Paul Driessen writes:
University of Delaware climatology professor (and amateur history buff) David Legates offers some fascinating insights into a persuasive socio-economic experiment. His analysis could provide handy intellectual ammunition for ongoing battles between free enterprise-oriented Republicans and committed socialists in the Democratic camp.
What if we could destroy a country’s political and economic fabric through a natural disaster – or a war – and then rebuild one half of it using capitalism as its base, while the other rebuilds on a socialist foundation? David wonders. Let the virtues of each system work their magic, and then see where the two new countries are after fifty years. Actually, he says, we’ve already performed The Experiment. It’s post-war Germany – and the outcome ought to end the debate over which system is better.
The Experiment: Capitalism versus Socialism
What if we could have an experiment to compare the two systems? Wait – we already did.
David R. Legates
Experimentation is a major tool in the scientist’s arsenal. We can put the same strain of bacteria into two Petri dishes, for example, and compare the relative effects of two different antibiotics.
What if we could do the same with economic systems? We could take a country and destroy its political and economic fabric through, say, a natural disaster or widespread pestilence – or a war. War is the ultimate political and economic cleansing agent. Its full devastation can send a country back almost to the beginning of civilization.
We could then take this war-torn country and divide it into two parts. It would have similar people, similar climate, similar potential trading partners, similar geography – but one part is rebuilt using capitalism as its base, while the other rebuilds using socialism and its principles. We’d let the virtues of each system play out and see where these two new countries would be after, say, fifty years.
Don’t you wonder what the outcome might be? Well, as it turns out, we have already performed The Experiment. It’s post-war Germany.
Following the devastation of World War II, Germany was split into two parts. The German Federal Republic, or West Germany, was rebuilt in the image of the western allies and a capitalist legal-political-economic system. By contrast, the German Democratic Republic, or East Germany, was reconstructed using the socialist/communist principles championed by the Soviet Union. The Experiment pitted the market economy of the West against the command economy of the East.
On the western side, considering what’s being taught in our schools, one might expect that “greedy capitalism” would create a state where a few people became the rich elite, while the vast majority were left as deprived masses. Socialism, by contrast, promised East Germany the best that life had to offer, through rights guaranteed by the state, including “human rights” to employment and living wages, time for rest and leisure, health care and elder care, and guaranteed housing, education and cultural programs.
So the Petri dishes were set, and The Experiment began. In 1990, after just 45 years, The Experiment abruptly and surprisingly ended – with reunification back into a single country. How did it work out?
In West Germany, capitalism rebuilt the devastated country into a political and economic power in Europe, rivaled only by its former enemy, Great Britain. Instead of creating a rich 1% and a poor 99%, West Germans thrived: average West Germans were considerably wealthier than their Eastern counterparts. The country developed economically, and its people enjoyed lives with all the pleasures that wealth, modern technologies and quality free time could provide.
By contrast, East Germany’s socialist policies created a state that fell woefully behind. Its people were much poorer; property ownership was virtually non-existent amid a collectivist regime; food and material goods were scarce and expensive, available mostly to Communist Party elites; spies were everywhere, and people were summarily arrested and jailed; the state pretended to pay its workers, and they pretended to work. A wall of concrete, barbed wire and guard towers was built to separate the two halves of Berlin – and keep disgruntled Eastern citizens from defecting to the West. Many who tried to leave were shot.
By the time of reunification, productivity in East Germany was barely 70% of that in West Germany. The West boasted large, vibrant industries and other highly productive sectors, while dirty antiquated factories and outmoded farming methods dominated the East. Even staples like butter, eggs and chicken – abundant and affordable in West Germany – were twice as expensive in the eastern “workers’ paradise.”
Coffee was seven times more expensive, while gasoline and laundry detergent were more than 2½ times more expensive. Luxury items, like automobiles and men’s suits were twice as expensive, color televisions five times more costly. About the only staple that was cheaper in East Germany were potatoes, which could be distilled into vodka, so that lower caste East Germans could commiserate better with their abundant Russian comrades.
Moreover, state-guaranteed health care in the East did not translate into a healthier society. In 1990, life expectancy in the West was about 3½ years longer than in the East for men, and more than 2½ years longer for women. Studies found that unfavorable working conditions, psychological reactions to political suppression, differences in cardiovascular risk factors and lifestyles, and lower standards of medical technology in East Germany were largely responsible for their lower health standards.
The socialist mentality of full employment for everyone led to more women working in the East than in the West. This pressure resulted in better childcare facilities in East Germany, as mothers there returned to work sooner after giving birth and were more inclined to work full-time – or more compelled to work, to put food on the table, which meant they had to work full-time and run the household. This also meant East German children had far less contact with their parents and families, even as West Germans became convinced that children fared better under their mothers’ loving care than growing up in nurseries.
As the education system in East Germany was deeply rooted in socialism, the state ran an extensive network of schools that indoctrinated children into the socialist system from just after their birth to the university level. While it’s true that today East Germans perform better at STEM (science, technology, engineering, math) studies than their Western counterparts, that may be explained in part by the influx of numerous poorly educated immigrants to former West German areas, and the extensive money invested in the eastern region since reunification.
However, schools of the East were not intended to establish creative thinking, which results in creativity and innovation. Rather, they were authoritarian and rigid, encouraging collective group-think and consensus ideas, rather than fostering outside-the-box thinking, novel philosophies and enhanced productivity. Thus, East German technology was slow to develop and students were often overqualified for available jobs.
Did the East gain any advantage? Nudism was more prevalent in the East, if that was your thing. Personal interaction was higher too, because telephones and other technologies were lacking. But even though East Germany was much better off than other Soviet satellite countries (a tribute to innate German resourcefulness), East German socialism offered few advantages over its capitalist western counterpart. In fact, in the years since reunification, homogenization of Germany has been slow, due largely to the legacy of years lived under socialist domination, where any work ethic was unrewarded, even repressed.
Freedom was the single most important ingredient that caused West Germany to succeed. Freedom is the elixir that fuels innovation, supports a diversity of thought, and allows people to become who they want to be, not what the state demands they must be. When the government guarantees equality of outcomes, it also stifles the creativity, diversity, ingenuity and reward systems that allow people and countries to grow, develop and prosper. The Experiment has proven this.
