How to Live .org

Monday, December 04, 2006

From Matt Ridley:
"Government is the problem, not the solution.
In all times and in all places there has been too much government. We now know what prosperity is: it is the gradual extension of the division of labour through the free exchange of goods and ideas, and the consequent introduction of efficiencies by the invention of new technologies. This is the process that has given us health, wealth and wisdom on a scale unimagined by our ancestors. It not only raises material standards of living, it also fuels social integration, fairness and charity. It has never failed yet. No society has grown poorer or more unequal through trade, exchange and invention. Think of pre-Ming as opposed to Ming China, seventeenth century Holland as opposed to imperial Spain, eighteenth century England as opposed to Louis XIV's France, twentieth century America as opposed to Stalin's Russia, or post-war Japan, Hong Kong and Korea as opposed to Ghana, Cuba and Argentina. Think of the Phoenicians as opposed to the Egyptians, Athens as opposed to Sparta, the Hanseatic League as opposed to the Roman Empire. In every case, weak or decentralised government, but strong free trade led to surges in prosperity for all, whereas strong, central government led to parasitic, tax-fed officialdom, a stifling of innovation, relative economic decline and usually war.
Take Rome. It prospered because it was a free trade zone. But it repeatedly invested the proceeds of that prosperity in too much government and so wasted it in luxury, war, gladiators and public monuments. The Roman empire's list of innovations is derisory, even compared with that of the 'dark ages' that followed.
In every age and at every time there have been people who say we need more regulation, more government. Sometimes, they say we need it to protect exchange from corruption, to set the standards and police the rules, in which case they have a point, though often they exaggerate it. Self-policing standards and rules were developed by free-trading merchants in medieval Europe long before they were taken over and codified as laws (and often corrupted) by monarchs and governments.
Sometimes, they say we need it to protect the weak, the victims of technological change or trade flows. But throughout history such intervention, though well meant, has usually proved misguided — because its progenitors refuse to believe in (or find out about) David Ricardo's Law of Comparative Advantage: even if China is better at making everything than France, there will still be a million things it pays China to buy from France rather than make itself. Why? Because rather than invent, say, luxury goods or insurance services itself, China will find it pays to make more T shirts and use the proceeds to import luxury goods and insurance.
Government is a very dangerous toy. It is used to fight wars, impose ideologies and enrich rulers. True, nowadays, our leaders do not enrich themselves (at least not on the scale of the Sun King), but they enrich their clients: they preside over vast and insatiable parasitic bureaucracies that grow by Parkinson's Law and live off true wealth creators such as traders and inventors.
Sure, it is possible to have too little government. Only, that has not been the world's problem for millennia. After the century of Mao, Hitler and Stalin, can anybody really say that the risk of too little government is greater than the risk of too much? The dangerous idea we all need to learn is that the more we limit the growth of government, the better off we will all be."

10 Comments:

  • there are some 100+ million factory workers around the world making less than $1/hour, working 10-15-hour days in windowless rooms without heating or cooling, ruled by the mantra, "no work, no pay." yeah, free trade is the best! just keep telling yourself that and buying your "made in china" Gap clothes and drinking your Starbucks and everything is peachy. it sure is good to be american.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 11:20 AM  

  • Hi, your blog is incredible, it is exactly everything I care about. I will most definitely continue to read it. Are you a student? Keep up the fantastic entries. I'll post more comments, if you don't mind, when I have time, which won't be for the next several days. In the meantime, good luck figuring out How to Live :-)

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 11:22 AM  

  • Re: First comment

    It sure is good to be American, capitalism and free trade is THE single most successful economic system in human history (although, to be fair, even Adam Smith conceded minimal regulation). It's unfortunate that people have to suffer in the meantime, but it's not our fault the Chinese government doesn't allow them to own anything. Or maybe it is our fault, do you think we should be the world police? Oh that doesn't sound familiar or anything, does it?

    When capitalism spreads to the rest of the world, they will benefit just like many developed countries do today. As a human rights activist, I cannot see a better solution for the termination of slavery and incredible poverty, than the extension of capitalism throughout the globe. Everything isn't peachy. But it never was, and it never will be. (Unless the technological Singularity creates such abundance and eliminates the need for such menial labor, so that all may enjoy the leisures of the "American" lifestyle, but that's another story...)

    11:29 AM

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 11:29 AM  

  • I'd be very interested to see if the ex-employees of Enron (the thousands whose pensions were wiped out) think there was too much government oversight of their corporation.

    I have strong Libertarian tendencies. I agree that we should have as little government as possible. But rogues who want to scam the system (like the "Smart Guys" at Enron) scream the loudest for deregulation. Sorry. Until the government can outlaw the laws of human natures, we need a vigorous regulation process

    By Blogger Rich, at 1:59 PM  

  • I believe that government helps in many respects: 1) prevents armed conflicts among citizens, 2) builds roads, etc., 3) provides efficiency and decreases uncertainty through standardization, etc.

    I also believe that government harms in many respects: 1) introduces dead-weight loss of corruption/anti-competitiveness, 2) gets involved in large-scale conflicts, 3) imposes values intrusively, etc.

    While I think government does well to stick to its basics rather than overreach for utopia, I do think we should increase the power of international organizations like the UN -- a layer of world government. The executive power of such bodies should be kept to a minimum and be focused on curbing wars and human rights disasters and facilitating economic development.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 2:33 PM  

  • I'm a little curious: how much are you spending on your Google/AdWords campaign?

    By Anonymous non-anon, at 4:24 PM  

  • You, sir, are a person of sound intellect and steady hand. I've started reading your blog and I have only seen a few others who I would say rival the depth of your philosophies. Your work is not only sound and researched, but inspiring and hopeful. I oblige you to continue with your work, but don't let any of this praise go to your head. One of the worst things to happen to anyone succeeding is success.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 11:38 PM  

  • Right, because the UN clearly loves getting involved in solving world problems. What would Kofi Annan do with more power? Bitch louder about the US? He sure wouldn't actually *change* anything, that would be asking to much. But whining, yes, looking good for his Western supporters, yes. That he's got covered...

    By Blogger Parijata Mackey, at 3:44 AM  

  • All,
    Thanks for the compliments and insightful comments.

    > Are you a student?
    Not a university student, but a student of life :)

    > how much are you spending on your Google/AdWords campaign?
    ~$3/day

    By Blogger howtolive.org, at 9:30 AM  

  • I love how the communists post anonymously.

    Clearly, on some level they know that the only way for their sick, twisted and failed philosophies of communism and socialism (communist lite) to "succeed" is through government-sponsored violence, oppression and suppression of every normal human tendency and impulse.

    To point at a single incident like Enron (of course there are others) and claim that "we need government regulation" is like pointing at a criminal and saying that everyone should be locked up until they can prove they are not crooks.

    Crooks are a part of life and a price we pay for freedom.

    If you want pure security, lock yourself in a padded room.

    It is no coincidence that Western Civilization is the wealthiest, most prosperous and advanced civilization in human history thus far: it is because we are the most free from government intervention.

    By Blogger Strati Vourakis, at 9:23 PM  

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