|
Mises
on the Family
G.K.
Chesterton called the family an anarchistic institution. He meant
that it requires no act of the state to bring it about. Its existence
flows from fixed realities in the nature of man, with its form refined
by the development of sexual norms and the advance of civilization.
This
observation is consistent with a brilliant discussion of the family
in Ludwig von Mises's masterwork Socialism,
first published in 1922. Why did Mises address family and marriage
in an economics book refuting socialism? He understood-unlike many
economists today-that the opponents of the free society have a broad
agenda that usually begins with an attack on this most crucial bourgeois
institution.
"Proposals
to transform the relations between the sexes have long gone hand
in hand with plans for the socialization of the means of production,"
Mises observes. "Marriage is to disappear along with private property....
Socialism promises not only welfare wealth for all
but universal happiness in love as well."
Mises
noted that August Bebel's Woman Under Socialism, a paean
to free love published in 1892, was the most widely read left-wing
tract of its time. This linkage of socialism and promiscuity had
a tactical purpose. If you don't buy the never-never land of magically
appearing prosperity, then you can focus on the hope for liberation
from sexual responsibility and maturity.
The
socialists proposed a world in which there would be no social impediments
to unlimited personal pleasure, with the family and monogamy being
the first impediments to go. Would this plan work? No chance, said
Mises: the socialist program for free love is as impossible as its
economic one. They are both contrary to the restraints inherent
in the real world.
The
family, like the structure of the market economy, is a product not
of policy but of voluntary association, made necessary by biological
and social realities. Capitalism reinforced marriage and family
because it insisted on consent in all social relations.
The
family and capitalism thus share a common institutional and ethical
foundation. By attempting to abolish them, the socialists would
replace a society based on contract with one based on violence.
The result would be total societal collapse.
When
the democratic socialists Sidney and Beatrice Webb traveled to the
Soviet Union, a decade after Mises's book, they reported a different
reality. They found women, liberated from the yoke of family and
marriage, living happy and fulfilled lives. It was as much a fantasy
actually a bloody lie-as their claim that Soviet society
was becoming the most prosperous in history.
No
sane intellectual embraces full-blown social economics anymore,
but a watered-down version of the socialist agenda for the family
is the driving force behind much of U.S. social policy. This agenda
goes hand in hand with the hobbling of the market economy in other
areas.
It
is no accident that the rise of free love in the U.S. accompanied
the rise of the fully developed welfare state. The goals of liberation
from work (and saving and investment) and liberation from our sexual
natures stem from a similar ideological impulse: to overcome fixed
realities in nature. The family has suffered as a result, just as
Mises predicted it would.
While
the advocates of the family and the proponents of capitalism should
be united in a single political agenda of smashing the interventionist
state, they typically are not. Family advocates, even conservative
ones, often decry finance capitalism as an alienating force, and
advocate ill-advised policies like tariffs, union monopolies, and
wage floors for married people.
At
the same time, free enterprisers show little interest in the genuine
concerns of family advocates. And neither seems interested in the
radical attack on both freedom and family life that government policies
like child labor laws, public schooling, Social Security, high taxes,
and socialized medicine represent. In Mises's view, this breech
is unnecessary.
"It
is no accident that the proposal to treat men and women as radically
equal, to regulate sexual intercourse by the State, to put infants
into public nursing homes at birth and to ensure that children and
parents remain quite unknown to each other should have originated
with Plato," who cared nothing for freedom.
Neither
is it an accident that the same proposals these days are pushed
by people who have little to no regard for family or economic law.
|