These days in the United States, however, forgetful, unobservant and ideological politicians are again touting the supposed benefits of socialism. Government-provided health and elder care, free tuition, paid day care and pre-school education, guaranteed jobs and wages are all peddled by candidates who feel government can and should care for us from cradle to grave. They apparently think East German socialism is preferable to West German capitalism. Have they learned nothing from The Experiment?
A friend of mine believes capitalism is greedy and evil – and socialism, if “properly implemented,” will take us forward to realizing a better future. I counter that The Experiment proves society is doomed to mediocrity at best under autocratic socialism. Indeed, those who turn toward the Siren call of socialism always crash upon its rocks. But my friend assures me: “Trust me, this time it will be different.”
That’s what they always say. Perhaps Venezuela and Cuba are finally making socialism work?
David R. Legates, PhD, CCM, is a Professor of Climatology at the University of Delaware in Newark, Delaware. His views do not represent those of the University of Delaware.
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Same experiment in Asia, still ongoing, unfortunately: North and South Korea.
Venezuela and Cuba v. Chile and Colombia show yet again conclusively that socialism fails and capitalism succeeds. Chile has a “socialist” president now, but she doesn’t control the Senate. Chile wisely kept Pinochet’s economic reforms in place after the disaster of Allende’s Soviet and Cuban-backed communism.
Chile v. Argentina is another good example. Argentina has awakened, but it’s unclear whether the new conservative government can achieve much against ingrained socialism.
Prior to going socialist, Argentina had the highest per-capita income in Latin America and wasn’t all that far behind the US.
This almost exactly mirrors the experience of Cuba before and after their revolution.
Yup. It’s why so many Italian immigrants flocked to Argentina.
Russia and Argentina were blessed with exceptional natural riches, yet managed to screw themselves over with socialism. Argentina has much more natural wealth than Chile, but embraced socialism, so crashed and burned, while Chile soared, with much fewer resources and people.
Here in Chile we have a very left leaning President Bachelet. There are constant protests for free education and other ‘social’ reforms. The good thing that Chile has is that by law the government can’t go into debt, so with copper prices down there is no money to spend. Hence President Bachelet’s approval rating is hovering around 19%. Election next year will likely swing back toward a more business friendly administration. The last few years the government has not been good for outside investment and it’s not helping the economy at all.
Yup. Chile’s saving grace. Can’t print money, borrow or invent it out of thin air, as does the US Federal Reserve Bank.
You’d think that Chilean voters would have learned their lesson during the first Bitchalot regime.
I’ve invested there, and currently regret it, but maybe as you say, things will turn around. My wife is Chilean.
Governments can only hinder an economy
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=uZSq_zZ5VrQ
College campuses in the US have long been socialist indoctrination camps. In the mid-eighties I had to take a critical thinking course freshman year. The course was taught by a doctrinaire Marxist with all assigned materials reflecting his point of view.
As a 26 year old veteran with a young family and conservative political views I was immune to the attempted indoctrination. In fact I offered the counterpoint at every opportunity. Bully for all that but how many students have passed through this process since. We are now living with the results.
My own twenty something daughter let me know recently that of course I waa the beneficiary of white male privilege. She must have forgotten why Dad wasn’t home as much as he would have liked because he worked his butt off to pay for the comfy living standard.
A couple of days after that conversation my little radical called to ask politely if I had mailed an expected check. I held my tongue. It wasn’t easy.
Alan Kors is a professor of History at University of Pennsylvania. He gives the most revealing and condemnatory talk about Socialism, ever:
He shows Socialism’s fundamental totalitarian nature, included in Social Democracy by the way, the lack of accounting for Socialism’s millions upon millions of deaths sacrificed to the cause of utopia and the serene lack of guilt progressives grant themselves for their knowing participation in, or knowing acceptance of, those deaths. Kors says the dead call out for their accounting, while silent faces are turned away.
And now, today, we have Progressives again, bloody hands hidden, posing as moral paragons all the while again promoting their politics of violence.
I recommend Alan Kors’ talk very highly.
Indeed. Kors’ perspective is firmly grounded in his appreciation for core Enlightenment values. I highly recommend his Teaching Company courses on the Enlightenment. He is a very perceptive and engaging historian. http://www.thegreatcourses.com/professors/alan-charles-kors/
Wow, powerful speech. Thanks you for the link.
[URL=http://s2.photobucket.com/user/mikeishere/media/Capitalism-Socialism-b.gif.html][IMG]http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y48/mikeishere/Capitalism-Socialism-b.gif[/IMG][/URL]
http://s2.photobucket.com/user/mikeishere/media/Capitalism-Socialism-b.gif.html
We don’t have to organize this experiment because it has been done as a longitudinal study–New Zealand 1950s to present is close to this situation. In fact, in the late 1950s one could say that New Zealand introduced a pathogen, the country got the disease associated with said pathogen, we removed the pathogen in the 1980s, and New Zealand has done much better since. It is darned near Koch’s postulates as applied to a national economy.
Was it 1956 or thereabouts that Sydney Holland was elected. Wasn’t that about the time of the wharfies strike. Maybe that was a bit earlier.
G
OMM – I agree wholeheartedly.
Yep, you’ve convinced me!
Re nudism in East Germany, here are the youthful Angela Kasner Merkel and two friends:
[photo needed pruning]
I should add allegedly, since the Chancellor hasn’t confirmed that the young lady on the left is she.
[What has been seen cannot be unseen, but let us avoid shocking others in public. .mod]
Oh that’s funny. She still looked like a boy, even then!
Doesn’t look like a boy to me. Maybe in the face but that body is all woman. And it looks like she had a nice body, when she was young.
That’s funny.
Cruel. But funny.
Much of humor is based upon cruelty.
Dear Moderator,
WUWT is, above all else, I think you would agree, a place to teach the truth. There are many readers here who are:
1. children under 18 trying to learn;
2. people in cultures where such a sight is highly offensive; and
3. women like me who find hanging out with men who are, at the same time, gazing at naked women, VERY uncomfortable.
