Economic
Fascism
by
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
When
people hear the word “fascism” they naturally think of its ugly
racism and anti-Semitism as practiced by the totalitarian regimes
of Mussolini and Hitler. But there was also an economic policy component
of fascism, known in Europe during the 1920s and 30s as “corporatism,”
that was an essential ingredient of economic totalitarianism
as practiced by Mussolini and Hitler. So-called corporatism was
adopted in Italy and Germany during the 1930s and was held up as
a “model” by quite a few intellectuals and policy makers in the
United States and Europe. A version of economic fascism was in fact
adopted in the United States in the 1930s and survives to this day.
In the United States these policies were not called “fascism” but
“planned capitalism.” The word fascism may no longer be politically
acceptable, but its synonym “industrial policy” is as popular as
ever.
The Free
World Flirts With Fascism
Few Americans
are aware of or can recall how so many Americans and Europeans viewed
economic fascism as the wave of the future during the 1930s. The
American Ambassador to Italy, Richard Washburn Child, was so impressed
with “corporatism” that he wrote in the preface to Mussolini’s 1928
autobiography that “it may be shrewdly forecast that no man will
exhibit dimensions of permanent greatness equal to Mussolini. .
. . The Duce is now the greatest figure of this sphere and time.”[1]
Winston Churchill wrote in 1927 that “If I had been an Italian I
am sure I would have been entirely with you” and “don the Fascist
black shirt.”[2] As late as 1940, Churchill
was still describing Mussolini as “a great man.”
U.S. Congressman
Sol Bloom, Chairman of the House Foreign Relations Committee, said
in 1926 that Mussolini “will be a great thing not only for Italy
but for all of us if he succeeds. It is his inspiration, his determination,
his constant toil that has literally rejuvenated Italy. . .”[3]
One of the
most outspoken American fascists was economist Lawrence Dennis.
In his 1936 book, The
Coming American Fascism, Dennis declared that defenders
of “18th-century Americanism” were sure to become “the laughing
stock of their own countrymen” and that the adoption of economic
fascism would intensify “national spirit” and put it behind “the
enterprises of public welfare and social control.” The big stumbling
block to the development of economic fascism, Dennis bemoaned, was
“liberal norms of law or constitutional guarantees of private rights.”
Certain British
intellectuals were perhaps the most smitten of anyone by fascism.
George Bernard Shaw announced in 1927 that his fellow “socialists
should be delighted to find at last a socialist [Mussolini] who
speaks and thinks as responsible rulers do.”[4]
He helped form the British Union of Fascists whose “Outline of the
Corporate State,” according to the organization’s founder, Sir Oswald
Mosley, was “on the Italian Model.” While visiting England, the
American author Ezra Pound declared that Mussolini was “continuing
the task of Thomas Jefferson.”[5]
Thus, it is
important to recognize that, as an economic system, fascism
was widely accepted in the 1920s and 30s. The evil deeds of individual
fascists were later condemned, but the practice of economic fascism
never was. To this day, the historically uninformed continue to
repeat the hoary slogan that, despite all his faults, Mussolini
at least “made the trains run on time,” insinuating that his interventionist
industrial policies were a success.
The Italian
“Corporatist” System
So-called
“corporatism” as practiced by Mussolini and revered by so many intellectuals
and policy makers had several key elements:
The state
comes before the individual. Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary
defines fascism as “a political philosophy, movement, or regime
that exalts nation and often race above the individual and that
stands for a centralized, autocratic government.” This stands in
stark contrast to the classical liberal idea that individuals have
natural rights that pre-exist government; that government derives
its “just powers” only through the consent of the governed; and
that the principal function of government is to protect the lives,
liberties, and properties of its citizens, not to aggrandize the
state.
Mussolini
viewed these liberal ideas (in the European sense of the word “liberal”)
as the antithesis of fascism: “The Fascist conception of life,”
Mussolini wrote, “stresses the importance of the State and accepts
the individual only in so far as his interests coincide with the
State. It is opposed to classical liberalism [which] denied the
State in the name of the individual; Fascism reasserts the rights
of the State as expressing the real essence of the individual.”[6]
Mussolini
thought it was unnatural for a government to protect individual
rights: “The maxim that society exists only for the well-being and
freedom of the individuals composing it does not seem to be in conformity
with nature’s plans.”[7] “If classical
liberalism spells individualism,” Mussolini continued, “Fascism
spells government.”
