During the past few years, there have been multiple reports of surveys and polls indicating that people are down on capitalism and may even prefer socialism.
Let’s dig deeper.
One factor that makes the survey’s findings problematical is hinted at by Edelman’s own wording—specifically, “capitalism in its current form.” Nowhere in the world is genuine free-market capitalism being practiced. The current practice of “capitalism” isn’t capitalism, but shoddy counterfeits of genuine capitalism. This skews objectors’ perceptions of capitalism.
Furthermore, “capitalism” as practiced in Australia isn’t the same as in Germany or Spain or Hong Kong. It’s hard to draw any valid general conclusions about something as imprecise and protean as “capitalism” as it happens to be practiced at any given time in various parts of the world. Indeed, asking someone what he or she thinks of capitalism is similar to a Rorschach test. It gives one the opportunity to express one’s subjective feelings, beliefs, ideology, personal experiences, resentments, etc. about a topic about which there are no standardized definitions or parameters.
Let’s turn to specific complaints.
Inequality
First, income inequality: I’ve written about income inequality before. Briefly, income inequality is unjust and objectionable when it results from the political powers rigging the system to favor certain constituents and cronies at the expense of others. Income inequality is just, perfectly normal, and healthy in free markets (i.e., true capitalism) in which the sovereign consumer determines winners and losers.The problem of making income inequality an ideological fetish is illustrated by the opinions of egalitarians such as Thomas Piketty, the French economist who made a splash with his book, “Capital in the Twenty-First Century,” a few years ago.
The ‘80s, if you recall, was a decade of growing prosperity and rising standards of living for working Americans, whereas the ’30s were marred by the Great Depression, which featured increasing poverty and concomitant massive suffering.
Egalitarians may find widespread suffering a price worth paying to achieve greater statistical income equality, but I think it’s more humane to favor times when rising prosperity improves living conditions for the masses.
Under socialism, under which government control is even more pervasive than it was during our Great Depression, and consequently impoverishes a populace to a greater degree, you may think that at least everyone is economically equal, but that’s not so.
Automation
Second, losing jobs to automation: First of all, automation due to technological progress is a global phenomenon, affecting socialist economies as well as relatively capitalistic economies.Environmental Sustainability
Third, environmental sustainability: Sadly, many children worry needlessly about environmental degradation. This is because they’re not taught important historical facts and economic principles. They’re oblivious to the dismal track record of socialist countries, which suffer far more severe pollution than capitalist countries.Corruption and Cronyism
In addition to concerns about income inequality, job loss, and environmental despoliation, the Edelman survey found that corruption has caused many people to distrust capitalism.Indeed, corruption is a huge problem in the world today. But why blame capitalism for corruption? Corruption is a human shortcoming that appears in all societies, capitalist or socialist. In fact, under socialism, where scarcity of many consumer goods becomes the norm, corruption is rampant, as needy citizens often have to resort to bribing government employees to get what they want—even to the point of prostituting themselves. Capitalism, with its relative abundance, doesn’t eliminate corruption, but it makes it less necessary and less pervasive.
One other complaint in the Edelman survey is the common “perception ... that institutions increasingly serve the interests of the few over everyone.” This is the very real and widespread problem of cronyism. It’s essential to understand, though, that cronyism is not a form or characteristic of capitalism, but the actual antithesis of capitalism.
Genuine capitalism is a private-property order in which individuals are free to exchange or not exchange with whomever they wish, and in which the government acts as an impartial economic referee instead of picking winners and losers. Socialism, by contrast, is a system in which the government essentially picks all the winners and losers. Under socialism, the state dictates who produces how much of what. Cronyism, then, is partial socialism—a practice by which the government chooses some, not all, of the winners and losers.
In sum, the Edelman survey reveals that the growing antipathy toward capitalism is tragically misplaced. It stems from faulty perceptions of what capitalism is and how it would work, if given the opportunity. Under genuine free-market capitalism, income inequality is benign and beneficial, job opportunities are maximized, environmental conditions improve, and cronyism is shunned rather than institutionalized.
If people understood what true capitalism is, and that what passes for capitalism today are shoddy, corrupted perversions of capitalism, they would realize that the world needs more capitalism, not less.