You may not care about category #3, but, DO think about the other two. The goal is learning, here, and not just a fun men’s club.
Re: #3, you are likely a male and will just not “get” how this photo could make me feel nauseous and like leaving and never coming back here. It does.
With high hopes that you will understand me and PLEASE SNIP THAT PHOTO,
Janice
[Done. .mod]
Sigh…
:))
You are right in every sense. When will we learn to stop insulting the very people we need to get the message across. Our apology as a community for being infantile and dense. Please stay.
Thank you, so much, dear .mod.
SMC — tsk, tsk. (lol — cute)
Just trying to add a little clarity Janice. :))
eye roll
🙂
You lost my respect Janice.
I would never thought that you can be such a high brow.
Well, sigh
Consider that the driver for nudism in the eastern block was an economy where people couldn’t afford bathing suits.
Or – “Here is what remains for the communists to steal from me after they have stolen everything else including my dignity.”
And how does this relate to the price of butter?
Besides the fact that you posted a nudie pic on a news site I’d like to make three points.
1: This has literally nothing to do with the topic of capitalism vs socialism unless you can prove that one of them produces more naturalists.
2: Europe, especially Germany, doesn’t have the same nudity taboos as other countries like the US does.
3: Some could conclude that you were attacking her by posting nude pictures of her from when she was a teenager. This is akin to Cook attacking us for not being a climate scientist when we debunk one of Al Gore’s more outlandish claims. It’s an attempt to discredit the individual because you can’t discredit the facts.
4: Using nude or racy pictures of women to discredit them is deplorable for several reasons. It gives them body shaming problems, it is a form of sexual discrimination, it makes them feel violated, and finally, it makes women feel less secure about being nude because they fear being tarnished by this social stigma.
Are you nuts?
Merkel was apparently proud of her body when she let that picture be taken.
That WUWT felt it should be taken down because of the complaint of an old Christian fundamentalist woman is just as bad as if a young ISIS fighter had complained about female nudity, while also keeping sex slaves.
Christian fundamentalists degrade women just as much as do Muslim fundamentalists. The Bible says that women should be subservient to their masters. Same as ISIS.
I thought that this site was in favor of freedom of expression. It appears as if I were mistaken.
I’ll have to look elsewhere for freedom. This site obviously censors basic human freedoms.
Sad.
What is the point of the Internet, if not to shock?
Moderator; I can’t repeat my post which did not appear because wordpress says I am trying to duplicate the comment.
[Hmmmn. Have not seen that problem before. .mod]
@ur momisugly mod, it has been happening to me as well for some reason after posting they request a password and after you enter your password , wordpress says you are duplicating, I ignore it wait for a few seconds ( I know 5 seconds is a long time for some). Then I just click on the Back arrow to go back to the first time I posted and it is there. I have no clue what I am doing but it works for me. (LOL) gee am I a genius or what ( nope it is Sat 2:30 am been looking for the bottom of a glass too long I guess )
[The mods note that, what one hopes to find in the bottom half of a glass late at night after many of hours reading depends on whether the glass is thought to be half full, half empty, full of air, or twice as large as it needs to be. .mod]
We don’t have to organize this experiment because it has been done as a longitudinal study–New Zealand 1950s to present is close to this situation. In fact, in the late 1950s one could say that New Zealand introduced a pathogen, the country got the disease associated with said pathogen, they removed the pathogen in the 1980s, and New Zealand has done much better since. It is darned near Koch’s postulates as applied to a national economy.
Three comments in a row head to limbo…. I must be a sinner.
Maybe just purgatory. Some indulgences might help.
The mods seem to [hold] a low bar in [your] way to limbo.
Well as far as the American experience goes, it already happened back with the first pilgrims, who gave everybody an equal share, and almost wiped the colony out as the millenials of that day wanted their free stuff, but not to work for it.
Capitalism saved the colonists and America happened.
G
So nyet on any more experiments. The only problem with capitalism is that is also brings in crime as a way of life; which in turn leads to second Amendments.
Note in the second the framers used the word “infringe” whereas in the earlier first they say “abridge”. AKA turn “War and Peace” into the classic comic.
So what is it about “infringe” that all these ammo hamstringers do not understand ??
Human nature brings in crime. The only role capitalism has, is that thanks to it, so many people have stuff worth stealing.
You think there isn’t crime in socialist societies?
In fact there is more, since much that is good and healthy, ie free enterprise, becomes a crime under socialism.
I don’t think I said that anywhere.
But as Mark says; there is more stuff to steal in the one case. in the other there is very little that is worth stealing.
G
Not that many people know about that! (Capitalism saving the colonists.) I’m in my 60’s, and didn’t hear about it until a few years ago. I’m surprised to hear about it several times since – and not while I was in grade school – especially around Thanksgiving. The country wasn’t that socialist leaning back then, either.
It’s true. A few sherkers came on the Mayflower.
With such a small group, they had to work together to survive. More like a family group.
Some didn’t survive the first winter.
Barbara, I thought about half didn’t survive the first winter. 53 of 102 passengers made it, and half of the crew of 20, according to Wiki.
And prior to the pilgrims, Jamestown started out as a socialist colony.
Shades of Hitchhiker’s Guide B Ark.
Not quite the case. It started out as a mercantilist colony, the gentleman members of which felt most forms of manual labor were beneath them. Only after John Smith introduced the radical concept of “no work, no food”, did the colony have a chance of success. It still would have failed if not for tobacco grown from mild Spanish seeds stolen by John Rolfe, husband of Matoaka “Pocahontas” Powhatan, aka Rebecca Rolfe, who showed him how best to raise a tobacco crop (Indian tobacco was too strong for frequent smoking).
You may find it amusing that Wankerpedia articles on Jamestown and Plymouth colonies contain no mention of the words ‘socialism’ or ‘communism.’ The failure of communism in the New World has been excised from the record by the Wankers. Down the “memory hole.”
OK, I see comment four shows up, so…New Zealand has done something like this, but in a longitudinal form 1950 to Present. They introduced the pathogen of socialism, did poorly, removed the pathogen and have done better.
