Tomorrow Happens

...trends slamming at us from the dark

David Brin

David Brin
Location
San Diego, California, USA
Birthday
October 06
Bio
http://www.davidbrin.com David Brin’s novels have been translated into more than twenty languages, including New York Times Best-sellers that won Hugo and Nebula awards. His 1989 ecological thriller, Earth, foreshadowed cyberwarfare, the World Wide Web, global warming and Gulf Coast flooding. A 1998 Kevin Costner film was loosely adapted from his post-apocalyptic novel, The Postman. ............................................ Brin is a noted scientist, futurist and speaker who appears frequently on television (Life After People, The Universe), discussing trends in the near and far future, on subjects such as surveillance, technology, astronomy, and SETI. His non-fiction book, The Transparent Society, deals with issues of openness and security in the wired-age. ............................................. David Brin web site: http://www.davidbrin.com http://davidbrin.blogspot.com/ Twitter: http://twitter.com/DavidBrin1 Facbook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/David-Brin/22358129265

JANUARY 17, 2012 2:32PM

Is Libertarianism Really about Property or Competition?

Rate: 4 Flag

Some folks have heard me beat this drum. But it’s a fresh-enough thought - going to fundamentals that run deep beneath normal politics - so that I am moved to raise it yet again. In part because someone recently asked me, as author of The Transparent Society: “Can transparency and libertarianism complement each other?”

Now let’s have the simple answer first. Yes. A sane, better-focused libertarianism would be utterly compatible with transparency. In fact, it should be the very top priority.

Both Adam Smith and Friedrich Hayek proclaimed that markets are healthy in direct proportion to the number of skilled and knowing player-participants. Indeed, one chief indictment against every  pre-modern economic system is that nearly all of them were based on “allocation” of resources by elites. Allocators are inherently knowledge limited and likely to be delusional, precisely because they are few.

Just to be doubly clear on that: almost all previous cultures used GAR - or Guided Allocation of Resources - as their guiding economic principle. Whether the allocation was done by kings, feudal lords, priests or communist nomenklatura, it was nearly always the same: decisions over how to invest society's surplus, which endeavors to capitalize and which products to produce were made by a small clade of delusional elites, as wrong in their models as they were sure of them.

Starting with Adam Smith - and later fervently preached by others, including Hayek - the notion of FIBM, or Faith In Blind Markets, began to compete against GAR.  The core notion? That the mass wisdom of millions of buyers, sellers, voters and investors will tend to emphasize or reinforce better ideas and cancel or punish bad ones. Delusions - the greatest human tendency - will be quickly discovered because no longer will some narrow group be able to nurse them without question.  Hence, getting back to the original question: the more transparency - and the greater the number of participants - the more people can come up with relatively accurate models and act upon them... or acutely criticize flaws in the models of others.

But let’s extend that thought and ask an even more general question.

Isn’t libertarianism fundamentally an appreciation of competition?

Think about all the core enlightenment processes -- entrepreneurial markets, science, democracy and justice. Each of these modern systems produce the modern miracle of positive-sum games... creating win-win scenarios for everybody. The famous rising tide that lifts all boats.

Now sure, there’s a lot more involved than just competition! There are many cooperative or consensus or even moral aspects... read Adam Smith’s The Theory of Moral Sentiments, to see that "competition" does not mean "cut-throat" or the brutal image of social darwinism. Many of today's libertarians oversimplify, especially the followers of Ayn Rand.

Nevertheless, it is wholly right and proper for a libertarian to emphasize and focus on one main feature of these positive sum processes. The fact that they all arise by harnessing and encouraging fair rivalry among human beings. So let me reiterate.

Competition is the great creative force of the universe.

That's proved. Competition produced all of nature's evolutionary marvels... and us.  By far the most successful human enterprise - science - is an inherently competitive process and scientists tend, by personality, to be extremely assertive in going after rivals.  Moreover the arts, supposedly our "highest" endeavors, are inherently - often ferociously - competitive, even when they are lecturing us about cooperation!  And yes, in professing this vast generalization you can see the libertarian in me - (despite my deep disdain for Ayn Rand.)

