The anonymous author of the Schumpeter column in TheEconomist is closing out his tenure. Fittingly, he ends by asking whether
capitalism can survive? At a time when all sensible human minds understand that
no viable alternative exists, capitalism faces the danger of being hollowed out
from within.
Inspiration for the column comes from Joseph Schumpter.
Today’s columnist explains:
This
column was inspired by the young Schumpeter’s vision of the businessperson as
hero—the Übermensch who
dreams up a new world and brings it into being through force of intellect and
will. On its debut in September 2009, we argued that Schumpeter was a perfect
icon for a business column because, unlike other economists, he focused on
business leaders rather than abstract forces and factors. But as Schumpeter
grew older, his vision darkened. He became increasingly preoccupied not with
heroism but with bureaucratisation, and not with change but with decay.
Of course, capitalism has triumphed. It has succeeded in
lifting most of the world’s poorer countries out of poverty. One need only but
mention that China, whose extreme poverty rate in 1970 was over 80% now has an
extreme poverty rate under 10%.
The columnist writes:
The
socialist alternative that loomed large back in 1942 has imploded. The emerging
world has capitalism to thank for its escape from millennia of poverty.
The original Schumpeter was concerned that capitalism would
be undermined from within. Today’s columnist says that Schumpeter feared
elites, a guardian class of philosopher kings who did not trust markets but who
trusted their own brilliance and believed fervently in the ideal-du-jour.
Today, it’s the ideal of equality—apparently, capitalism does not provide
people with an equal quantity of misery.
He says:
His [Schumpeter’s]
biggest worry was that capitalism was producing its own gravediggers in the
form of an anti-capitalist intelligentsia. Today that very elite, snug in Los
Angeles canyons and university departments, has expanded. Hollywood studios
denounce the wolves of Wall Street and the environmental vandals at large in
the oil industry. The liberal sort of academic (meaning the type that favours
big government) far outnumbers the conservative kind, by five to one, according
to one recent study.
It takes a well-tuned prophetic sense to have seen the rise
of an intelligentsia that cares more about its own importance than about the
prosperity of the citizenry. And that cares more about its gauzy ideals than about whether the people are well nourished.
Obviously, the Marxist fairy tales spun out by what is
called the Frankfort School have captured the minds of many academics in their
web. While railing against consumerism these great minds ignore the fact that
true socialism does not need to worry about consumerism because it produces
nothing worth consuming.
Among the forces militating against capitalism was the state
bureaucracy and its will to its own power. The original Schumpeter saw it in
Roosevelt’s New Deal. He would not be reassured by today’s bloated government
bureaucracies:
Another
of Schumpeter’s concerns was that the state activism of Roosevelt’s New Deal
was undermining the market. But in 1938 the American government was spending
only a fifth of GDP. Today it is spending 38%—and that constitutes
neoliberalism of the most laissez-faire kind compared with Italy (51% of GDP)
or France (57%). Big regulation has advanced more rapidly than big government.
Business is getting visibly flabbier, too. European industry has been old and
unfit for years and now stodge is spreading to America. The largest firms are
expanding and smaller ones are withering on the vine. The share of American companies
that are 11 years old or over rose from a third in 1987 to almost half in 2012.
Two points should be underscored. “Big regulation”-- which
happens to be the hallmark of the Obama administration-- has tamped down the growth of business and the
economy. One may question whether or not it has redistributed wealth. It has
certainly not created wealth. Thanks to excessive regulation small
business cannot really get a toehold. Compliance costs too much.
The columnist continues:
Many
big firms thrive because of government and regulation. The cost per employee of
red tape—endless form-filling and dealing with health-and-safety rules—is
multiples higher for companies that have a few dozen staff than for those with
hundreds or thousands. Schumpeter called for owner-entrepreneurs to lend
dynamism to economies. Today capitalism exists without capitalists—companies
are “owned” by millions of shareholders who act through institutions that
employ professional managers whose chief aim is to search for safe returns, not
risky opportunities.
This has stifled productivity across the developed world:
The
rate of productivity growth across the rich world has been disappointing since
the early 1970s, with only a brief respite in 1996-2004 in the case of America.
There, and in other rich countries, populations are ageing fast. Meanwhile, the
fruits of what growth there is get captured by an ever narrower section of
society. And those who succeed on the basis of merit are marrying other winners
and hoarding the best educational opportunities.
Today’s populist revolt against the elites demonstrates
something of a recognition of the
problem. While the columnist understands well that the “people” might not be an
infallible source of wisdom, he knows that the “smug and self-serving” elites
have provoked the reaction:
It may
be nonsense that “the people” are infallible repositories of common sense, but
there is no doubt that liberal elites have been smug and self-serving. And
populism feeds on its own failures. The more that business copes with
uncertainty by delaying investment or moving money abroad, the more politicians
will bully or bribe them into doing “the right thing”. As economic stagnation
breeds populism, so excessive regard for the popular will reinforces
stagnation.
He concludes—more as a warning than as a solution-- that if
the popular will recommends interfering in the markets it might well aggravate
the problem. And yet, if by populism one means undoing regulations and diminishing the power of the bureaucracy it might
end up being a good thing.
The Schumpeter columnist will henceforth be writing the
Bagehot column for the Economist. We wish him well and thank him for his good
work.
2 comments:
EoP comment at: EoP v WiP NWO Neg: 01 Jan: Had Enough Therapy .. The Economist.
Along those lines: http://slatestarcodex.com/2016/12/30/contra-nyt-on-economists-on-education/
NYT and fake news/dissembling.
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