I can see your identical posts at 2:08 and 2:12 as well as this one. I think the NZ experience is more relevant to discussion of trade vs protectionism rather than socialism vs capitalism, although the two are obviously related. We were never purely socialist and we are not today purely capitalist.
Same for Korea.
The only place socialism works is within a family unit because it is the only situation where dependents have a reason to trust their rulers.
The best example of the success of capitalism was in the survival of the Plymouth colony when William Bradford changed the rules from a socialist to a capitalist model:
“Bradford, who had become the new governor of the colony, recognized that this form of collectivism was as costly and destructive to the Pilgrims as that first harsh winter, which had taken so many lives.” It just wasn’t working. There wasn’t any prosperity. From his own journal, “He decided to take bold action. Bradford assigned a plot of land to each family to work and manage,” and whatever they produced was theirs. The overages they could sell or share or do whatever they wanted with. But what happened essentially was that Bradford was “thus turning loose the power of the marketplace.”
http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/daily/2010/11/24/the_true_story_of_thanksgiving3
If the family unit is operating properly, the rulers should care for the well-being of their dependents than they do their own.
The people are not the dependents of their rulers.
Sleepalot:
until there is an ecosystem established whereby dependence is rewarded.
subsidies for incompetence and uselessness exist only under a particular condition.
it comes about when people relinquish ownership of what they produce.
that’s the only way it happens.
the cord can only be cut in one place.
this is the cost of altruism: economic gangrene of socialism
@ur momisugly gnomish: let us say, rather, “the cost of externally enforced ‘altruism’.”
When I am forced to give of my abundance to help another, I am robbed of the joy of giving.
heh- is there a joy of giving? (if you get something in return, it’s a purchase, not a gift)
Well families are not democracies; more like benign dictatorships.
It’s an environment where some are there to teach, and others are there to learn.
When the learners make it to age 18, you hand them a shiny new $20 bill, and pat them on the A^^^ and tell them; ” Have a good life. ”
If you trained them well; they will.
You would be surprised how many people don’t seem to understand that in a marriage you commit to leave one family and start an entirely new family.
G
G
“The only place socialism works is within a family unit”
Another place a form of socialism works is in primitive tribes. For instance, if Australian Aboriginals caught a large animal that was too large for the family to eat on their own, they would have to share it with their neighbours in the tribe. It makes sense because without refrigeration, nor salt curing of meat, it would go off before it could be eaten. I’ve seen the same thing about south seas islanders and European Gypsies.
But there are limits. These rules only applied to large things and valuables obtained from settlers (no savings banks, after all). They didn’t apply to small animals that could be cooked and eaten immediately. So it would be misleading to say that they were socialist societies. Grimly practical would be more accurate.
In a small community social reputation can function as a currency. People remember who has contributed and reciprocate. The hunter who brings in and shares a large animal can, for awhile, expect more favors from others in the community.
I was thinking that it was this by Bromberg:
“I will never be your fool” In Philly:
1985 – the same year as “Live aid” Philly & London…
JPP
The last 2 minutes sum it up ….
Thanks gnomish, for reminding me of this…
omg! what a performance! i never saw that one- thanks!
The Original Mike M September 23, 2016 at 2:21 pm
Rush plays fast and loose with history.
The link gives a better quick history of the first years. Also the Mayflower Compact was in no way socialist.
The families knew one another and shared the same religion and work ethic. Their first building “meeting house” was their church. The second story made it also a blockhouse/fort. Their had their cannon, long rang minions were placed there.
They accomplished a great deal in the first year.
Also the first colonist were required to bring tools and everyday household items. Some of which survives to this day. I have personally seen a clock that is a heirloom of the descendants of one of the Mayflower families.
http://mayflowerhistory.com/houses/
michael
@Mike the Morlock
“Rush plays fast and loose with history.”
Examples please. Rush’s information is based on Governor Bradford’s own writings, and has been covered in many other places.
I hadn’t read the Mayflower Compact before, but a quick search shows that it was very brief, and only laid out what the colonists intended to do, not what they actually did. Kind of like a Mission Statement.
The link you provide bills itself as “…the Internet’s most complete and accurate website dealing with the Mayflower passengers and the history of the Pilgrims and early Plymouth Colony.” but I don’t see it that way. I consider it a lightweight overview.
However, it does provide these links to a 1912 version of Governor Bradford’s “History of Plymouth Plantation”:
Volume 1:
http://archive.org/stream/historyplymouth01socigoog#page/n12/mode/2up
Volume 2:
http://archive.org/stream/historyofplymout02brad#page/n7/mode/2up
It’s probably worth acknowledging East Germany was also a slave state to the USSR and little control over their internal processes. I still doubt EG would have come out ahead but it does put the two Germanys in the poor example category for the point being made.
Communist Romania and Yugoslavia were less Soviet-dominated but just as screwed up as East Germany.
Or Sweden and Norway – oh, wait…
Norway and Sweden both have natural resources. When those run out and when neither can borrow any more money, then look out.
Norway is always mentioned as a bastion of how to run socialism. It’s a homogenous country of 5 million people with vast oil income. You can model it all you want but few other countries have that set of circumstances. Chile rode the copper bubble and leaned socialist flush with cash and now with no money from copper it isn’t working at all.
Mike,
Compare with Venezuela and its hopeless mismanagement of its oil industry, using the proceeds to buy votes, while ignoring the infrastructure needs of the energy sector.
Copper should come back when and if China revives.
Einstein whimsically claimed he needed only one valid example to disprove an hypothesis. Apparently with socialism even two are not enough.
Only two? Try every single one
dunno wtf somebody gets the idea that sweden and norway are socialist.
they have lots of welfare but private ownership and market trade is the source of the wealth.
that’s hardly socialism.
but liars will lie and idiots will be vectors for further infection.
lookin at YOU dpstick
Sweden and Norway are considered welfare states – A democratic/capitalist system with high taxes to pay for universal education and health care and benefits for those in need.
In Norway, 5.4% have over $1M in wealth and 23.1% have less than $10 000. The difference in average and median net worth is a lot better than in the US (321k/120k compared to 301k/45k) but Sweden is hardly better than the USA.
http://cdn.financialsamurai.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/average-net-worth-2014.png
Notice that Australia has the least difference.