But the sane libertarian also knows that competition - in nature and primitive human societies - contains an inherent contradiction. A runaway process of self-destruction that historically always led (and I do mean always) to calamity...

...to the winner turning around and cheating! Victors in ancient combat were never content with incremental or partial success in war. Can you picture the victorious helping their adversaries to their feet and welcoming them to come back to another equal fight the following year? It was human nature, rather, to destroy opponents. The battlefield may have made you great, but you do not want to return there again and again for an endless series of even matches!

Think. In order to have maximum creative output, competition has to go on and on, maximizing innovative aspects and minimizing blood. The clearest example of transforming destruction into endlessly vigorous competition may be the ritualized combat systems called rule-based sports.

Nor is this just about war. Adam Smith saw what had happened in markets and societies for 4000 years. Winners in capitalism tend not to be satisfied with success in the latest market battle, with a cool product or in achieving recent financial or political success. Human nature propels us to use our recent victory to ensure that competitors will fail in future struggles. To bias the next competition. Or to stomp our defeated competitors flat! To absorb their companies. Squat on patents. Create monopolies or cartels to divvy-up markets. Eliminate transparency. Spy on competitors but keep them - and consumers in the dark. Capture regulators and make them work for us. Capture politicians and make the laws favor us.

Suppose that I become rich and powerful. What will I do, if I am one of the 99% who let human nature play out? Then I’ll use wealth and power to game the system so new competitors won't challenge me! If you deny this, you're just being silly. It was the way of oligarchy, in 99% of human cultures. The top priority of the owner-lords in all those nations was one distilled goal - to prevent bright sons of the the peasant class from competing fairly with the children of the rich. Admit it. Go ahead, choose a random decade across the last 60 millennia, in some random locale that had metals. And tell me this wasn't the pattern.

And it worked. It’s in our blood. We're all descended from the harems of guys who pulled off that trick.

And here is where Adam Smith came in.  He looked around, saw all the cheating by owner-oligarchs destroying the creative effectiveness of markets.  And - in the seminal year 1776 - he called for something new.  A way to get the best, most creative-competitive juices flowing, in the largest possible variety of human beings, while preventing the old failure mode.  And it turned out there was a way.

As in rule-based sports, competition can only becoming self-sustaining... continuing to deliver its positive-sum outcomes... amid a network of transparent, fine-tuned, relentlessly scrutinized -- and universally enforced -- rules.

The vital importance - and difficult complexity - of “fairness”

Fair competition isn’t just a matter of morality. It is also the way to maximize competitive output, by ensuring that bright people and teams get second, third chances and so on. And creating ever-flowing opportunities for new competitors to keep arising from the population of savvy, educated and empowered folk. That kind of fairness requires rules and careful tending to ensure new competitors can and will always arise to challenge last year's winners. And that earlier winners can't cheat. Because... we've seen... they will.

Let’s be plain here. The founder of both liberalism and libertarianism - Adam Smith - weighed in about both of these reasons for fairness, To him, they were equally important. All right, liberals and libertarians each emphasize different ones. Liberals talk about the moral reasons for fairness and libertarians the practical, competition-nurturing ones.  They tend to forget that - as followers of Smith - they actually want the same end result!

What they share is something deeper that both movements ought to recognize.  They want every child to hit age 21 ready and eager to join the rivalry of work, skill and ideas.

Liberals should recall that fair competition is the driver, the engine of our cornucopia. The source of the wealth that made social progress possible. And libertarians need to pause, amid their dogmatic, “FDR-was-Satan” incantations, and recall that the word “fair” is the only thing that can make competition last.

Ironically, government can play a role there, if carefully watched. e.g. by ensuring that all poor kids get the care and education needed to become adult competitors! By ensuring that social status - whether poor or hyper-privileged - is never the prime determinant of success or failure. In other words, a sane libertarian who loves competition does not scream "Socialism!" at every state intervention. Instead, that grownup libertarian calmly judges every intervention by one standard.