The essence
of fascism, therefore, is that government should be the master,
not the servant, of the people. Think about this. Does anyone in
America really believe that this is not what we have now? Are Internal
Revenue Service agents really our “servants”? Is compulsory “national
service” for young people, which now exists in numerous states and
is part of a federally funded program, not a classic example of
coercing individuals to serve the state? Isn’t the whole idea behind
the massive regulation and regimentation of American industry and
society the notion that individuals should be forced to behave in
ways defined by a small governmental elite? When the nation’s premier
health-care reformer recently declared that heart bypass surgery
on a 92-year-old man was “a waste of resources,” wasn’t that the
epitome of the fascist ideal that the state, not individuals,
should decide whose life is worthwhile, and whose is a “waste”?
The U.S. Constitution
was written by individuals who believed in the classical liberal
philosophy of individual rights and sought to protect those rights
from governmental encroachment. But since the fascist/ collectivist
philosophy has been so influential, policy reforms over the past
half century have all but abolished many of these rights by simply
ignoring many of the provisions in the Constitution that were designed
to protect them. As legal scholar Richard Epstein has observed:
“[T]he eminent domain . . . and parallel clauses in the Constitution
render . . . suspect many of the heralded reforms and institutions
of the twentieth century: zoning, rent control, workers’ compensation
laws, transfer payments, progressive taxation.”[8]
It is important to note that most of these reforms were initially
adopted during the 30s, when the fascist/collectivist philosophy
was in its heyday.
Planned
industrial “harmony.” Another keystone of Italian corporatism
was the idea that the government’s interventions in the economy
should not be conducted on an ad hoc basis, but should be “coordinated”
by some kind of central planning board. Government intervention
in Italy was “too diverse, varied, contrasting. There has been disorganic
. . . intervention, case by case, as the need arises,” Mussolini
complained in 1935.[9] Fascism would
correct this by directing the economy toward “certain fixed objectives”
and would “introduce order in the economic field.”[10]
Corporatist planning, according to Mussolini adviser Fausto Pitigliani,
would give government intervention in the Italian economy a certain
“unity of aim,” as defined by the government planners.[11]
These exact
sentiments were expressed by Robert Reich (currently the U.S. Secretary
of Labor) and Ira Magaziner (currently the federal government’s
health care reform “Czar”) in their book Minding America’s Business.[12]
In order to counteract the “untidy marketplace,” an interventionist
industrial policy “must strive to integrate the full range of targeted
government policies procurement, research and development,
trade, antitrust, tax credits, and subsidies into a coherent
strategy . . . .”[13]
Current industrial
policy interventions, Reich and Magaziner bemoaned, are “the product
of fragmented and uncoordinated decisions made by [many different]
executive agencies, the Congress, and independent regulatory agencies
. . . . There is no integrated strategy to use these programs to
improve the . . . U.S. economy.”[14]
In his 1989
book, The
Silent War, Magaziner reiterated this theme by advocating
coordinating groups like the national Security Council to take a
strategic national industrial view.”[15]
The White House has in fact established a “National Economic Security
Council.” Every other advocate of an interventionist “industrial
policy” has made a similar “unity of aim” argument, as first described
by Pitigliani more than half a century ago.
Government-business
partnerships. A third defining characteristic of economic fascism
is that private property and business ownership are permitted, but
are in reality controlled by government through a business-government
“partnership.” As Ayn Rand often noted, however, in such a partnership
government is always the senior or dominating “partner.”
