Corporatism and Socialism in America
by
Anthony Gregory
by Anthony Gregory
Principled
advocacy of the free market requires an understanding of the differences
between genuine free enterprise and state capitalism.
Although the Left frequently exaggerates and overemphasizes the
evils of corporate America, proponents of the free market often
find themselves in the awkward position of defending the status
quo of state capitalism, which is in fact a common adversary of
the free marketer and the anti-corporate leftist, even if the latter
misdiagnoses the problem and proposes the wrong solutions.
Indeed,
corporatism, implemented by the state whether through direct
handouts, corporate bailouts, eminent domain, licensing laws, antitrust
regulations, or environmental edicts inflicts great harm
on the modern American economy. Although leftists often misunderstand
the fundamental problem plaguing the economy, they at least recognize
its symptoms.
Conservatives
and many libertarians, on the other hand, frequently dismiss many
ills such as poverty as fabricated by the left-liberal imagination,
when in fact it does a disservice to the cause of liberty and free
markets to defend the current system and ignore very real and serious
problems, which are often caused by government intervention in the
economy. We should recognize that state corporatism is a form of
socialism, and it is nearly inevitable in a mixed economy that the
introduction of more socialism will cartelize industry and consolidate
wealth in the hands of the few.
Leftists
usually understand how wartime provides politically connected corporations
with high profits and cushy contracts. What is more often neglected
is that the history of the American domestic welfare and regulatory
state also corresponds closely to the rise of corporatism. It is
no coincidence.
Corporatism
versus liberty in the 19th century
Throughout
the 19th century, the two major political traditions in America
offered authentically different views on the proper roles of government.
The classical liberals, typified by Thomas Jefferson early on, had
their political outlet in the Democratic Party, which, for the most
part, stood on the side of limited, constitutional government and
individual rights. Those who believed in a strong central government,
typified early on by Alexander Hamilton, found their political home
first in the Federalist Party, then in the Whig Party, and then
in the Republican Party, the last of which openly embraced the doctrine
of big government throughout the 19th century.
For
about a hundred years the Jeffersonian tradition was mostly associated
with the cause of the common man, whereas big government was often
associated with monopoly privileges and big business. Hamilton and
his philosophical progeny fought perennially for central banking,
high tariffs, and subsidies to corporations to build internal
improvements. Hamiltons first major successor, Henry
Clay, called this governmental corporate program the American
System.
By
the end of the 19th century, the so-called robber barons came to
dominate much of the industry in oil and railroads. Misunderstood
by nearly everyone, they were neither demons on earth nor flawless
gods. They certainly were not a homogeneous group nor were they
champions of pure laissez-faire capitalism. Most notably, the federal
government empowered the railroad tycoons with eminent domain, forcibly
taking privately owned land and giving it to the railroad companies.
That was not the free market at work.
The
Progressive Era
The
Left has often hailed the Progressive Era as a time when, for the
first time, Hamiltonian means big government were
used to achieve Jeffersonian ends the dignity and respect
of the common man. In fact, the Progressive Era was a time in which
both corporatism and socialism received major steroid injections.
Corporate
interests pushed through the most significant Progressive-Era government
reforms in order to guarantee profits, which they had been losing
to smaller businesses that had emerged in the relatively free market
of the early 20th century. Gabriel Kolkos groundbreaking book
The Triumph of Conservatism best advances this thesis
of how the government expanded to accommodate, rather than curb,
the interests of big business. Though a New Leftist, Kolko shows
how political capitalists in every industry from meatpacking
to coal, from railroads to insurance embraced the expanding
regulatory state for their own gain to push competitors out
of the market and give government legitimacy to their companies.
Kolko
shows how, in spite of the conventional history that characterizes
the Progressive Partys nomination of Teddy Roosevelt in 1912
as a response to the backwards laissez-faire William Howard Taft
administration, in reality the party was favored by large businesses
with whom Teddy Roosevelt had strong ties and whom Taft had alienated
by failing to accommodate and empower through the regulatory state.
