Boston Review
 
_ONLINE OCTOBER 19,  2011_ 
(http://www.bostonreview.net/BR36.5/contents.php)  
Libertarianism and Liberty
How Not to Argue for  Limited Government and Lower Taxes 
T. M. Scanlon 
This article is part of _Libertarianism  and Liberty_ 
(http://www.bostonreview.net/BR36.5/ndf_libertarianism_liberty.php) , a forum 
on arguments for 
libertarian policy  conclusions. 
 
Libertarians embrace liberty as their fundamental  starting point. From 
this, they advocate a program of limited government and  lower taxes.

But it’s not clear how they get from their starting point to  their policy 
conclusion.
 
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Libertarianism presents itself as a simple, clear, and principled view. It  
appears to provide a moral basis, in the value of individual liberty, for a 
 specific political program of limited government and low taxes. The moral  
significance of liberty seems obvious even to those who believe it is not 
the  only thing that matters. But the claim of the libertarian political 
program to  be founded on this value is illusory. Three lines of thought lead 
to 
conclusions  that might be seen as libertarian. But none of these shows 
that respect for the  value of individual liberty should lead one to support 
the political program of  low taxes and limited government that libertarians 
are supposed to favor. 

• • •

One route to libertarian conclusions appeals to an idea of productive  
efficiency. As Hayek argued, the market is, in an important range of cases, a  
more efficient mechanism for deciding what to produce than decisions by any  
central planner. This is so for two reasons. The first is the flow of  
information: no planner could acquire information about what consumers want  to 
buy as efficiently as the market does. The second is capture by  interests: 
decisions by state-owned industries are likely to be guided by  the interests 
of those who run or work in those industries rather than by the  goal of 
efficient overall production. Where they apply, these arguments are  powerful. 
As recent financial crises show, however, these considerations do not  lead 
to the conclusion that government regulation is always a bad thing. And  
even Hayek would not deny that government intervention is needed in the case 
of  externalities such as pollution and climate change. The considerations 
just  mentioned provide some guidance about how to deal with these problems, 
but they  provide no reason for thinking that they should be dealt with by 
simply leaving  it to the market.  
Whatever policies they support, however, these considerations are not based 
 on the value of liberty for an individual. This argument assigns 
individual  liberty only an instrumental value: it is important only as a means 
to 
economic  efficiency. “Efficiency” sounds important. But efficiency is only 
as important  as the goal that is efficiently promoted. The value that Hayek’
s argument takes  as fundamental is the satisfaction of individual 
preferences. More specifically,  it is the satisfaction of preferences that can 
be 
expressed through the market,  the weights given to these preferences being 
determined by individuals’  willingness and ability to pay for their 
satisfaction. Since individuals with  more money are willing to pay more for 
the 
satisfaction of a given preference,  this means in practice that what is 
maximized is the satisfaction of preferences  weighted by the wealth and income 
of 
those whose preferences they are.  
Many of the factors affecting the degree of control individuals have over  
their lives—such as the legal system and the organization of the economy—
are not  the subject of preferences expressed through the market. To the 
degree that they  are not, market outcomes will not be sensitive to the value 
individuals place on  their own liberty. For example: The productive efficiency 
of a market economy  depends importantly on its ability to shift resources 
from industries that are  no longer needed or efficient—such as typewriters 
manufacturers in an era of the  computer—to those making products for which 
there is greater demand—such as  computers and software to use on them. This 
efficiency is attained at a cost to  workers, who must find new employment 
when such changes occur. Workers who are  constantly subject to such 
disruption have less control over their lives than  they would in a more stable 
society. To determine what system is to be  preferred, some decision must be 
made about how to balance the conflicting  values of productive efficiency and 
individuals’ control over their lives. The  market itself does not answer 
this question, since the choice between different  systems is not something 
that individuals express a preference about through  their market behavior. 

