Doug
Casey on the Morality of Money
Interviewed
by Louis James, Editor, International
Speculator
Recently
by Doug Casey:
The Coming War with Iran
L:
Doug, every time we have a conversation I ask you about the investment
implications of your ideas, and we consider ways to turn the trends
you see into profits. The assumption is that's what people want
to hear from you, since you're the guru of financial speculation.
But this, your known status as a wealthy man, the fact that you
have no children, and other things may lead some people to form
an incorrect conclusion about you that "all you care
about is money." So let's talk about money. Is it all you care
about?
Doug:
I think anyone who has read our conversation giving advice to people
just starting out in life (or re-starting) knows that the answer
is no. Or the conversation we had in which we discussed Scrooge
McDuck, one of the great heroes of literature. However, I have
to stop before we start and push back: If money were all I cared
about, so what? Would that really make me a bad person?
L: I've
grokked
Ayn Rand's "money
speech," so you know I won't say yes, but maybe you should
expand on that for readers who haven't absorbed Rand's ideas
Doug:
I'm a huge fan of Rand; she was an original and a genius. But just
because someone like her, or me, sees the high moral value of money,
that doesn't mean that it's all that important to them. In fact,
I find money less and less important as time goes by, the older
I get. Perhaps that's a function of Maslow's hierarchy: If you're
hungry, food is all you really care about; if you're freezing, then
it's warmth, and so forth. If you have enough money, these basics
aren't likely to be problems.
My most enjoyable
times have had absolutely nothing to do with money. Like a couple
times in the past when I hopped freight trains with a friend, once
to Portland and once to Sacramento. Each trip took three days and
nights, each was full of adventure and weird experiences, and each
cost about zero. It was liberating to be out of the money world
for a few days. But it was an illusion. Somebody had to get the
money to buy the food we ate at missions. Still, it's nice to live
in a dream world for a while.
Sure, I'd like
more money, if only for the same genetic reason a squirrel wants
more nuts to store for the winter. The one common denominator of
all living creatures is one word: Survive! And, as a medium of exchange
and store of value, money represents survival
it's much more
practical than nuts [laughs].
L: Some
people might say that if money was your highest value, you might
become a thief or murderer to get it.
Doug:
Not likely. I have personal ethics, and there are things I won't
do.
Besides, crime
real crime, taking from or harming others, not law-breaking,
which is an entirely different thing is for the lazy, short-sighted,
and incompetent. In point of fact, I believe crime doesn't pay,
notwithstanding the fact that Jon Corzine of MF Global is still
at large. Criminals are self-destructive. It's a subject I'm writing
an essay about evil, stupidity, sociopaths, and the fate
of America for this month's Casey Report.
Anyway, what's
the most someone could take, robbing their local bank? Perhaps $10,000?
That's only enough to make a wager with Mitt Romney.
But that leads
me to think about the subject. In the old days, when Jesse James
or other thieves robbed a bank, all the citizens would turn out
to engage them in a gun battle in the streets. Why? Because it was
actually their money, not the bankers'. It was just being stored
in the bank; a robbed bank had immense personal consequences for
everyone in a town. Today, nobody gives a damn if a bank is robbed
they'll get their money back from a US government agency.
The bank has become impersonal; most aren't locally owned. And your
deposit has been packaged up into some unfathomable security nobody
is responsible for. The whole system has become corrupt. It degrades
the very concept of money. This relates to why kids don't save coins
in piggy banks any more it's because they're no longer coins
with value, they're just tokens, essentially worthless. All of US
society is about as sound as the dollar now.
Actually, it
can be argued that robbing a bank isn't nearly as serious a crime
today as robbing a candy store of $5. Why? Nobody in particular
loses in the robbery of today's socialized banks. But the candy
merchant has to absorb the $5 loss personally. Anyway, if you want
to rob a bank today, you don't use a gun. You become part of management
and loot the shareholders through outrageous salaries, stock options,
and bonuses, among other things. I truly dislike the empty suits
that fill most boardrooms today.