"Will this help to increase the number of skilled, vigorous competitors?"

And by that standard, suddenly, liberals and libertarians have something to discuss.  Without a scintilla of doubt, measures for civil rights, sanitation and public health, infrastructure, childhood health care  and... yes... the vast increases in literacy wrought by public education... vastly increased the number of citizens capable of independent engagement in markets and innovative goods and services.

Sure, we are finding flaws in our schools! But that judgment (let's remember) is from the higher plateau of expectations and desires that public education created!  It is only because we achieved 99% literacy that - suddenly - 99% literacy is no longer anywhere near enough. Is it time to bring market tools and competition into education?  Sure. Probably. And I am willing to discuss the assertion that teachers' unions have "become a cartel."  Still, when criticism turns into willful dogmatism, a failure to acknowledge the accomplishments and effectiveness of mass society - brought into effect by government, exactly as demanded by Adam Smith(!) - well that's churlish ingratitude and hardly a basis for saying "let's move on to something better."

And there are things government should not do!  Some well-intentioned things that stymie competitive creativity, instead of enhancing it.  "Equalizing all outcomes.  is socialism and I am not on that boat!  But maximizing the number of skilled and ready competitors is a different goal and I am here to hold that conversation. You may be surprised how many liberals and moderates will be willing to discuss it (and occasionally vote libertarian) if you make that the issue, instead of "FDR-was-Satan!"

A Movement based on LOVE of something, not HATE...

Sorry, but this needs to be hammered home, so let me repeat it. Screeching an incantation that government inherently suppresses competition is pure religious cant, disproved by countless counter-examples, from education and public health to the vast stimulative effect of public investments in science and technology and infrastructure. Again, look at 4000 years of history. Instead of simple-minded hatred of government, be more interested in pragmatic ways to enhance creative competition. Then the movement might have the subtlety of a surgeon or mechanic, instead of the sensibility of a berserk lumberjack.  Make it about love of something, not bilious blame and hate.

So... is libertarianism consistent with transparency?

By that standard, transparency is clearly one of the most vital things that libertarians could defend. Hayek himself said that markets (and democracy and science and justice) only work when all participants know as much as possible. Absence of light is death to all four positive-sum games.

Alas, today's libertarians are (I grieve to say it) in-effect quite mad. They worship unlimited private property, even though it was precisely the failure mode that crushed freedom in 99% of human cultures. And they rage against a system that in general resulted in vastly more wealth, freedom and more libertarians than any other.

This is a quasi-religious idolatry. It makes them complicit allies of the enemies of competition. It makes them murderers of the thing that they should love.

Your tags:

TIP:

Enter the amount, and click "Tip" to submit!
Recipient's email address:
Personal message (optional):

Your email address:

Comments

Type your comment below:
Bravo Davester! You remain my favorite articulator of sanity on OS.
libertarianism is being used to feather the bed of those who mistake god for an ideology. that's why so many who have so little to gain personally from the creed are the most ardent adherents. (take a look at the blog of Ken Jacobsin (I think that's it) and so many others whose hope for survival itself is based on social programs they eschew.
"That the mass wisdom of millions of buyers... will tend to emphasize or reinforce better ideas and cancel or punish bad ones."
---Libertarians today seem to be more concerned with rewarding effective organizations and destroying incompetent firms. The focus is on the elimination of bureaucracies, both corporate and state owned. Modern markets benefit companies that can attract talent into a system that best utilizes their workers' skills. In turn, corporate misapplication and wastefulness should result in a difficult environment to obtain capital. I believe these results should be the ultimate goal of any economic system/philosophy.

"Can you picture the victorious helping their adversaries to their feet and welcoming them to come back to another equal fight the following year?"
---I do not see how society benefits by assisting inefficient organizations. Currently, it seems RIMM (maker of blackberry phones) is unable to adapt to the changing telecommunication environment. Whether this is due to horrible leadership, a lack of product innovation, or a failure to respond to new technology, its failure reveals flaws in its organization. How would we gain from RIMM's continued, artificial existence if it could not take advantage of being the market leader?