• • •

A second, quite different view is what might be called “motorcycle-helmet  
libertarianism,” which gives fundamental place to the value of having 
control  over how one’s life goes in important respects. The idea of control 
that 
this  line of thinking appeals to is not a right but a value—something that  
individuals have reason to want. The importance of the difference between 
rights  and values is demonstrated by an argument of Robert Nozick’s. In 
Chapter 8 of  Anarchy, State, and Utopia Nozick considers, as a possible 
objection to  his view, that in a society of the kind he is recommending some 
people would  lack control over their lives in important respects. In a 
skillful 
rhetorical  move, he responds to this objection by asking whether there is “
a right to have  a say about what affects you,” and he quickly and 
convincingly shows that there  is no such right. As he puts it, few things 
affect 
your life more deeply than  whom you marry. So a right to have a say over what 
affects you would include a  right to have a say about whether your beloved 
will marry someone else, thereby  becoming unavailable to marry you. But 
clearly you have no such right. 
An unregulated market leaves many workers with little  control over their 
lives. Their liberty also matters morally. 
What this argument shows is that the objection Nozick is considering should 
 not put it in terms of a supposed right. It does not show that having 
control  over one’s life in certain respects is not an important value that 
needs to be  taken into consideration in deciding what rights people have. 
Indeed, Nozick  himself seems to appeal to such a value when he says that his 
system of  “libertarian” rights is appropriate for us because we are “distinct 
individuals  each with his own life to lead.” _1_ 
(http://www.bostonreview.net/BR36.5/ndf_t_m_scanlon_libertarianism_liberty.php#1)
  
The distinction involved here is one of several that can be referred to,  
somewhat misleadingly, as between positive and negative rights. As I have 
said,  however, it is not a distinction between two kinds of rights but between 
rights  and considerations that must be taken into account in justifying 
them. The  lesson to draw from it is not that there are no “positive rights”—
rights to  particular benefits—but rather that not every desirable thing 
that is relevant  to justifying rights can be directly transformed into a “
right to” realize that  thing.  
Recognizing control as an important moral value leads to the  question of 
what system of rights—what set of laws and policies—would best  secure this 
important form of control for everyone, since everyone counts  morally. It 
may seem to industrialists that an unregulated market provides the  greatest 
freedom, because regulation and taxation reduce their ability to do  what 
they want. But as I have mentioned, an unregulated market leaves many  workers 
with little control over some important aspects of their lives, and  their 
liberty also matters morally. So an argument appealing to the moral  
importance of control over one’s life must take both of these facts into  
account, 
along with others.  
If we ask what conditions are most important for having meaningful  liberty—
meaningful control over one’s life—in a modern society, one of the first  
things that comes to mind is education, which enables one to understand one’
s  choices and to acquire the skills needed to pursue them, including the 
skills  needed participate in the market economy. A second important factor is 
a strong  social safety net, including unemployment benefits, which enable 
people to plan  responsibly for having a family despite the uncertainties of 
employment in an  efficient market economy. Neither of these is part of the 
“low taxes and limited  government” program normally favored by 
libertarians. Perhaps a revised  libertarianism might incorporate these 
policies, 
along with other measures  needed to give meaningful liberty to all._2_ 
(http://www.bostonreview.net/BR36.5/ndf_t_m_scanlon_libertarianism_liberty.php#2)
  
As commonly understood, however, the  libertarian political program should 
seem responsive to the value of individual  liberty to only one group of 
people: those who believe that they have no need of  such policies in order to 
exercise control over their lives, and imagine that no  one else needs these 
things either (or else that it does not matter whether they  have them). 