But most people
are mostly honest it's the 80/20 rule again. So, no; I think
this argument is a straw man. The best way to make money is to create
value. If I personally owned Apple as a private company, I'd be
making more money completely honestly than many governments
and they are the biggest thieves in the world.
L: No
argument.
Doug:
Notice one more thing: making money honestly means creating something
other people value, not yourself. The more money I want,
the more I have to think about what other people want, and find
better, faster, cheaper ways of delivering it to them. The reason
someone is poor and, yes, I know all the excuses for poverty
is that the poor do not produce more than they consume. Or
if they do, they don't save the surplus.
L: The
productive make things other people want: Adam Smith's invisible
hand.
Doug:
Exactly. Selfishness, in the form of the profit motive, guides people
to serve the needs of others far more reliably, effectively, and
efficiently than any amount of haranguing from priests, poets, or
politicians. They tend to be profoundly anti-human, actually.
L: People
say money makes the world go around, and they are right. Or, as
I tell my students, there are two basic ways to motivate and coordinate
human behavior on a large scale: coercion and persuasion. Government
is the human institution that is based on coercion. The market is
the one based on persuasion. Individuals can sometimes persuade
others to do things for love, charity, or other reasons, but to
coordinate voluntary cooperation society-wide, you need the price
system of a profit-driven market economy. That's how money makes
the world go around.
Doug:
And that's why it doesn't matter how smart or well-intended politicians
may be. Political solutions are always detrimental to society over
the long run, because they are based in coercion.
If governments
lacked the power to compel obedience, they would cease to be governments.
No matter how liberal, there's always a point at which it comes
down to force especially if anyone tries to opt out and live
by their own rules. Even if people try that in the most peaceful
and harmonious way with regard to their neighbors, the state cannot
allow separatists to secede. The moment it grants that right, every
different religious, political, social, or even artistic group might
move to form its own enclave, and the state disintegrates. I'd say
thats wonderful for everybody but the parasites who
rely on the state which is why secession movements always
become violent.
I'm actually
mystified at why most people not only just tolerate the state, but
seem to love it. They're enthusiastic about it. Sometimes that makes
me pessimistic about the future
L: Reminds
me of the
conversation we just had on Europe disintegrating. But let's
stay on topic. So you're saying that money is a positive moral good
in society because the pursuit of it motivates the creation of value,
because it's the bridge between selfishness and social good and
because it's the basis for voluntary cooperation, rather than coerced
interaction. Anything else?
Doug:
Yes, but first, let me say one more thing about the issue of selfishness
the virtue of selfishness and the vice of altruism.
Ayn Rand might never forgive me for saying this, but if you take
the two concepts ethical self-interest and concern for others
to their logical conclusions, they actually are the same.
It's in your selfish best interest to provide the maximum amount
of value to the maximum number of people that's how Apple
became the giant company it is. Conversely, it is not altruistic
to help other people. I want all the people around me to be strong
and successful. It makes life better and easier for me if they're
all doing well. So it's selfish, not altruistic, when I help them.
To weaken others,
to degrade them by making them dependent upon generosity, as we
discussed in our conversation
on charity, is not doing those people any good. If you really
care about others, the best thing you can do for them is to push
for totally freeing all markets. That makes it both necessary and
rewarding for them to learn valuable skills and to become creators
of value, and not burdens on society. It's a win-win all around.
L: That'll
bend some people's minds
So, what was the other thing?
Doug:
Well, referring again to our conversation on charity, the accumulation
of wealth is in and of itself an important social as well as a personal
good.
L: Remind
us.
Doug:
The good to individuals of accumulating wealth is obvious, but the
social good often goes unrecognized. Put simply, progress requires
capital. Major new undertakings, from hydropower dams to spaceships
to new medical devices and treatments, require huge amounts of capital.
If you're not willing to extract that capital from the population
via the coercion of taxes, i.e., steal it, you need wealth to accumulate
in private hands to pay for these things.
In other words,
if the world is going to improve, we need huge pools of capital,
intelligently invested. We need as many obscenely rich people as
possible.