They are not socialist.
But would that make Aussies anti-socialists
Robert B, thanks, fascinating list, can’t quite work out the significance of lower median than average positions, is that the result of high state and public debts? For instance, average net/median net positions for the following;
UK 10/4
Japan 12/5
Italy 11/3
Finland 17/7
Spain 20/14
There are far more than two choices when it comes to economics. The issues are not “capitalism” vs. “Socialism” it is “laissez-faire capitalism” vs. “fettered capitalism”. Fettered Capitalism is where the government enforces regulations to ensure free and fair exchange of goods. For instance, fettered capitalism enforces anti-monopoly legislation, transparent pricing, and accurate financial reporting. “Laissez-faire capitalism” is basically a “buyer beware” type of phenomena.
Ronald Reagan (under the economic guidance of Wendy Lee Gramm), advocated a strong laissez-faire capitalism. All studies (back t Adam Smith) has shown that monopolistic practices break out within a generation in all laissez-faire capitalists which increases the income disparity. Wendy Lee Gramm (FWIW) was appointed to the board of Enron six weeks after she changed commodity rules to favor them. She remained on the board when her husband (Sen. Phil Gramm) ran the CFMA through the distracted, post-election congress which included the “Enron Loophole”. Most of us would call that corruption — but, to them, this was laissez-faire capitalism.
We should also consider that some industries are better served with basically socialistic practices. The most obvious is health-care. You point out that the west had better life expectancy than the Soviet satellite states. This was true. However, most western nations have better life expectancy than the United States. Plus, their health care with costs that are 50% – 60% lower than the United States. The reason is (of course) health care expenses do not respond well to free-market forces. It is easy for medical to take advantage of sick people.
“However, most western nations have better life expectancy than the United States.”
By a small amount, according to statistics which are not uniformly gathered within the nations, and particular sub-populations skew the US average down.
“Plus, their health care with costs that are 50% – 60% lower than the United States.”
So it is claimed. But, there are two reasons to discount the claims. One: government accounting is fungible – costs relating to healthcare can be disbursed among all the myriad government functions, and do not all get counted. Two: the US is more prosperous. You will pay a lot more for comparable healthcare in Manhattan than you will in Topeka. In fact, you will pay a lot more for just about everything in Manhattan than you will in Topeka. Does that mean Topeka is more prosperous than Manhattan? Of course not.
” The reason is (of course) health care expenses do not respond well to free-market forces.”
In fact, they respond very well. When government mandates increase the demand, while discouraging supply, prices escalate relentlessly. This same phenomenon is playing out all over the world, Europe included, where health costs are also exploding. The politicians seem to think that doubling down on such policies will reduce the trend, but nobody can escape the law of supply and demand.
Monopolies are impossible unless government power is used to create them.
You don’t need government to create and enforce health and safety regulations. Read up on UL.
You are correct that some industries thrive under socialism. That is because they use the government to block all new competition and to require people to buy their products.
It is impossible to compare health care costs between countries, because no two countries gather their statistics in the same way.
It is also nearly impossible to compare health outcomes, for the same reason.
One example that always comes up is how do you determine what is an infant death?
In the US, if a baby draws a single breath, then dies, it is counted as an infant death.
In Germany, if a baby dies within 24 hours it is considered to have been still born.
In France, they have set a weight threshold, if the baby is below that weight and dies, regardless of how long it lived, it is considered to have been still born.
BTW, infant deaths are counted when determining life expectancy. Still born’s aren’t.
Gini percentages from the Credit Suisse Global Wealth Databook (2015) cited by Robert B above for wealth (higher % is less equal). Some interesting and surprising results I think. Numbers in brackets are wealth per adult (1,000s USD, constant exchange rates).
World 91.5 (56)
Asia-Pacific 89.2 (46)
Africa 85.6 (6)
North America 84.2 (344)
Europe 83.4 (143)
India 83.1 (6)
Latin America 80.9 (25)
China 73.3 (20)
US 85.0 (353)
Sweden 80.9 (348)
Norway 77.9 (386)
Australia 63.9 (379)
(Discussed by Robert B)
UK 67.8 (338)
Japan 63.4 (222)
Italy 66.7 (229)
Finland 74.2 (169)
Spain 67.1 (125)
(Noticeably lower median than average wealth ranks. Except Finland more equal wealth distribution than China)
And finally …
Russia 91.2 (21)
Singapore 70.8 (249)
Switzerland 80.3 (481)
My guess is that most people, including me, would have put UK inequality higher, as ever it’s best not to pay too much attention to BBC/Guardian axis propaganda.
Yep, then there was the USSR — a true human paradise if ever there was one.
@ur momisugly Nigel S.
can’t quite work out the significance of lower median than average positions, is that the result of high state and public debts?
No they are just two ways of looking at the same range of numbers.
Median is the midpoint of the assets, average is the arithmetic mean.
So basally to get the median you count up all the entries, divide that number by 2 and there is the median.
Let’s say we have one person in group of 11 people one who makes S1,000,000/per year and 10 people who make $10,000 each
The average salary is just a bit below $100,000/per year. Looks like people are well paid but no, it’s one person who making a killing while the rest are just scraping by.
The median salary is 10,000 says (technically) that at least 50% of the group is making $10,000 or less. So a big difference between the mean (average) and the median suggests that while some people are doing really well, probably a lot more people are not.
The fact that the primary trading partners of EG were other socialist economies who all suffered the same fate, while WG and its market-oriented partners all benefitted from trade and investment in WG makes, I think, a rather stronger case for “the experiment” than the author has drawn.
“East Germany was also a slave state to the USSR”
East Germany also had to pay back a gigantic amount in war reparations to Stalinist Russia. It was a gigantic drain on their economy, so it is difficult to say the entire difference was because of socialism.
As an experiment, the methodology (as in all economic & social studies) was fundamentally flawed.
Weather socialism from internal sources or socialist demands from external sources, socialism would still be at the root
North Korea doesn’t have to pay back Russia and China with reparations. What’s your excuse for the failure of socialism to feed people there?
