http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.9340/pub_detail.asp

 

April 26, 2011


Marxism Redux


 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.129/author_detail.asp>
Herbert London

                                

http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/imgLib/20110306_Progressives.jpg

 

Writing in the pages of the Chronicle of Higher Education, Paul Mattick, a
professor at Adelphi University, attempts to explain capitalism's failure in
an article entitled, "Capitalism's Dismal Future." Presumably its future is
a continuation of its past. As Professor Mattick notes, 

 

"Capitalism has been around for so many generations now, proving its
vitality by displacing or absorbing all other social systems around the
globe, that it seems a part of nature, irreplaceable. But its historical
limits are visible in its inability to meet the ecological challenges it has
produced." 

 

Alas, even if one accepts some of the exaggerated claims of ecological
degradation, the evidence does not suggest that capitalism alone is
responsible for the problem. China, which has a state controlled economic
system, has environmental problems that surpass any in the United States and
Europe. Moreover, a free market offers profit as an incentive to address the
problem Professor Mattick identifies.

 

Mattick's overheated rhetoric does not stop there. He also asserts that
depression and recoveries are "a recurrent feature" of the capitalist
economy. As I see it, capitalism has the capacity to create wealth and put
it at risk as well, as opposed to command economies which distribute limited
wealth and keep their citizens in a permanent state of impoverishment. The
choices are not between a self equilibrating system and the Keynesian
concept of government manipulation as Mattick indicates, but rather an
imperfect system of private incentives and a government dominated system for
the allocation of resources. History has already indicated that the former
is to be preferred to the latter, despite Professor Mattick's neo-Marxist
interpretation.

 

Despite the assertion that capitalism is trapped in a cycle of its own
creation, it is clear that capitalism is sufficiently flexible to address
the problems the system has created. For example, Mattick makes reference to
the poor the capitalist system leaves behind. Yet it is clear that the
enormous wealth capitalism produces has allowed for government largess for
the poor in the form of welfare provisions.

 

In fact, one could make the argument that government interference very often
is the factor that imperils capitalist success. The guarantees provided by
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac helped to create a real estate bubble that
ultimately undermined the housing market. To cite another example, the
"carry trade" that gives banks the opportunity to borrow at near zero
interest and invest in 30 year Treasurys at three percent has restored
solvency in the banks, but has not encouraged loans to entrepreneurs or a
reasonable return on the savings accounts of average Americans. These
conditions suggest something that might be described as "crony capitalism"
instead of mere capitalism.

 

However, seeking advantage or privilege, while one dimension of capitalism's
perversion, is a constant, indeed a permanent, feature of command economies.
Corruption in the form of bribery is the elixir that keeps the Chinese
economy going and in the former Soviet Union, pay offs to party officials
were the coin of the realm. 

 

Yes, capitalism is fragile, in large part because people are fragile. But it
is the most adaptable economic system the world has known. The free market,
the essence of capitalism, relies on the aspiration and desire of the people
aggregated into something called demand. That demand quotient changes as
conditions in the society change, including everything from natural
disasters to the availability of fossil fuels.

 

Professor Mattlick has rehearsed a theme that coruscates through Western
Civilization, a utopia of full employment, the fair distribution of
resources, responsiveness to human needs (usually as some elitist sees it)
and equality. But to the dismay of many, such a system does not exist and
cannot exist. What we do have is a capitalism that is robust, with all its
flaws, and sufficiently adaptable to address the most basic human desires.
That is not half bad and certainly does not presage a "dismal future."

 

 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/> FamilySecurityMatters.org
Contributing Editor
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.129/author_detail.asp>
Herbert London is president of Hudson Institute and professor emeritus of
New York University. He is the author of Decade of Denial (Lanham, Maryland:
Lexington Books, 2001), America's Secular Challenge (Encounter Books) and
<http://www.amazon.com/Decline-Revival-Higher-Education-Herbert/dp/141281425
1> Decline and Revival in Higher Education (Transaction).

 



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