mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-18 12:14:33 -05:00
140 lines
7.6 KiB
Plaintext
140 lines
7.6 KiB
Plaintext
|
Planning Threatens Freedom
|
||
|
by C. Brandon Crocker
|
||
|
|
||
|
Is the American economy too free? Many people think so.
|
||
|
Socialists have long advocated central economic planning,
|
||
|
and, under the guise of "national economic policy," such
|
||
|
ideas are working their way into the programs of the major
|
||
|
political parties.
|
||
|
The persistent appeal of central planning would seem
|
||
|
anomalous, given the poor relative performance of planned
|
||
|
economies versus free economies. But economic efficiency is
|
||
|
not the only, nor necessarily the most compelling argument
|
||
|
against central planning. Economic planning threatens all
|
||
|
individual freedoms, and must be analyzed in terms of these
|
||
|
threats.
|
||
|
How does central planning threaten individual liberty?
|
||
|
To find the answer, we must consider what central planning is
|
||
|
and how it works. The goals of central planning are to
|
||
|
create high growth, minimize unemployment, and sometimes to
|
||
|
provide an "equitable" income distribution, or to protect the
|
||
|
environment. Proponents believe these goals can be achieved
|
||
|
by using government to intercede in the "chaos" of the free
|
||
|
market so as to redirect the nation's resources and design an
|
||
|
"optimal" mix of industries.
|
||
|
The losses to individual freedom from this type of
|
||
|
system are obvious. To make sure the economic plan is
|
||
|
followed, government must interfere with the freedom of
|
||
|
individuals to start businesses, to invest and work where
|
||
|
they choose, and even to consume certain goods and services.
|
||
|
A nation's economy is nothing more than the decisions of
|
||
|
individuals as to what to produce and consume. Therefore, a
|
||
|
government-controlled economy means government-controlled
|
||
|
people. If government is to enforce an economic plan, it
|
||
|
cannot have people starting whatever businesses they like or
|
||
|
investing capital wherever they wish. Certain fields of
|
||
|
employment will have to be forcibly curtailed and certain
|
||
|
goods and services (either already available or which could
|
||
|
be made available) will have to prevented from reaching the
|
||
|
population -- because control of what is produced is
|
||
|
necessarily control of what is consumed.
|
||
|
These are not insignificant losses of freedom.
|
||
|
Proponents of central planning, however, deny that there is
|
||
|
any major restriction of occupational choice under economic
|
||
|
planning. To be sure, some restriction will take place in
|
||
|
"undesirable" industries targeted to be phased out,
|
||
|
curtailed, or not allowed to start up, but this will be done
|
||
|
for the "social good." Furthermore, central planning in
|
||
|
practice often saves jobs, they claim, in industries which
|
||
|
would be abandoned in a free market, thus preserving the
|
||
|
freedom of many people to pursue the occupations of their
|
||
|
choice.
|
||
|
These arguments, however, are invalid. First, whether
|
||
|
jobs are taken away for the "social good" or not doesn't
|
||
|
alter the fact that freedom of choice, in terms of available
|
||
|
options, has been diminished. Second, while the free
|
||
|
operation of the market does cause some people to leave their
|
||
|
chosen occupations when industries become obsolete, there is
|
||
|
a great difference between not being able to follow one's
|
||
|
chosen occupation because no one is willing to pay for a
|
||
|
particular product or service, and not being able to follow
|
||
|
one's occupation because of government edict. In the first
|
||
|
instance freedom of action is not being denied and the
|
||
|
freedom of people to make (or not make) contracts is
|
||
|
preserved. In the second instance, the opposite is true.
|
||
|
Is the individual freedom lost so onerous as to outweigh
|
||
|
such professed benefits as security against involuntary
|
||
|
unemployment and destitution? An acquaintance from Norway,
|
||
|
living under a semi-socialist system, thinks not. He likes
|
||
|
the feeling of security. He even asserts, as do many
|
||
|
Norwegians, that government should tell people what they
|
||
|
should and should not do because most people do not know how
|
||
|
best to take care of themselves (and the government does).
