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Subject:                [Mises Daily] Special: Bastiat Was Right
Date sent:              Wed, 11 Apr 2001 15:56:49 -0500

http://www.mises.org/fullstory.asp?control=652

Bastiat Was Right

by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.

[Posted April 12, 2001]

Frederic Bastiat was a French economist, a passionate and articulate believer in
free
enterprise, who lived from 1801 to 1850. But his writings speak to us today, and
help
explain why the recent conflict with China has ended through diplomacy and peace
rather than belligerence and war.

The answer can be summed up in one word: commerce. Glorious, peaceful,
prosperity-making, peace-preserving commerce. It was the overwhelming fact that the
health of our economies are linked that made the Chinese and US governments realize
that both sides have more to gain from good relations than hatred and war.

It was Bastiat who observed the trade-off between trade and war. When goods don't
cross borders, he said, armies will. Without trade, there is less to lose from the
mass destruction that war implies. Countries that trade have a mutual stake in the
preservation of open, friendly relations. This is one reason that free commercial
activities promote peace, and why protectionism and trade sanctions generate war
tensions.

History shows that war is good for government. In wartime, government gains massive
power over society. It is granted a degree of latitude in its use of emergency powers
that would not otherwise be permitted. War allows politicians and bureaucrats with a
passion for power to use it to the hilt, through taxation, inflation, and
regimentation. War destroys things and then permits governments to profit from
rebuilding them. It drains the private sector of capital and entrepreneurial energy,
and enriches the parasitical institutions of the State. No free society stays free
after war begins.

The mystery isn't why war exists but rather why, given the nature of government, it
isn't the norm. Bastiat explained that free trade helps quell government's passion
for war. It creates powerful lobbying groups on all sides that demand the
preservation of peace and the triumph of diplomacy over hostility. International
trade networks create intermediating structures of business relations that work as a
barrier to bombs and belligerence.

This observation was further elaborated on by Ludwig von Mises, who responded to the
Marxist-Leninist theory that capitalism leads to war. Lenin saw war as the
internationalization of the intractable conflict between capital and labor. On the
contrary, Mises said, the basis of capitalism is trade and mutual cooperation to the
benefit of everyone. Capitalism creates networks of commerce-including capital
markets and wide circles of labor and entrepreneurial specialization-that become
dependent on each other.

The socialists of today understand this, which is why, since the end of the Cold War,
so many of them have joined the war party. They too recognize that freedom, trade,
and peace go together, so they've decided to oppose all three. Only last year, for
example, the website of the World Sociologists complained that "The pledge to restart
the talks [with China] came after a barrage of lobbying pressure by US companies
alarmed over the prospect of losing the billions of dollars in trade and investment
opportunities...."

Indeed, commercial ties are the very basis of international friendship, particularly
that which thrives between the US and China. Each year, China exports $200 billion in
goods to the world, and imports $170 billion, for a total dollar value of commercial
world traffic in and out of China of nearly half a trillion.

China's top trade partner is Japan but next in line is the US. Each year, China
exports to the US $81 billion in electrical machinery and equipment, apparel, shoes,
toys, games, iron and steel, furniture, leather goods, and a million other things,
while importing $13 billion in machinery, fuel, medical equipment, paper product,
aircraft, and a million other things.

Our lives-by which I mean the lives of regular people in the US and in China-are made
immeasurably better because of the freedom to trade. Our networks of exchange build
private-sector prosperity in both countries. Was the "corporate lobby" influential in
preventing the tensions over the US spy plane from degenerating into outright
conflict? Very possibly, even likely-a fact which we should celebrate, not condemn.

So entrenched are U.S.-China business ties that the warmongers among us have to think
creatively to come up with excuses for protectionism and hostility. Lately they have
been fulminating about human rights in trade, the supposed existence of forced and
child-based labor, the claim that China is spying on the US, and the trade deficit.
They say that all these things raise good reasons to curb or cut off commercial
relations.

The crucial question to ask about all these complaints is: will less trade make
matters better or worse? The typical political dissident in China wants more contact
with the outside world, more economic opportunity that trade brings. Commerce opens
up societies and gives the powerless greater opportunities to have control over their
destinies. Besides, if it were possible to use embargoes and sanctions to shape up
foreign countries, Cuba and North Korea would have become paradises of human rights
long ago.

Bastiat had a radical goal. In addition to the protection of private property, he
wanted "the abolition of war, or rather (what amounts to the same thing), the
fostering of the spirit of peace in public opinion, which decides the question of war
or peace. War is always the greatest of the upheavals that a people can suffer in its
industry, the conduct of its business, the investment of its capital, and even its
tastes."

In the recent conflict with China, some Americans (even, I'm sorry to say, many
American conservatives) tasted blood. But they didn't get their way, Deo Gratias.
With free trade between the US and China, the opportunities for our governments to go
to war are greatly reduced.

It is because peace and freedom go together, and mutually reinforce each other, that
we need ever-more trade and commercial relations with all countries everywhere, with
no exceptions, ever. May private enterprise continue to save the world from
destruction by governments.

* * * * *

Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr., is president of the Ludwig von Mises Institute and editor
of www.LewRockwell.com. See his Mises.org archive and email him at
[EMAIL PROTECTED] See also the Mises.org essay and reference collection for
Frederic Bastiat.

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The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The libertarian therefore considers one of his prime educational
tasks is to spread the demystification and desanctification of the
State among its hapless subjects.  His task is to demonstrate
repeatedly and in depth that not only the emperor but even the
"democratic" State has no clothes; that all governments subsist
by exploitive rule over the public; and that such rule is the reverse
of objective necessity.  He strives to show that the existence of
taxation and the State necessarily sets up a class division between
the exploiting rulers and the exploited ruled.  He seeks to show that
the task of the court intellectuals who have always supported the State
has ever been to weave mystification in order to induce the public to
accept State rule and that these intellectuals obtain, in return, a
share in the power and pelf extracted by the rulers from their deluded
subjects.
[[For a New Liberty:  The Libertarian Manifesto, Murray N. Rothbard,
Fox & Wilkes, 1973, 1978, p. 25]]

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