In Mussolini’s
Italy, businesses were grouped by the government into legally recognized
“syndicates” such as the “National Fascist Confederation of Commerce,”
the “National Fascist Confederation of Credit and Insurance,” and
so on. All of these “fascist confederations” were “coordinated”
by a network of government planning agencies called “corporations,”
one for each industry. One large “National Council of Corporations”
served as a national overseer of the individual “corporations” and
had the power to “issue regulations of a compulsory character.”[16]
The purpose
of this Byzantine regulatory arrangement was so that the government
could “secure collaboration . . . between the various categories
of producers in each particular trade or branch of productive activity.”[17]
Government-orchestrated “collaboration” was necessary because “the
principle of private initiative” could only be useful “in the service
of the national interest” as defined by government bureaucrats.[18]
This idea
of government-mandated and -dominated “collaboration” is also at
the heart of all interventionist industrial policy schemes. A successful
industrial policy, write Reich and Magaziner, would “require careful
coordination between public and private sectors.”[19]
“Government and the private sector must work in tandem.”[20]
“Economic success now depends to a high degree on coordination,
collaboration, and careful strategic choice,” guided by government.[21]
The AFL-CIO
has echoed this theme, advocating a “tripartite National Reindustrialization
Board including representatives of labor, business, and government”
that would supposedly “plan” the economy.[22]
The Washington, D.C.based Center for National Policy has also
published a report authored by businessmen from Lazard Freres, du
Pont, Burroughs, Chrysler, Electronic Data Systems, and other corporations
promoting an allegedly “new” policy based on “cooperation of government
with business and labor.”[23] Another
report, by the organization “Rebuild America,” co-authored in 1986
by Robert Reich and economists Robert Solow, Lester Thurow, Laura
Tyson, Paul Krugman, Pat Choate, and Lawrence Chimerine urges “more
teamwork” through “public-private partnerships among government,
business and academia.”[24] This report
calls for “national goals and targets” set by government planners
who will devise a “comprehensive investment strategy” that will
only permit “productive” investment, as defined by government, to
take place.
Mercantilism
and protectionism. Whenever politicians start talking about
“collaboration” with business, it is time to hold on to your wallet.
Despite the fascist rhetoric about “national collaboration” and
working for the national, rather than private, interests, the truth
is that mercantilist and Protectionist practices riddled the system.
Italian social critic Gaetano Salvemini wrote in 1936 that under
corporatism, “it is the state, i.e., the taxpayer, who has become
responsible to private enterprise. In Fascist Italy the state pays
for the blunders of private enterprise.”[25]
As long as business was good, Salvemini wrote, “profit remained
to private initiative.”[26] But when
the depression came, “the government added the loss to the taxpayer’s
burden. Profit is private and individual. Loss is public and social.”[27]
The Italian
corporative state, The Economist editorialized on July 27,
1935, “only amounts to the establishment of a new and costly bureaucracy
from which those industrialists who can spend the necessary amount,
can obtain almost anything they want, and put into practice the
worst kind of monopolistic practices at the expense of the little
fellow who is squeezed out in the process.” Corporatism, in other
words, was a massive system of corporate welfare. “Three-quarters
of the Italian economic system,” Mussolini boasted in 1934, “had
been subsidized by government.”[28]
If this sounds
familiar, it is because it is exactly the result of agricultural
subsidies, the Export- Import bank, guaranteed loans to “preferred”
business borrowers, protectionism, the Chrysler bailout, monopoly
franchising, and myriad other forms of corporate welfare paid for
directly or indirectly by the American taxpayer.
Another result
of the close “collaboration” between business and government in
Italy was “a continual interchange of personnel between the . .
. civil service and private business.”[29]
Because of this “revolving door” between business and government,
Mussolini had “created a state within the state to serve private
interests which are not always in harmony with the general interests
of the nation.”[30]
Mussolini’s
“revolving door” swung far and wide:
Signor
Caiano, one of Mussolini’s most trusted advisers, was an officer
in the Royal Navy before and during the war; when the war was over,
he joined the Orlando Shipbuilding Company; in October 1922, he
entered Mussolini’s cabinet, and the subsidies for naval construction
and the merchant marine came under the control of his department.
General Cavallero, at the close of the war, left the army and entered
the Pirelli Rubber Company . . . ; in 1925 he became undersecretary
at the Ministry of War; in 1930 he left the Ministry of War, and
entered the service of the Ansaldo armament firm. Among the directors
of the big . . . companies in Italy, retired generals and generals
on active service became very numerous after the advent of Fascism.[31]
Such practices
are now so common in the United States especially in the
defense industries that it hardly needs further comment.