|
||
|
This is security at a price, certainly. But in addition
|
||
|
to the individual freedoms already lost by such a scheme,
|
||
|
this brand of security comes at the expense of something of
|
||
|
far greater value -- security against arbitrary power and
|
||
|
despotism -- in a word, security against totalitarianism.
|
||
|
The serious implementation of any significant economic
|
||
|
plan will lead to increasing governmental dominance in the
|
||
|
running of industry and make possible the easy abduction of
|
||
|
most political and economic freedoms. There will be an
|
||
|
inevitable conflict between business and the economic
|
||
|
planners. To regulate millions of individual businesses in
|
||
|
such a complete way (output, number of employees, use of raw
|
||
|
materials, etc.) without the cooperation of those businesses
|
||
|
will be impossible -- especially considering that business
|
||
|
will feel that policy may change with the next election. The
|
||
|
solution to an uncooperative private sector will be to make
|
||
|
individual companies better serve the "public interest"
|
||
|
through measures such as nationalization and government
|
||
|
controlled syndicates.
|
||
|
Government control of the economy leads not only to
|
||
|
power over production, but also to power over consumption and
|
||
|
distribution. Substituting the price system with government
|
||
|
edicts takes the distribution of goods and services out of
|
||
|
the hands of individual buyers and sellers, and places it
|
||
|
into the hands of a central authority. With this power the
|
||
|
central authority can wield great control over the populace.
|
||
|
George Orwell, commenting on Friedrich Hayek's classic
|
||
|
book, The Road to Serfdom, remarked, "It cannot be said too
|
||
|
often -- at any rate it is not being said nearly enough --
|
||
|
that collectivism is not inherently democratic, but, on the
|
||
|
contrary, gives to a tyrannical minority such powers as the
|
||
|
Spanish inquisition never dreamt of." To believe that such a
|
||
|
vast concentration power will not be used at some point to
|
||
|
oppress the population is to deny the history of mankind.
|
||
|
The world is full of maniacs and coercive utopians -- many of
|
||
|
whom are interested in political power, as history well
|
||
|
shows.
|
||
|
All totalitarian regimes rely heavily on economic
|
||
|
controls to coerce their subjects. The efforts of Hitler's
|
||
|
National Socialists to oppress Jews and other minority groups
|
||
|
were greatly facilitated by the Nazi government's control of
|
||
|
employment and the distribution of goods. The Soviets use
|
||
|
economic controls to pressure dissidents, and they even use
|
||
|
their system of rationing to create high voter turnouts for
|
||
|
their one-candidate elections -- if you don't vote, you don't
|
||
|
receive your ration cards. Those not rigidly conforming to
|
||
|
Maoist doctrine during the Cultural Revolution often lost
|
||
|
their jobs, no matter how valuable their skills. China's
|
||
|
current one-child policy is enforced by a series of economic
|
||
|
"benefits" which include jobs, salaries, and rations. The
|
||
|
success of the Chinese central planners in enforcing such an
|
||
|
unpopular policy which meets the resistance of centuries of
|
||
|
Chinese tradition shows how great the power a government can
|
||
|
wield over its people when it controls the economy.
|
||
|
Neither Germany in 1933, Russia in 1917, nor China in
|
||
|
1949 had long traditions of democracy and political and
|
||
|
economic freedom. The United States, in contrast, has a long
|
||
|
and deeply ingrained tradition of democracy and freedom, as
|
||
|
well as constitutional arrangements which make quickly
|
||
|
installed tyranny unlikely. This is no reason, however, to
|
||
|
feel safe in taking steps to weaken that tradition and to
|
||
|
make possible great abrogation of individual freedom. Free
|
||
|
societies have been, and still are, very rare and fragile.
|
||
|
Freedoms taken for granted and not carefully safeguarded do
|
||
|
not last long. The loss of economic freedom is a major crack
|
||
|
in the foundation of any free society.
|
||
|
|