Nice write up. It seems that most people, when they are young, naive, idealistic, and don’t forget poor, tend to believe in the promise of socialism. It all seems so logical at a young age, it did for me. Then as they age, and have acquired years of practical experience in the real world, they realize that there is this thing about human nature, call it personal motivation, that has more effect on the wealth of a society than everything else combined. And that socialism, for all it’s logical wonderfulness on paper, stifles personal motivation, while capitalism encourages it. Were it not for this one thing, socialism might actually achieve superior results. But this one thing makes all the difference!
Exactly. Work is hard! People don’t like working. That’s why they have to pay you to do it. Very few people will work if they don’t have to or if they can’t keep what they earn. When the government takes what you earn in the form of confiscatory taxes or in the form of subsidized services for others most people simply stop working and the system collapses.
Work may be hard, but the best thing is to find a work you love, or better, a profession or calling. Much better than working with friday-in-mind. In socialism and capitalism you often find people with no love for their work, and mostly in the lower classes. And these often have no chance to get a higher education, even in Germany, where even unversity is free. It’s the cultural sourrunding which shapes a person. Poor children learn how to live as a poor person. Rich people can give much more to their children, and I don’t blame them.
But if a system enables poor persons to reach an average or better wealth, the I call it a good one.
“Let the virtues of each system work their magic”
Socialism has virtues? Who knew?
It fails quickly. I call that a virtue. Or is it a feature?
A feedback.
Apparently one of the few virtues of Socialism is the ability to flaunt having nothing by wearing it.
The difference between East and West Germany was obvious when the wall fell in the early 1990’s.
Self correcting negative feedback loop.
We lived and worked in Munich early 1978- late 1983. We were fluent in German (which our Stazi minders (there were two ‘escorting’ our group of ~20) did not know, and were able to take a 10 day tour of East Germany along with a group of Lutheran ministers and spouses. East Berlin, Leipzig, Dresden, and ‘Luther’ points in between. I can assure all here that Legates description of East Germany does NOT do the stark differences sufficient justice. Empty supermarket shelves. Trabis as the main auto rather than BMW, Mercedes, and VW. Drab concrete housing ghettos. Crappy roads. We had many conversations with locals as we would wander off tour to explore. They were much worse off than the west, and knew it. East Germany basically imploded, as did Poland, Rumania, and the USSR itself under Gorbachov. Still not fully at the level of the former West Germany despite 25 years of reunification effort, I am told by longtime Munich friends
Berlin Wall guards came from the small enclave in NE East Germany which couldn’t receive West German TV broadcasts. so could be duped into believing Communist Party lies.
This is simply not true. Personally know six (former)DDR border guards – all (East)Berliners. Two are successful Silicon Valley techies, the others are solid middle class Germans.
Were they on the Inter-German Border or on the Wall in Berlin? And from what period?
DDR Grenztruppen guarded both the long “international” border and the Wall in Berlin.
My first trip off of North America was to the APL conference in Leningrad in 1992 . The city was a basket case . As I wrote my Logic of Liberty columns for the Manhattan Libertarian Serf City a decade ago , http://cosy.com/Liberty/LogicOfLiberty.htm , communism couldn’t compete with competition .
You can’t compare European socialism….with American socialism
For Europeans it was a step up….
…for Americans, it’s a step down
Socialism is never a step up as it never creates wealth.
from feudalism it is….
Under feudalism serfs could get free by living in a city for a year and a day. Under socialism, everyone except for the political elites are serfs, with no way out. And even the elites are in constant danger of being enslaved again, too.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Road_to_Serfdom
Hayek on feudalism, capitalism and socialism, including its nationalist variety, as in 1930s Germany and 2010s Scotland.
So you don’t understand that selling people on socialism….sounds good when they are coming from feudalism
Socialism always “sounds good” when pitched. It just never is when implemented
If I understand it correctly, Capitalism is an economic system concerned with the creation of wealth, and Socialism is a form of government concerned with the distribution of wealth. You can have a capitalist economy with a socialist government. Communism, on the other hand, prohibits capitalism, aka the free market. Read Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations and you will see capitalism explained, although he doesn’t call it that. Then read Karl Marx who rants about the inequity of evil capitalism that the economic rewards are not equally shared. So in a socialist society, it doesn’t matter that the average person is poor, it only matters that nobody is allowed to be rich. /sarc on that last
“You can have a capitalist economy with a socialist government.”
Socialist governments never succeed. They either turn into communist governments (socialists with force; ie guns), or they fail. There are many examples of the former, few of the latter; socialists love power too much to admit failure, they just need to try harder, hence the guns.
The dead hand of socialism will always be a dead hand. It can never work because it goes against human nature. And, anyway, Margaret Thatcher explained socialism very clearly and very simply many years ago: “The trouble with Socialism is that eventually you run out of other people’s money.”
Socialism is an economic model where the government owns the means of production and/or distribution. It has come to mean a centrally planned economy as well.
Capitalism is an economic model which allows the private ownership of property which encourages the free and fair exchange of goods. Adam Smith’s argument was that a farmer with excess food could exchange that food with cloth from a cloth merchant who has excess cloth. The result is that they both benefit from the transaction.
Feudalism is where a select nobility hold property in the name of the crown in exchange for military service in defense of the nation. The vast majority of citizens were not permitted to hold private property.
It is easy to see how capitalism is more efficient. However, predatory capitalism effectively degenerates to a feudalistic class system without oversight. This is a system where the few rich exploit both their customers by removing competition. This is the challenge of our current system — we have created an inherited aristocracy which is every bit as harmful as the English System that we rebelled against.
“Wherever there is great property, there is great inequality… for one very rich man, there must be at least five hundred poor.” — Adam Smith
The difference between feudalism and socialism lies mostly in how serfs were not permitted to move without permission.
Dan, the problem is that if you allow the government to determine what the proper distribution of wealth is, then the free market will always collapse.
Predatory capitalism exists only in the fevered imaginations of socialists.
It’s always their excuse for why they need to take what others have produced and give it to themselves.
There is no argument any longer surely.
