The purpose of this brief essay is to
present an argument that state spending on welfare, which necessarily rests on
the state's power to extract funds from the public, cannot be justified. An argument in favor of state sponsored
welfare is that a democratically elected government chooses to do so, therefore
it follows that it must have the power to collect these funds from the citizen
coercively. Yet claiming that the democratic
process is sufficient to justify state coercion fails even the most cursory
examination. One needs only to look at
our own American past of slavery and the more recent history of Nazi Germany to
disabuse oneself of the notion that democratically elected representatives can
do no wrong. Both the Old South and Nazi
Germany had democratically elected governments.
No, something other than the temporary wishes of a majority of the
people is needed to justify state coercion.
I will examine the issue from three
perspectives: the natural rights of the individual vis a vis the state, whether
one's natural rights may be violated in order to achieve some higher conception
of justice, and whether the state is capable of rational economic
calculation. I will show that state spending
on welfare violates one's natural rights, is unjust, and lacks necessarily
rational economic calculation. I have
selected Frederic Bastiat's natural rights-based argument for the limits of
government as expressed in The Law; Immanuel Kant's argument of true justice as explained
by Roger Scruton in Kant: A Very
Short Introduction and T. Patrick
Burke's No Harm:
Ethical Principles for a Free Market;
and Ludwig von Mises' explanation of the source of rational economic
calculation as expressed in Economic
Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth.
This essay focuses on the rational
justification for state welfare spending and does not accept empirical claims
that need exists. I do not deny that
state welfare can alleviate the suffering of some to some extent, especially in
the short run. Likewise, I make no
attempt to calculate the cost to those whose property is expropriated to do
so. Furthermore, I make no claim whether
such a benefit is necessary. For one
thing, it is possible that state spending could be replaced to some extent,
perhaps completely, by private efforts. It
is also possible that the very attempt to remove some kinds suffering is counterproductive,
such as the possibility that paying a man not to work in menial jobs or in uncomfortable
conditions might destroy his ability to take care of himself and his
family. All this is irrelevant if we can
conclude that state spending on welfare cannot be justified in the first place.
Man's Natural Rights and the Limits of Government
In The
Law Frederic Bastiat presents the irrefutable maxim that man's rights exist
prior to the formation of the state and that, therefore, the collective action
of the state cannot conflict with man's prior rights. Man can
delegate to the state only those powers that he himself already possesses. Since man has the natural right to protect
himself and his property, he can legitimately delegate to the state those
powers, which we refer to domestically as the justice system and
internationally as national defense. However,
man does not have the natural right to force another to give to a charity. Since I cannot coerce you to give to the
charity of my choice, neither can government force you to give to the charity
of its choice. Yet that is exactly what
it does. Let us say that you object that
government gives money to a charity that you personally abhor. You would not get very far arguing that you
have a right to reduce your tax payment by a pro rata amount. If you persisted in withholding payment,
government will confiscate your assets.
If you try to protect your assets, government will kill you. Yet, from the context of natural rights,
government has no justification in forcing you to pay for a charity of which
you disapprove and would not fund voluntarily.
True Justice and the Categorical Imperative
Perhaps there is a higher rationale for
allowing the state to violate our natural rights by confiscating our property
coercively for the supposed betterment of others. For this rationale we turn to two
philosophers--Immanuel Kant and T. Patrick Burke. We'll start with Kant. Our conception of true justice has found no
better expression than that by Immanuel Kant in his explanation of the "categorical
imperative". A categorical
imperative tells us what to do unconditionally in all places at all times and
to all men. It does not derive its power
from any authority other than pure reason.
Kant distinguishes this categorical imperative from a hypothetical
imperative, such as "need".
Although a hypothetical imperative may be valid, such as "poor
people would live better if they received welfare payments", it can never
be objective. It gives a reason only to
those who are affected, in this case poor people. Giving welfare to poor people cannot be an
unconditional action, applying to all people in all places at all times.
In his introductory book on Kant cited
above, Roger Scruton explains that there are five variant forms of the
categorical imperative. The first two
are the most important for our purposes here.
The first variant is the Golden Rule, Matthew 7:12: “So in
everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up
the Law and the Prophets.” Abraham Lincoln stated the Golden Rule when he
said, "As I would not be a slave, so I would not be a master." It is based upon reason alone. The second
variant is that all men be treated as ends and not as means. Rational beings are ends in themselves and
never merely means to some other end or as a means to achieve the ends of some
men and not others. By this natural law
even if everyone in a community except one man voted that all should donate to
a charity, the categorical imperative would deny that it is just for the
community to coerce this one man. The
community of men would be using this one man as a means and not as an end, a
rational being with human dignity.
Professor T. Patrick Burke adds an
important addendum to the unjust nature of state coercion for the purpose of
charitable giving. He persuasively makes
the case that the act of refusing to help someone in need is not unjust, for
that needy person is left in the same position as before. The act of refusing to help does not add to
that person's plight. If we become bound
by some higher concept of justice to help all who come to us in need, then we
become slaves to all of mankind, a violation of the categorical imperative in
that we would be used as means and not as ends.
The Impossibility of Economic Calculation by the State
In 1920 Ludwig von Mises wrote a devastating
critique of the emerging socialist movement that has never been refuted. At fewer than seventy-five pages, which
includes an introduction by Professor Yuri Maltsev and a postscript by
Professor Joseph Salerno, the Mises Institute edition of Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth explains that,
absent private property, economic calculation is impossible. Mises explained that no government knows what
to produce or what resources to use in producing whatever the desired good may
be, because only those who actually own property can dispose of it rationally. Think of two worlds, the world of the mind
containing preferences and the world of markets and prices. One's preferences are ordered in the mind
according to greatest need. These
preferences are different for different people and change within the same
person constantly. These internally held
preferences meet in the market with all other preferences to produce money
prices, which allows us to make economic and economical decisions about what to
produce, and how to produce it, and what to buy. Mises pointed out that without market prices,
the economic czar is blind as to what to produce and how to produce it. Market prices are determined only by people
expressing preferences for what they actually own; i.e., private property. The economic czar is not spending his own
money or taking his own product to market to sell. So, how can he rationally decide what to
do? Mises' answer was that he cannot.
Since the government is composed of
individuals who are not spending their own money or taking their own product to
market, there is no way that they can decide rationally which charities, if
any, should be state supported. They
fall back upon what can only be called corrupt relationships; i.e., helping
friends, choosing organizations that may hire them in the future, buying off
organizations that are particularly persistent and annoying, etc. This behavior is best described by
"public choice theory", which explains that actions of individuals in
government are guided by the same self-interest as they are in all other areas
of life, ridiculing the idea that those in government have higher ethical
considerations.
Conclusion
In the end we observe that state welfare
is imposed coercively; it has no justification other than that of pure force. No one has a natural right to our labor or
our property; there is no categorical imperative to demand the help of others
and none to shame us for refusing to help others; and there is no possibility
of rational economic calculation to determine which charities for the state to
support and to what extent.
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