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Posts by Kevin Carson

‘Free Market Capitalism’ is an Oxymoron

Kevin Carson on capitalism’s destruction of markets.

17 July 2010 | C4SS

It’s pretty much standard for the chattering classes—both liberal and conservative—to refer to something called ‘our free market system’, also known as ‘free market capitalism’.  To the extent that the right-wingers at Fox and CNBC or on the editorial page of The Wall Street Journal advocate some purer form of “free markets” in contrast to the existing economy, what they mean is essentially the present model of corporate capitalism without the regulatory or welfare state.

But the form taken by the existing capitalist system that we live under owes precious little to free markets.  From its beginnings in the late Middle Ages, it has been shaped by massive and ceaseless intervention and enforcement of privilege—much of it breathtakingly brutal—by the state.  To adapt a phrase from Orwell, the past has been a boot stamping on a human face.

The state played a central role in creating the defining characteristic of capitalism as we know it:  the wage system.  Had free markets been allowed to develop peacefully, with the peasant majorities remaining in control of their land and with free access to the means of subsistence, labor markets would likely have taken a much different form.  Employers would have had to compete with the possibility of self-employment, available to the vast majority of the population.  But thanks to Enclosures and similar land expropriations over a period of several centuries, the majority of the population was turned into a landless proletariat totally dependant on wage labor for its subsistence.

As if this weren’t enough, the British state imposed totalitarian social controls on the working class in the early days of the Industrial Revolution to reduce the bargaining power of labor.  The Laws of Settlement, for example, acted as a sort of internal passport system, forbidding workers to leave their parish of birth in search of better terms of employment without permission.  The Poor Law authorities then came to the rescue of employers in the underpopulated industrial North, by auctioning off laborers—cheaply—from the parish workhouses of London.

Over a period of several centuries the European powers brought most of the Earth under their subjection and imposed similar land expropriations and social controls on the peoples of the Third World, and looted the mineral resources and raw materials of most of the world.

A wide range of thinkers, from the free market anarchist Lysander Spooner to the Marxist Immanuel Wallerstein, have pointed out historic capitalism’s continuities with feudalism.  Capitalism, as a historic system of political economy, was really just an outgrowth of feudalism with markets grafted in and allowed to operate in the interstices to a limited extent.

The state also played a central role in the rise of corporate capitalism from the late 19th century on.  The railroad land grants created a single national market in the U.S., externalizing the costs of long-distance distribution on the taxpayer, and led to industrial firms and markets far larger than would otherwise have existed.  Patent law and assorted regulations passed during the Progressive Era served to cartelize markets under the control of a handful of oligopoly firms.

In the twentieth century, the state played a growing role in absorbing the surplus output of overbuilt industry or guaranteeing an overseas market for it.  The leading industrial sectors were state creations:  the automobile-highway complex, civil aviation, the miliitary-industrial complex and outgrowths like miniaturized electronics and industrial automation.

The neoliberal economy of the past twenty years is overwhelmingly dependent on the draconian enforcement of “intellectual property” law.  The dominant sectors in the corporate global economy—software, entertainment, biotech, pharma, agribusiness, electronics—are all almost entirely dependent for their profits either on “intellectual property” or direct subsidies from the state.  The central function of the U.S. national security state since WWII has been to make the world safe for corporate power through the overthrow of unfriendly governments.

Both the statist right and the statist left, for their own reasons, equate the “free market” to corporate capitalism, and promote the myth that corporate capitalism as we know it is what would naturally have emerged from a free market absent state intervention to prevent it.  The statist right want to defend the legitimacy of big business, and the statist left want to make you think you need them to defend you against big business.

But the exact opposite is true.  Big business has been a creature of the state from the beginning.  And genuinely free markets would operate as dynamite at the foundations of corporate power.

And that’s exactly what those of us on the free market left want to do.


Filed under: Political Science Tagged: anarchism, capitalism, copyright, corporate capitalism, corporatism, freed markets, history, Immanuel Wallerstein, Industrial Revolution, intellectual property, Kevin Carson, libertarian, Lysander Spooner, market-anarchism, media, Newspeak, patents, state capitalism

At C4SS–Homeland Security Mission Creep: "Intellectual Property Crime"

New Pamphlet: Some Readings For Your First Day of High School Civics Class

C4SS Needs Your Help

By Brad Spangler

Dear Supporters of the Center for a Stateless Society,

I’ll keep it short.

I’m writing this on the afternoon of July 13th. There are less than 48 hours left before the planned end of our fundraising drive to cover expenses for the past month. Very simply, we’re nowhere near meeting our goal. This jeopardizes our ability to continue operating.

That doesn’t mean it’s time to panic. Our fundraising goal is so small that there’s no reason we can’t meet it, even at this late stage. We need just a little over $1,000. This message is going out to nearly 900 supporters on Facebook alone. If 1 out of every 10 people reading this message chips in $10, we’re basically there.

Please support our work. Donate using the ChipIn widget on any page of our web site: http://c4ss.org/

At C4SS–Homeland Security Mission Creep: The Drug War

At C4SS–Homeland Security Mission Creep: Anti-Globalization

At C4SS: "Intellectual Property" Eats Itself

C4SS Monthly Fundraiser

Guest Blog by Brad Spangler

[cross-posted at C4SS]

Dear Supporters of the Center for a Stateless Society,

It’s time for me to again report to you on our financial situation and ask you to please help us pay some bills. Our fundraising goal this month is $1,320. Please support our work. Donate using the ChipIn widget on any page of our web site. Financial details follow …

We have had $1820 in total expenses for this past month of June. Those expenses are partially offset by $300 in income from recurring donations. Additionally, we’ve received several hundred dollars in online course fees for the Stateless-U program of online courses. Because those course fees are not a monthly source of income, though, as well as because enrollees can potentially drop classes and ask for their money back during the remainder of the month of July, we’re only counting a portion of that money toward the June expenses; $200.

That, then, is how we arrived at our fundraising goal for this month:

***********

C4SS

$1,820 EXPENSES
- $300 DONATION INCOME
- $200 COURSE FEES INCOME
_______
$1,320 FUNDRAISING GOAL

***********

The monthly expense breakdown is pretty similar to what you’ve seen in recent months. Tom Knapp is now our part-time Media Coordinator, so his pay has changed. Although you’ll continue to see the occasional written commentary from him, Tom is now mostly doing promotional work aimed at media placement of our content. Darian Worden is now making more money as well because he’s taking up some of the writing slack from Tom writing less. Additionally, I’m drawing a $100 monthly stipend now and had $20 in phone expenses this past month. Here’s the expense listing:

***********

Research Associate: Carson — $425
News Analyst: Knight — $160
News Analyst: Worden — $260
Web Administrator: Gogulski — $215
Media Coordinator: Knapp — $640
Director (Stipend & Expenses): Spangler — $120
_____
TOTAL EXPENSES: $1820

***********

That’s where we’re at right now.

Will you please support our work? Donate using the ChipIn widget on any page of our web site.

Regards,

Brad Spangler,
Director, Center for a Stateless Society (C4SS)

At C4SS–Overthrowing the Government: As American as Apple Pie

At C4SS: In the Religion of 100% Americanism, Ignorance is Strength