"But that judgment (let's remember) is from the higher plateau of expectations and desires that public education created!"
---Unfortunately, libertarians are quick to dismiss these significant contributions. However, one is demonized for pointing out any shortcomings in the public school system. Students go through three to five years of an hour a day classroom instruction, with the supposed goal of learning a foreign language. Yet, we know that less than one percent will graduate with a gained intermediate ability to speak in their focused language. Why waste the time of millions of students and teachers day in and day out? This criticism does not mean I want to eliminate all foreign language teachers and programs. It does suggest that schools should pursue new methods/systems that return better results.

"Screeching an incantation that government inherently suppresses competition is pure religious cant..."
----Agreed. Too many of us libertarians fail to realize that markets cannot address every worthy human endeavor. Governments should engage in missions of exploration/discovery that have no viable profit. If governments followed libertarian principles here and did not pursue such objectives , society would lose out.

"So... is libertarianism consistent with transparency?"
---Isn't a libertarian system best able to exist with transparency? I do not want my private insurance company nor my government to punish me for my recent ice cream purchase (sorry for the hyperbole). Libertarianism at least addresses the state worry and offers possible solutions for my corporate insurance concern.
ThaiKen I appreciate your courtesy, but you are still doing incantations instead of pragmatically dealing with the central human problem... which is the relentless tendency for us to drift back to feudalism, which happened in 99% of human cultures. Until libertarians are willing to stop spouting fine-sounding incantations and instead Look at the Human Problem... I despair for them being worth more than a bowl of jujubees.

Note that you utterly ignored my challenge, to randomly pick decades and places (that had metallurgy) across the last 4000 years and find for me ANY examples where those who possessed the most property were not the principal oppressors against liberty and open rights and markets. You cannot do it. What's more, you KNOW that you cannot do it.

That is why libertarians have transformed, in recent years, from very interesting fellows who knew a lot of history (e.g. Goldwater and Buckley) to among the most mystical, incantation-reciting people alive today, never, ever citing the long litany of failures in our past.


Look, the Enlightenment is our one and only and last-best chance to escape the attractor state known as feudalism, that spanned nearly every human generation since copper tools. The absolutel refusal of libertarians to even LOOK at that long history - while they PRESCRIBE for us how humans ought to live - is proof of stunning insanity.

The experiment engendered by Locke, Smith, Franklin and ... yes... FDR resulted in the miracle of a society that simultaneously was relatively FLAT and socially mobile, WHILE engendering vastly creative entrepreneurial capitalism. A combination that was positive sum... no matter how much the socialists and right-wingers scream that it must be ZERO-sum.

That achievement is now under threat. The flatness is going away at the SAME time as entrepreneurial capitalism is failing! Guess what, FDR was right. These things are linked. And the libertarian notion that FDR was Satan is diametrically opposite to the truth.
Libertarianism is a theory of liberty that focuses on itself as a theory of liberty. What is the object of libertarianism? To argue about liberty theory.
Function is secondary, at best, and is always a product of assumption over empiricism. The liberty contradiction is it is ignorant of power, which has always had far more influence on liberty than theories.
The reason libertarianism is dysfunctional is it's barely a philosophy, as claim-epistemology-conclusion is the same thing, making it no more than a glorified ideology. To maintain consistency with its laughably simplistic claim, it must apply the idea of extreme individualism to all things. There is not much opportunity for reason when your a priori claim is seen as the sum of all reason. Because it has to cram all ideas through a tiny ring of prescription it can't think--at least in the way most would use the word. Problems must be because libertarianism has not been applied, and solutions are always to apply libertarianism.

Another contradiction, more drenched in humor, is that it's a group of individualists performing collective thinking...again, using the t word generously.