• • •

It may be said that what is objectionable about laws requiring 
motorcyclists  to wear helmets is not that when such laws are in force people 
lack 
control over  important aspects of their lives. The objection is rather that 
such 
laws deprive  people of control over their lives in a particular way, by 
coercively telling  them what to do. So the basis of libertarianism might be 
taken to lie in the  idea that no one should be coercively told what to do. 
As stated, this way of  putting the objection is overly broad. Enforcing any 
law involves coercively  telling people what to do. Certainly this is true 
of property laws, which  libertarians favor. So the libertarian idea is a 
narrower one, that no one  should be coercively told what to do as long as he 
or she is not violating the  rights of others.  
This intuitively appealing idea is the third route to libertarian  
conclusions, which starts not from the value of control over one’s life but 
from  an 
idea of non-interference, given content by an enumerated list of rights.  
Since this idea is to serve as a test for the legitimacy of laws and social  
institutions, it is important that the rights in question be “natural” in 
the  sense of not depending, for their own validity, on the legitimacy of  
institutions that establish them. Foremost among these rights claimed by  
libertarians are property rights and rights not to be subjected to force or  
violence. If every government action beyond the protection of such rights is  
objectionable coercion, then respecting these rights may seem to lead to  
policies of limited government and low taxes favored by libertarians.  
The question, then, is why we should think that, independent of any law or  
social institution, people have these rights, and only these rights, and 
that  these rights are the only basis of justified coercion. The strongest 
reason for  thinking this seems to me to be that the existence of these rights 
seems to be  the best explanation of the wrongfulness of certain actions 
that do seem to be  clearly wrong, independent of any law or institution. Being 
attacked by a  murderer, or being captured and enslaved are good examples 
of such wrongs. So  does having the crops that one has raised in order to 
live through the winter  taken away by a band of armed marauders. Examples of 
this kind seem to support  the idea that there is a natural right to 
property. 
Property rights require an institution that creates,  defines, and enforces 
them, and is justified by the benefits it brings to  all. 
This brings us to a second interpretation of the distinction between 
negative  and positive rights: Negative rights are rights not to be interfered 
with;  positive rights are rights to be provided with certain benefits. A 
mechanism of  enforcement is a positive benefit, whatever rights are being 
enforced. But the  idea is that coercive enforcement is legitimate only if what 
is 
being enforced  is simply that people not interfere with others who are not 
interfering with  them.  
But property rights go beyond mere rights to non-interference. We can see 
the  difference by looking more closely at the example of the crop-stealing  
marauders. To explain why their action is wrong, we do not need to appeal to 
a  right to property. The wrong is adequately explained as a violation of a 
 narrower right not to be interfered with. To put the matter in Lockean 
terms: we  have the right to act on the things of the world in order to 
preserve and  improve our lives, as long as, in so doing, we do not encroach on 
others’  ability to do likewise. Others ought not to interfere with our doing 
this, and  if they try to do so we are justified in using force to prevent 
them. The  assumption in this example is that clearing land and growing crops 
in order to  survive did not encroach on anyone, hence it is wrong for 
others to interfere  with this.  
These ideas of rightful use, wrongful interference, and rightful defense  
account for what Locke called natural property rights. But property rights as 
we  commonly understand them are much stronger. They involve not only the 
right to  use the things one owns, and to exclude others from taking them, 
whether or not  we would not suffer from this loss. And property rights also 
include the power  to give others similar rights over a thing, by 
transferring it to them.  
By permissibly using something, I can make it wrong for you to take it, on  
Lockean grounds, because you would be interfering with my use. By ceasing 
to use  it, and leaving it with the intention that you will use it, I can 
make it the  case that you will not wrong me by using or destroying it. These 
ideas, included  in the right of non-interference as I have construed it, are 
extremely  plausible. But it is extremely implausible to think that I can, 
by an exercise  of my will, confer upon you the right to exclude anyone else 
from the use of a  thing, and give you the power to transfer this right to 
yet other people. Having  this power would make me an odd kind of moral 
legislator. As David Hume argued,  property rights require an institution that 
creates, defines, and enforces them,  and is justified by the benefits it 
brings to all affected by it._3_ 
(http://www.bostonreview.net/BR36.5/ndf_t_m_scanlon_libertarianism_liberty.php#3)
  It follows that if there are property 
rights  that can be coercively enforced, justifiable coercion is not limited 
to the  enforcement of “natural” rights. So a rights-based idea of mere 
non-interference  does not provide a foundation for libertarian politics. 

• • •

There are no property rights independent of some institution defining them, 
 but it is generally agreed that there should be such an institution. The  
question is what form this institution should take. So-called “defenders of  
property rights” are best understood as arguing that it would be in some 
way  better—more conducive to economic productivity, for example—for our 
institutions  to define these rights in one way rather than another.  
The threshold question here is how property rights must be defined in order 
 to be justifiable to all who are required to accept them. Above that 
threshold  there is the question of which of the various justifiable systems of 
property  rights we should most prefer under current conditions. 
Considerations of  productive efficiency—more specifically, the considerations 
of 
information flow  and interest-group influence that I mentioned in Section 1—
clearly have a role  in determining the answer. So does the value, mentioned in 
Section 2, of  individuals having control over their lives. Libertarians are 
correct in calling  attention to these considerations, although there is no 
reason to believe that  they are the only things that are relevant to 
deciding what form our  institutions should take. Moreover, since these two 
ideas 
are distinct, and do  not always point in the same direction, it is 
misleading to lump them together  under a single heading of concern for 
“liberty.”  
 
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