China and Russia and Vietnam now have the best capitalists that there is. The proof is already evident.
Regardless of morality or human emotional reactions, the solutions to most problems are simply ones that work better. That is all that the free enterprise system was about. It simple works better given the test objects under consideration – people.
Having said that – there still needs to be a government sector. There are aspects of an economy that work better under government – socialism in short. There needs to be laws and police and courts and highways and water systems and infrastructure. These parts are paid for collective taxes. It is more efficient to pool everyone’s resources and pay for highways than it is for individuals to build highways and charge everyone else.
It appears that the most efficient societies are ones where the government versus private sector is around 30:70 or 35:65. That is just the facts. That is what appears to work better regardless of theory or emotions. Any more that, and the economy and standard of living slowly degrades. Any less than that, and one ends with too much disorder and a lack of basic services.
Sorry, but even 30% government spending is too high. In general, the higher the government spending, the lower will be economic growth.
Government has a role to play but should be kept to a minimum. For instance, DARPA did “invent” the Internet, but it would have been created eventually and better by private enterprise, and pose less of a threat to civil liberty than it does now. Same goes for space exploration.
So did destroying the Bell System (Ma Bell) and along with it the Bell Telephone Laboratories do us any favors.
I have a Western Electric built Princess Telephone, that I can’t plug into anything, and I have an AT&T telephone that we use with rubber bands to hold the hand set on the wall with.
One was built by private enterprise, and one is government regulated.
G
This isn’t a criticism: where do you get those ratios? Are there any studies I can analyze? I’m used to WWF pulling statistics out of thin air. But I would be very interested in studies regarding the ratios you quote.
You can Google total government spending as a share of GDP for the US. Currently around $6.4 trillion federal (over $4 Tr), state and local v. ~$16+ trillion.
I recall reading a study some fifty years ago or so in which it was asserted that once government absorbed over 30% of GDP things began to fall apart. Don’t remember the author.
The federal government spending of the United States has averaged ~ 22% +/- 3% of GDP since the mid-1960s. Total government spending (including state and local governments) is ~40% of GDP.
There is no hard rule on how much spending is the best amount. Most European nations include health care in their government spending. The spend 9-12% of their GDP on health care. We spend 18% of our GDP on health care, but 2/3rds of that money is part of government spending. That extra 6% paid by employers and individuals gives us lower life expectancy and worse access to health care than any other major western nation.
Does it matter to you whether you give the money to the government or a health insurance company?
Laws, Police and Courts are not part of an economy, they are part of Governance, and defined (in states) constitutionally. Responsibility for construction and management of Water systems, highways, electrical markets… These can be privately run quite well, even in the midst of otherwise ‘Commonwealth’ systems, and paid for by usage fees. Even Massachusetts, a fairly socialistic state, has a tollway.
good, mr fraser
“Laws, Police and Courts are not part of an economy”
tho those things are products in an economy, they are not an economic system
“It is more efficient to pool everyone’s resources and pay for highways than it is for individuals to build highways and charge everyone else”
prove that one, puhleeze, you statist apologist.
maybe you think 40$ an hour to hold a SLOW sign is productivity?
“Turnpikes: The Turnpike Companies
The process of building roads was very expensive. The Boston-Newburyport Turnpike, was 32 miles long and cost approximately $12,500 per mile to construct. n an attempt to finance the building and maintenance of roads, without raising taxes, the state legislatures began granting charters to private turnpike companies. The turnpike companies built, improved, and maintained a particular section of roadway, and tolls were collected from users to finance the ventures. Turnpike companies sold shares of stock in order
to raise the funds in order to cover the cost of labor and materials. Once the turnpike road was completed, the companies charged tolls to those who traveled the road in order to make a profit and repay its investors. Many of these early toll roads kept the name ‘Turnpikes’ – it conveyed to people that a charge would be made for using the road. Turnpikes therefore came into common use and the term is used interchangeably with toll road in current terminology. Some of the Turnpikes were nearly 200 miles (320 km) long.”
and the beauty was market feedback. you also knew who was the man responsible for fixing the potholes and they got fixed.
and let’s see if you’re gonna even try telling that same baloney about AMTRAK
go ahead- try it. make my day.
Stossel on private roads:
Bill,
Actually it’s more efficient not to pool resources, but for government to lay out the route of highways, condemn the land and let private enterprise build the roads, then collect tolls. As long as the bureaucrats aren’t bought off by the Mob.
Economic growth since the 60’s have been intermittent to poor as well.
For most of this nations history, government was well below 30% of GDP.
Not only did we not suffer, the economy never grew faster.
The studies I have reviewed to date seem to indicate a ratio in the 15 – 20 area for government spending. However, I don’t think it takes into account our (US) meddling in other governments – to our benefit prior to the early 90’s. Then again, it (the meddling) still didn’t seem to help us grow that much faster.
But the rejoinder will be “It just wasn’t done right that time, and we can do better”.
Sadly, every new generation needs to be inoculated against the siren call of socialism, ie robbing the successful to buy the votes of the indolent.
All govts. are socialist; it’s just a matter of degree.
Obama said that when anyone commented on his plans to socialize things. He was convinced that he was so smart he could avoid all the pitfalls of all the socialists that came before him. Wrong.
And what do liberals say when their plans don’t work out? “We just needed to spend more money”. When the $1T stimulus plan had no lasting impact, liberals said we should have spent twice as much. They will never admit that they made a mistake, and instead blame their failure on their opponents who restricted their spending and control. If your goal is universal poverty, then socialism is your best path.
That is literally true. Krugman claims that a trillion dollars a year in “stimulus” for eight years wasn’t enough to get the economy going again, when we were already deficit spending.
Having lived in Berlin in the early 80’s, I can say that East Germany had another issue that West Germany did not. The Soviets LOOTED the east after the war and continued to loot the east until the fall of the GDR. Their method was quite simple, at first they merely loaded goods and entire factories on trains. Later, the always helpful comrades of the USSR purchased goods from the GDR using worthless non-convertable Rubles and sold the GDR goods requiring payment in hard currencies. Not that the fundamental analysis is wrong. Cuba vs Panama or DR is a good contrast as is the incredible story of the Koreas.