L: Right
then
so, money is all good nothing bad about it at
all?
Doug:
Unfortunately, many of the rich people in the world today didn't
get their money by real production. They got it by using political
connections and slopping at the trough of the state. That's bad.
When I look at how some people have gotten their money Clinton,
Pelosi, and all the politically connected bankers and brokers, just
for a start I can understand why the poor want to eat the
rich.
But money itself
isn't the problem. Money is just a store of value and a means of
exchange. What is bad about that? Gold,
as we've discussed many times, happens to be the best form of
money the market has ever produced: It's convenient, consistent,
durable, divisible, has intrinsic value (it's the second-most reflective
and conductive metal, the most nonreactive, the most ductile, and
the most malleable of all metals), and can't be created out of thin
air. Those are gold's attributes. People attribute all sorts of
other silly things to gold, and poetic critics talk about the evils
of the lust for gold. But it's not the gold itself that's evil
it's the psychological aberrations and weaknesses of unethical people
that are the problem. The critics are fixating on what is merely
a tool, rather than the ethical merits or failures of the people
who use the tool and are responsible for the consequences of their
actions.
L: Sort
of like the people who repeat foolish slogans like "guns kill"
as though guns sprout little feet when no one is looking
and run around shooting people all by themselves.
Doug:
Exactly. They're the same personality type busybodies who
want to enforce their opinions on everyone else. They're dangerous
and despicable. Yet they somehow posture as if they had the high
moral ground.
L: Okay,
so even if you cared only for money, that could be seen as a good
thing. But you do care for more like what?
Doug:
Well, money is a tool the means to achieve various goals.
For me, those goals include fine art, wine, cars, homes, horses,
cigars, and many other physical things. But it also gives me the
ability to do things I enjoy or value like spend time with
friends, go to the gym, lie in the sun, read books, and do pretty
much what I want when I want. Let's just call it as philosophers
do: "the good life." It's why my partners and I built
La
Estancia de Cafayate. We're having several events down there
in March that I'd like to welcome readers to.
But I don't
take money too seriously. It's just something you have. It's
much less important than what you do, and trivial in comparison
to what you are. I could be happy being a hobo. As I said
on that in the conversation on fresh
starts, there have been times when I felt my life was just as
good and I was just as happy without much money at all. That said,
you can't be too rich or too thin.
L: Very
good. Investment implications?
Doug:
This may all seem rather philosophical, but it's actually extremely
important to investors. What is the purpose of investing or speculating?
To make money. How can anyone hope to do that well if they feel
that there is something immoral or distasteful about making money?
Someone who
pinches his or her nose and tries anyway because making money is
a necessary evil will never do as well as those who throw themselves
into the fray with gusto and delight in doing something valuable
and doing it well.
L: The
law of attraction.
Doug:
Yes, but I don't view the law of attraction as a metaphysical force
rather as a psychological reality. If you have a negative
attitude about something, you're unlikely to attract it
even
if you try to talk yourself into thinking the opposite.
L: Okay,
but that's not a stock pick
Doug:
Sure. We're talking basics here. No stock picks today, just a PSA:
If you think money is evil, don't bother trying to accumulate wealth.
On the other hand, if you want to become wealthy, you'd better think
long and hard about your attitudes about money, work through the
thoughts above and those you can find in the rest of our conversations
via the links we provide. Cultivate a positive attitude about money,
which is right up there with language as one of the most valuable
tools man has ever invented. Think about it, and give yourself permission
to become rich. It's a good thing.
L: Very
well. Thanks for what I hope will prove to be a very thought-provoking
conversation!
Doug:
My pleasure. Talk to you next week.
Natural resource
exploration is one of the few sectors where companies can create
amazing wealth but only the best players succeed. Here's
how to profit
from these brilliant money-makers.
February
9, 2012
Doug
Casey (send him mail)
is
a best-selling author and chairman of Casey
Research, LLC., publishers of Casey’s
International Speculator.
Copyright
© 2012 Casey
and Associates
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