the government’s altruistic notion that you are better served by their taking your money now, having the government spend it on other programs, and then taxing your children and grandchildren to take care of you.

Now go to an online Real Estate website and look through some houses whose prices match the amount of money taken from you for your Social Security account; or look at some travel agency brochures and figure out how many places you could have visited with that money. Savor the pictures of the places you were not able to visit. Now you can see what you have sacrificed. I might add, parenthetically, that the house you might have bought with this money could have been a retirement house, which means you would have retained all that money as equity. Now, as a pensioner, you will only get it back in small monthly payments that are barely enough to survive on. Again, ask yourself what good all this altruism is doing for you compared to whatever good you could have done for yourself with your own money.

Some would say that the exercise I am recommending is a selfish way of looking at the issue and that you should instead consider the good that the government has done with your money. Rather, I would say, do some research on government waste and identify a program that has not been a boondoggle or that has not benefited a Congressman by setting up a phony business so he (through proxies) could pocket your money. Or learn about how much money was paid by government to friends or relatives of politicians and you’ll see the harm that has been done to you. You may also consider that the house you could have bought would not involve anything but your own sense of self and what you can accomplish for your life. If that is selfish, make the most of it.

Hazlitt was a classical economist who taught his generation to look at all aspects of a government program, not just the beneficiaries but the harm that is done to the people who earned the money. Classical economists were not blind to the fact that the government was violating the individual and property rights of some people in order to give benefits to their voting blocks. Their arguments were critical of socialist ideas but they missed the truth that the government did not have the moral right to take the property of citizens. They considered themselves to be number-crunchers; like dutiful pragmatists, they only wanted to consider the actual results of socialist schemes and thought that questions of value were irrelevant to a discussion of economic effects. So they never (or seldom) brought up the impropriety (or evil) of the idea of re-distribution. Needless to say, armed with the moral argument for altruism and the imposition of guilt upon anyone who refused to sacrifice, the left won the day.

Working hard in order to live a better life and educating yourself so you can earn more money, are both moral actions and anyone who decides to engage in such acts is a moral agent, a good person. To look at those actions and then to claim that there is no moral issue involved is a crude mistake, if you don’t mind my saying so. You have a moral right to better yourself and it is immoral for the government to violate your right to a better life. Well, look with your own eyes at the benefits you have been denied; the very benefits that have been forbidden to you; benefits that would enable you to have a better life and also to create more jobs so other people can live better lives. Isn’t the denial of your right to be moral a denial of morality? Is this not evil?

You did the work, did you not? You exerted your energy and your thinking in order to make this money, did you not? Was it not a moral decision to decide that you should be the beneficiary of your actions? Since morality is a normative study, how could someone say that living and making the decision to live (well) are not moral decisions? How can someone make mere statistics out of being moral?

Why should anyone take your money from you? Who gave the government the authority to expropriate your property? Who gave them the moral authority, the moral right, to decide what to do with your money; money that would not have been created without your effort? The answer is that there is no such authority, no such right held by any man anywhere to decide what to do with your earnings and property.

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[1] Economics in One Lesson, Henry Hazlitt, Three Rivers Press

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