From an economic
perspective, fascism meant (and means) an interventionist industrial
policy, mercantilism, protectionism, and an ideology that makes
the individual subservient to the state. “Ask not what the State
can do for you, but what you can do for the State” is an apt description
of the economic philosophy of fascism.
The whole
idea behind collectivism in general and fascism in particular is
to make citizens subservient to the state and to place power over
resource allocation in the hands of a small elite. As stated eloquently
by the American fascist economist Lawrence Dennis, fascism “does
not accept the liberal dogmas as to the sovereignty of the consumer
or trader in the free market . . . . Least
of all does it consider that market freedom, and the opportunity
to make competitive profits, are rights of the individual.” Such
decisions should be made by a “dominant class” he labeled “the elite.”[32]
German
Economic Fascism
Economic fascism
in Germany followed a virtually identical path. One of the intellectual
fathers of German fascism was Paul Lensch, who declared in his book
Three Years of World Revolution that “Socialism must present
a conscious and determined opposition to individualism.”[33]
The philosophy of German fascism was expressed in the slogan, Gemeinnutz
geht vor Eigennutz, which means “the common good comes before
the private good.” “The Aryan is not greatest in his mental qualities,”
Hitler stated in Mein Kampf, but in his noblest form he “willingly
subordinates his own ego to the community and, if the hour demands,
even sacrifices it.”[34] The individual
has “not rights but only duties.”[35]
Armed with
this philosophy, Germany’s National Socialists pursued economic
policies very similar to Italy’s: government-mandated “partnerships”
between business, government, and unions organized by a system of
regional “economic chambers,” all overseen by a Federal Ministry
of Economics.
A 25-point
“Programme of the Party” was adopted in 1925 with a number of economic
policy “demands,” all prefaced by the general statement that “the
activities of the individual must not clash with the interests of
the whole . . . but must be for the general good.”[36]
This philosophy fueled a regulatory assault on the private sector.
“We demand ruthless war upon all those whose activities are injurious
to the common interest,” the Nazis warned.[37]
And who are these on whom “war” is to be waged? “Common criminals,”
such as “usurers,” i.e., bankers, and other “profiteers,” i.e.,
ordinary businessmen in general. Among the other policies the Nazis
demanded were abolition of interest; a government-operated social
security system; the ability of government to confiscate land without
compensation (wetlands regulation?); a government monopoly in education;
and a general assault on private-sector entrepreneurship which was
denounced as the “Jewish materialist spirit.”[38]
Once this “spirit” is eradicated, “The Party . . . is convinced
that our nation can achieve permanent health from within only on
the principle: the common interest before self-interest.”[39]
Conclusions
Virtually
all of the specific economic policies advocated by the Italian and
German fascists of the 1930s have also been adopted in the United
States in some form, and continue to be adopted to this day. Sixty
years ago, those who adopted these interventionist policies in Italy
and Germany did so because they wanted to destroy economic liberty,
free enterprise, and individualism. Only if these institutions were
abolished could they hope to achieve the kind of totalitarian state
they had in mind.
Many American
politicians who have advocated more or less total government control
over economic activity have been more devious in their approach.
They have advocated and adopted many of the same policies, but they
have always recognized that direct attacks on private property,
free enterprise, self-government, and individual freedom are not
politically palatable to the majority of the American electorate.
Thus, they have enacted a great many tax, regulatory, and income-transfer
policies that achieve the ends of economic fascism, but which are
sugar-coated with deceptive rhetoric about their alleged desire
only to “save” capitalism.
American politicians
have long taken their cue in this regard from Franklin D. Roosevelt,
who sold his National Recovery Administration (which was eventually
ruled unconstitutional) on the grounds that “government restrictions
henceforth must be accepted not to hamper individualism but to protect
it.”[40] In a classic example of Orwellian
doublespeak, Roosevelt thus argued that individualism must be destroyed
in order to protect it.
Now
that socialism has collapsed and survives nowhere but in Cuba, China,
Vietnam, and on American university campuses, the biggest threat
to economic liberty and individual freedom lies in the new economic
fascism. While the former Communist countries are trying to privatize
as many industries as possible as fast as they can, they are still
plagued by governmental controls, leaving them with essentially
fascist economies: private property and private enterprise are permitted,
but are heavily controlled and regulated by government.