Perhaps
no government reform has been more misconstrued as anti-business
populism than the Federal Reserve, which was sold to the American
people in 1913 as an agency to regulate greedy and irresponsible
bankers. As Kolko and many others have shown, the Federal Reserve
established a banking oligopoly, guaranteed bailouts for the big
bankers, created new barriers to entry for smaller bankers, and
was in fact designed by people representing some of the most powerful
banking interests in the world, including the National City Bank
of New York; Kuhn, Loeb & Company; J.P. Morgan Company; and
the First National Bank of New York.
The
New Deal
Both
Franklin Roosevelts admirers and his detractors often think
of his New Deal legacy as generally socialistic. Like the Progressive
Era, the New Deal is widely misunderstood: it did indeed attack
the free market, but often did so at the behest of corporate interests.
Such
interests were largely behind the emergence of the National Recovery
Administration, which exemplified FDRs economic central planning.
Far from being a purely egalitarian agency, the NRA was largely
modeled after the policies of Mussolini, who had yet to be considered
an enemy by most Americans, but rather was still seen as an inspiration
by many. As John Flynn explained in his book, The
Roosevelt Myth,
[Mussolini]
organized each trade or industrial group or professional group
into a state-supervised trade association. He called it a corporative.
These corporatives operated under state supervision and could
plan production, quality, prices, distribution, labor standards,
etc. The NRA provided that in America each industry should be
organized into a federally supervised trade association. It was
not called a corporative. It was called a Code Authority. But
it was essentially the same thing. These code authorities could
regulate production, quantities, qualities, prices, distribution
methods, etc., under the supervision of the NRA. This was fascism.
The anti-trust laws forbade such organizations. Roosevelt had
denounced Hoover for not enforcing these laws sufficiently. Now
he suspended them and compelled men to combine.
Though
the NRA intended to guarantee profits through mergers and price
controls forbidding smaller business from competing by offering
better prices big business, big labor, and most other initial
supporters turned against the NRA when it became universally recognized
as a complete failure. In 1935 the Supreme Court found it unconstitutional.
Aside from the NRA, other New Deal measures epitomized naked corporatism.
The Agricultural Adjustment Administration cartelized the farming
industry, and Roosevelts farm subsidies and price supports
have to this day helped to solidify a corporate stronghold in American
agriculture.
Corporatism
and socialism in todays America
In
more recent years, corporate interests have often cheered on big
government programs, often the same ones championed by those who
consider themselves anti-corporate. In the late 1990s, the now-defunct
Enron was one of the largest lobbying influences behind the international
Kyoto Treaty, which would have forced the world to comply with a
ghastly web of new regulations and would have meant large energy
contracts for Enron, had the company not gone bankrupt. The antitrust
breakup of Microsoft was a de facto giveaway to competitors such
as Netscape. (One of the complaints about Microsoft was that it
intended merging with AOL, a company with which Netscape has since
joined forces.)
Bushs
farm subsidies are direct welfare for the biggest agricultural corporations,
and his protectionist trade policies are indirect welfare for politically
favored businesses. His recent expansion of Medicare has been both
the greatest augmentation of the American welfare state in decades
and a giveaway to large pharmaceutical corporations. If universal
health care ever comes to America, the corporations are likely to
stay intact but will no longer have to satisfy customers, only the
politicians.
To
convince the anti-corporate skeptic of the benefits of the free
market, it is crucial to defend the legitimate systems of profit
and private property, but it is also vitally important to make clear
that America doesnt have a free-market economy, and indeed
many of the ills associated with free markets are actually the result
of state capitalism or socialist corporatism. That the expansion
of government regulations, often done in the name of combating corporate
excesses, is frequently supported most enthusiastically by corporate
interests makes it all the easier to explain economic liberty to
those who have become disenchanted with the current system and misattribute
the problems to the free market.
February
24, 2005
Anthony
Gregory [send him mail]
is a writer and musician who lives in Berkeley, California. He is
a research assistant at the Independent
Institute. See
his webpage for more
articles and personal information. Reprinted from The
Future of Freedom Foundation with permission.
Copyright
© 2005 The Future of Freedom Foundation
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