Contrary to popular libertarian and conservative propaganda, America wasn't founded on libertarianism, and real libertarianism rejects the Constitution as too coercive. You'll see the occasional libertarian well informed enough to know that, but most of 'em think they're the spitting image of Jefferson or Madison, not Bastiat and Malthus...guys whose influence didn't find American roots until 50 years post-Constitution.

It's a great entry-level political philosophy for those who can't or don't wish to use reason and want something extremely easy to understand and argue, in perpetuity, as no country in its right mind would ever accept it.
"Note that you utterly ignored my challenge, to randomly pick decades and places (that had metallurgy) across the last 4000 years and find for me ANY examples where those who possessed the most property were not the principal oppressors against liberty and open rights and markets. You cannot do it. What's more, you KNOW that you cannot do it."
---The first examples that come to mind are the Italian city-states in the 13th century. Chiangmai's history also provides one exceptions to your theory.

"Until libertarians are willing to stop spouting fine-sounding incantations and instead Look at the Human Problem..."
---We do look at the human problem. You view feudalism (in whatever general definition you decide to give it) as the underlying obstacle, whereas libertarians see the issue as centralized planning.

"The absolutel refusal of libertarians to even LOOK at that long history - while they PRESCRIBE for us how humans ought to live - is proof of stunning insanity."
----Libertarians, for the most part, are not telling people how they ought to live. They are telling the public about their ideal relationship between the state and its citizens.

"And the libertarian notion that FDR was Satan is diametrically opposite to the truth."
----Packing the Supreme Court and placing Japanese-Americans into concentration camps does not get him points with many, including Constitutionalists. If you're referring to FDR's Social Security safety net, then the Left's notion that Reagan was Satan is an equal lie as his administration saved the program. It is humorous to see who champions Roosevelt, a man born into great wealth and who had a history of not paying his 'fair share' in taxes.
If one imagines Ron Paul an android before receiving his "emotion" chip, attracting other such androids dispersed throughout the population looking for what is missing in themselves, the mystery of the appeal of libertarianism is solved on a human level.
Entrepreneurial innovation and invention is a wonderful thing. But often, it needs to be watered by government. Think about railroads, airplanes, radar, the computer, space exploration, and the internet. Each of these was incubated and nurtured by government funding and regulation, in many cases because no one in the private sector could afford the massive losses of their research and development stages.
David,
normally I am 100% with you in what you write.
But this "Competition is the great creative force of the universe" - is simply over the top. Co-operation is at least as important - since without co-operation we all start again from scratch. In particularly, science the process, no matter how competitive the individuals might be, is fundamentally a co-operative process. I agree competitive drive is important, but competition creates more losers than it creates winners.

We cannot all move forward, unless we recognise that success always always includes an element of luck. Not punishing the losers too much is every bit as important as rewarding the winners. (See ThaiKens remarkably hate filled tirade against RIMM for an example of not being open to the idea that luck plays a part.) If you punish the losers too hard, nobody will take risks anymore. I like to call this attitute (common amongst "Austrian" economics fans) moral risk fetishism. It leads to the gold-bug mentality - let's have a medieval monetary system - after all the dark ages were stable.
I thought I might add, my father was a scientist. You know what I remember him doing most, travelling a lot. A why did he travel? Mostly to meet with and talk with and work with other people working in the same field. That is - with his competitors! ???
Thai Ken
""And the libertarian notion that FDR was Satan is diametrically opposite to the truth."
----Packing the Supreme Court and placing Japanese-Americans into concentration camps does not get him points with many, including Constitutionalists. If you're referring to FDR's Social Security safety net, then the Left's notion that Reagan was Satan is an equal lie as his administration saved the program. It is humorous to see who champions Roosevelt, a man born into great wealth and who had a history of not paying his 'fair share' in taxes."

Read this again and notice something. People are not black or white. Expecting to agree with, or disagree with absolutely everything that an individual does, is pretty silly. (And remember they are often subject to pressures outside of their control. ) It only makes sense to judge those individuals on their whole record.
Gods, David, I have tried to make this point so MANY times to Randians.

They never listen.
You asked for an example of Libertarian ideals in practice: Somalia