As
most of the rest of the world struggles to privatize industry and
encourage free enterprise, we in the United States are seriously
debating whether or not we should adopt 1930s-era economic fascism
as the organizational principle of our entire health care system,
which comprises 14 percent of GNP. We are also contemplating business-government
“partnerships” in the automobile, airlines, and communications industries,
among others, and are adopting government-managed trade policies,
also in the spirit of the European corporatist schemes of the 1930s.
The state
and its academic apologists are so skilled at generating propaganda
in support of such schemes that Americans are mostly unaware of
the dire threat they pose for the future of freedom. The road to
serfdom is littered with road signs pointing toward “the information
superhighway,” “health security,” “national service,” “managed trade,”
and “industrial policy.”
Notes
- Benito
Mussolini, My Autobiography (New York: Charles Scribner’s
Sons, 1928).
- Cited
in John T. Flynn, As
We Go Marching (New York: Doubleday, 1944), p. 70.
- Ibid.
- Cited
in Richard Griffiths, Fellow
Travellers of the Right: British Enthusiasts for Nazi Germany,
1933-39 (London: Trinity Press, 1980), p. 259.
- Alastair
Hamilton, The
Appeal of Fascism: A Study of Intellectuals and Fascism, 1919-1945
(New York: Macmillan, 1971), p. 288.
- Benito
Mussolini, Fascism: Doctrine and Institutions (Rome: Adrita
Press, 1935), p. 10.
- Ibid.
- Richard
Epstein, Takings
(Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1985), p. x.
- Mussolini,
Fascism, p. 68.
- Ibid.
- Ibid.,
p. 122.
- Ira
C. Magaziner and Robert B. Reich, Minding
America’s Business (New York: Vintage Books, 1982).
- Ibid.,
p. 343.
- Ibid.,
p. 370.
- Ira
C. Magaziner, Silent
War (New York: Random House, 1989), p. 306.
- Fausto
Pitigliani, The Italian Corporative State (New York: Macmillan,
1934), p. 98.
- Ibid.,
p. 93.
- Ibid.,
p. 95.
- Magaziner
and Reich, Minding America’s Business, p. 379.
- Ibid.,
p. 378.
- Ibid.
- Lane
Kirkland, “An Alternative to Reaganomics,” USA Today, May
1987, p. 20.
- Center
for National Policy, Restoring American Competitiveness
(Washington, D.C.: Center for National Policy, 1984), p. 7.
- Rebuild
America, An Investment Economics for the Year 2000 (Washington,
D.C.: Rebuild America, 1986), p. 31.
- Pitigliani,
The Italian Corporative State, p. 93.
- Ibid.
- Ibid.
- Gaetano
Salvemini, Under
the Axe of Fascism (New York: Viking Press, 1936), p.
380.
- S.
Belluzzo, Liberta, September 21, 1933, cited in Salvemini,
Under the Axe of Fascism, p. 385.
- Salvemini,
Under the Axe of Fascism, p. 380.
- lbid.,
p. 385.
- Lawrence
Dennis, The
Coming American Fascism (New York: Harper, 1936), p. 180.
- Adolph
Hitler, Mein Kampf (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1943), p.
297.
- Ibid.
- Ibid.,
p. 126.
- Norman
H. Baynes, The Speeches of Adolph Hitler (New York: Howard
Fertig, 1969), p. 104.
- Ibid.,
p. 105.
- Ibid.,
p. 104.
- Ibid.
- Cited
in Samuel Rosenman, ed., The
Public Papers and Addresses of Franklin D. Roosevelt (New
York: Random House, 193850), p. 750.
November
23, 2004
Thomas
J. DiLorenzo [send him mail]
is
the author of The
Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an
Unnecessary War,
(Three Rivers Press/Random House). His latest book is How
Capitalism Saved America: The Untold Story of Our Country’s History,
from the Pilgrims to the Present
(Crown Forum/Random House, August 2004). This article is reprinted
with permission from the June 1994 issue of The
Freeman.
Copyright
© 1994 by the Foundation for Economic Education
Thomas
DiLorenzo Archives at LRC
Thomas
DiLorenzo Archives at Mises.org
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