You left out that early on they forcibly moved some of the best and brightest minds to other countries. EG citizens had little control over their lives.
Randy S,
Maybe the Soviets looted more, but following WWII the victors did plenty of looting themselves, using the excuse: ‘spoils of war’ (“To the victor go the spoils.”)
Folks living in the San Francisco Bay Area have probably driven along the bay and seen the huge line of gantry cranes along the Oakland and Alameda ports.
Yep. Spoils of war. The cranes were disassembled in Germany and re-assembled here. They’re still in service.
Germany was looted by everyone on the Allied side after both world wars. Still, West Germany prospered under free market capitalism, while East Germany remained in stasis. Prior to unification, E. German girls still curtsied.
A lot of folks still don’t know that Angela Merkel is a product of that Communist system. There’s a suspicion that she’s doing what she is told—and not by the voters who elected her. That would explain her insistence on putting the interests of illegal foreign immigrants ahead of the citizens she’s supposed to represent.
She and Putin speak the same language. Literally.
Trump isn’t the guy who sold American uranium mining rights to Russia. That was Clinton.
And Putin and Trump are in a bromance…
…as opposed to Putin running all over Obama and Hillary
dbstealy:
Not true. Germany did get a great help form the US via CARE parcels and the Marshal plan. WE were not looted, but got a great support in many things. And this did help us.
And about Merkel you wrote:
“That would explain her insistence on putting the interests of illegal foreign immigrants ahead of the citizens she’s supposed to represent.”
This is total rubbish. Not one single German person got 1 € less bc. of war refugees. And she welcomed war refugees from Syria (a lot of them, of course), and she is strictly for returning illegal social immigrants. But this is point the bureaucracy is not able to handle in a proper way – for about 20 years or so. The same with registration of asylees and ways to integrate them in good manner.
It’s not only the implementation of Socialism which fails, it is evil in principle. By design, socialism breaks at least two of the ten commandments: thou shalt not covet, and thou shalt not steal.
And it can only be maintained by murder and places the state before mothers and fathers.
+2
All govts. steal: it’s called taxation.
Thanks, professor. When that rate approaches 100% it also steals the populations incentive to work. And more importantly, most socialist/communist countries didn’t tax themselves into being. Socialist revolutions inevitably bring mass appropriations of industry and property, which are theft.
Clinton steals. It’s called selling American foreign policy to the highest bidder.
Benjamin Franklin seemingly disagreed, looks like he rather thought taxes were a completely necessary element of civil society:
“All Property, indeed, except the Savage’s temporary Cabin, his Bow, his Matchcoat, and other little Acquisitions, absolutely necessary for his Subsistence, seems to me to be the Creature of public Convention. Hence the Public has the Right of Regulating Descents, and all other Conveyances of Property, and even of limiting the Quantity and the Uses of it. All the Property that is necessary to a Man, for the Conservation of the Individual and the Propagation of the Species, is his natural Right, which none can justly deprive him of: But all Property superfluous to such purposes is the Property of the Publick, who, by their Laws, have created it, and who may therefore by other Laws dispose of it, whenever the Welfare of the Publick shall demand such Disposition. He that does not like civil Society on these Terms, let him retire and live among Savages. He can have no right to the benefits of Society, who will not pay his Club towards the Support of it.” (Letter to Robert Morris, 25 Dec. 1783)
It’s hard to live out in the woods in these days, I suggest paying taxes instead.
After all, only two things in life are certain…
@ur momisugly Gard R. Rise
“…all Property superfluous to such purposes is the Property of the Publick, who, by their Laws, have created it…”
“It takes a village”? “You didn’t create that”? No.
@ur momisugly Gard
Did anybody in this thread say there should be no taxation whatsoever? You are setting up a strawman and trying to mislead us by quoting Franklin out of context. When he wrote that letter there was 0% income tax and the federal government spent a minuscule percentage of GDP, funded by tariffs and consumption taxes. Franklin’s argument is anti-anarchy, not pro-socialist.
By the same logic of Franklin’s letter, socialist governments take more than they need. I don’t want my tax dollars being spent on studies of Feminist Glaciology, which is just the tip of the iceberg of ridiculous government excess.
Nope, no strawmen here, but Rob Morrow seems eager to set up some of his own. Don’t ask me where he read any “pro-socialist” sentiments? I am, however, sorry that I didn’t specifically state that I was replying to Harold, who stated “all govts. steal: it’s called taxation.” And yes, that is kind of like saying “there should be no taxation whatsoever”. After all, why should anyone condone organized “theft”? Taxation is not theft, and Benjamin Franklin agreed with this. It is most certainly not quoted out of context and I don’t see how it could possibly mislead any literate person.
(Aside: I wouldn’t want my tax money spent on Feminine Glaciology either, but suppose that 15% or whatever of the tax-paying citizens find Feminine Glaciology extremely important. Wouldn’t it be fair to them (as taxpayers) if at least some amount of public money goes towards research in that area? In free, representative democratic societies, public money will sometimes be channeled towards projects that are unproductive and even detrimental to the economic well-being of same societies. This simply because of the fact that large parts of the electorate might be uninformed about vital issues in society and legislators must necessarily take even their viewpoints into account when allocating tax money.)
In Franklin’s day, govt taxation was just a couple of percent.
Christians break the First Commandment, but let’s not go there on this thread.
It’s worth pointing out that Capitalism alone did not turn West Germany into the big success story – Ludwig Erhard’s policies of de-regulation throughout the 50’s did that, performing an “economic miracle”. Something that has been mainly forgotten in the modern Germany of the EU, which seems to be reversing the procedure.
Deregulation… or, “moving towards a more capitalist sytem.” Got it.
No, actually going a lot further than any other capitalism-driven economy at that time, even outstripped the USA when it got into its stride.
socialism if “properly implemented” …. OK, but I’m pretty sure it would take a capitalist to properly implement socialism, assuming the return on investment was acceptable.
The only “proper” way requires an elimination of desire, and thus, free will.
Yes. Socialism will work perfectly once they succeed in engineering The New Socialist Man.
The key question is properly implemented by whom?