This talk
was delivered at the Mises Institute Brasil's 2nd Austrian School
Conference in Porto Alegre on April 10, 2011.
The Problem
of Social Order
Alone on
his island, Robinson Crusoe can do whatever he pleases. For him,
the question concerning rules of orderly human conduct – social
cooperation – simply does not arise. This question can only arise
once a second person, Friday, arrives on the island. Yet even
then, the question remains largely irrelevant so long as no scarcity
exists. Suppose the island is the Garden of Eden. All external
goods are available in superabundance. They are "free goods,"
just as the air that we breathe is normally a "free" good. Whatever
Crusoe does with these goods, his actions have no repercussions
neither with respect to his own future supply of such
goods nor regarding the present or future supply of the
same goods for Friday (and vice versa). Hence, it is impossible
that a conflict concerning the use of such goods can arise between
Crusoe and Friday. A conflict is possible only, if goods are scarce;
and only then is there a need to formulate rules that make
orderly, conflict-free social cooperation possible.
In the Garden
of Eden only two scarce goods exist: a person’s physical body
and its standing room. Crusoe and Friday each have only one body
and can stand only at one place at a time. Hence, even in the
Garden of Eden conflicts between Crusoe and Friday can arise:
Crusoe and Friday cannot occupy the same standing room simultaneously
without coming into physical conflict with each other. Accordingly,
even in the Garden of Eden rules of orderly social conduct must
exist – rules regarding the proper location and movement of human
bodies. Outside the Garden of Eden, in the realm of all-around
scarcity, there must be rules that regulate the use not only of
personal bodies, but of everything scarce, such that all
possible conflicts can be ruled out. This is the problem of social
order.
The Solution:
The Idea of Private Property
In the history
of social and political thought, myriad proposals have been offered
as solutions to the problem of social order, and this multitude
of mutually incompatible proposals has contributed to the widespread
belief that the search for a single "correct" solution is futile
and illusory. Yet a correct solution does exist. There is no reason
to succumb to moral relativism. Indeed, the solution to the problem
of social order has been known for hundreds of years. The solution
is the idea of private property.
Let me formulate
the solution first for the special case represented by the Garden
of Eden and subsequently for the general case represented by the
"real" world of all-around scarcity.
In the Garden
of Eden, the solution is provided by the simple rule stipulating
that everyone may place or move his own body wherever he pleases,
provided only that no one else is already standing there
and occupying the same space.
Outside of
the Garden of Eden, in the realm of all-around scarcity, the solution
is provided by four logically interrelated rules.
First: Every
person is the private (exclusive) owner of his own physical body.
Indeed, who else, if not Crusoe, should be the owner of Crusoe’s
body? Friday? Or Crusoe and Friday jointly? Yet that would not
help avoid conflict. Rather, it would create conflict
and make it permanent.
Second: Every
person is the private owner of all nature-given goods that he
has perceived as scarce and put to use by means of his body, before
any other person. Again: who else, if not the first user, should
be their owner? The second user? Or the first and the second user
jointly? Yet such rulings again would be contrary to the very
purpose of norms: of helping to avoid conflict, rather than to
create it.
Third, every
person who, with the help of his body and his originally appropriated
goods, produces new products thereby becomes the proper owner
of these products, provided only that in the process of production
he does not physically damage the goods owned by another person.
Fourth, once
a good has been first appropriated or produced, ownership in it
can be acquired only by means of a voluntary, contractual transfer
of its property title from a previous to a later owner.
I can spare
myself here the task of providing a detailed ethical as well as
economic justification of these rules. This has been done elsewhere.
However, a few statements in this connection are in order.
Contrary
to the frequently heard claim that the institution of private
property is only a convention, it must be categorically
stated: A convention serves a purpose, and it is
something to which an alternative exists. The Latin alphabet,
for instance, serves the purpose of written communication and
there exists an alternative to it, the Cyrillic alphabet. That
is why it is referred to as a convention. What, however, is the
purpose of action-norms? If no interpersonal conflict existed
– that is: if, due to a pre-stabilized harmony of all interests,
no situation ever arises in which two or more people want to use
one and the same good in incompatible ways – then no norms would
be needed. It is the purpose of norms to help avoid otherwise
unavoidable conflict. A norm that generates conflict rather than
help avoid it is contrary to the very purpose of norms.
It is a dysfunctional norm or a perversion. With regard to the
purpose of conflict-avoidance, however, the institution of private
property is definitely not just a convention, because no
alternative to it exists. Only private (exclusive) property makes
it possible that all otherwise unavoidable conflicts can be avoided.
And only the principle of property acquisition through acts of
original appropriation, performed by specific individuals at a
specific time and location, makes it possible that conflict can
be avoided from the beginning of mankind onward, since
only the first appropriation of some previously un-appropriated
good can be conflict-free – simply, because per definitionem
no one else had any previous dealings with the good.
The Enforcement
of Social Order and the Protection of Private Property: The State
As important
as this insight is: that the institution of private property,
ultimately grounded in acts of original appropriation, is without
alternative given the desideratum of conflict-avoidance (peace),
it is not sufficient to establish social order. For even
if everyone knows how conflict can be avoided, it is still possible,
that people simply do not want to avoid conflict, because they
expect to benefit from it at the expense of others. In fact, as
long as mankind is what it is, there will always exist murderers,
robbers, thieves, thugs and con-artists, i.e., people not
acting in accordance with the above-mentioned rules. Hence, every
social order, if it is to be successfully maintained, requires
institutions and mechanisms designed to keep such rule-breakers
in check. How to accomplish this task, and by whom?
The standard
reply to this question is to say: this task, i.e., the enforcement
of law and order, is the first and primary duty – indeed: the
raison d’etre of the state. In particular, this is the
answer also given by classical liberals such as my own intellectual
master, Ludwig von Mises. Whether or not this answer is correct,
depends on how "state" is defined. The state, according
to the standard definition, is not a regular, specialized firm.
Rather: it is defined as an agency characterized by two unique,
logical connected features. First, the state is an agency that
exercises a territorial monopoly of ultimate decision-making.
That is, the state is the ultimate arbiter in every case of conflict,
including conflicts involving itself. It allows no appeal above
and beyond itself. Second, the state is an agency that exercises
a territorial monopoly of taxation. That is, it is an agency that
unilaterally fixes the price that private citizens must pay for
the state’s service as ultimate judge and enforcer of law and
order.
The Fundamental
Error of "Statism"
As widespread
as the standard view regarding the necessity of the institution
of a state as the provider of law and order is, it stands in clear
contradiction to elementary economic and moral laws and principles.
First off,
among economists and philosophers two near-universally accepted
propositions exist.
First: Every
"monopoly" is "bad" from the viewpoint of
consumers. Monopoly is here understood in its classic meaning
as an exclusive privilege granted to a single producer
of a commodity or service, or as the absence of "free entry"
into a particular line of production. Only one agency, A, may
produce a given good or service, X. Such a monopoly is "bad"
for consumers, because, shielded from potential new entrants into
a given area of production, the price of the product will be higher
and its quality lower than otherwise, under free competition.
Second: The
production of law and order, i.e., of security, is the primary
function of the state (as just defined). Security is here understood
in the wide sense adopted in the American Declaration of Independence:
as the protection of life, property, and the pursuit of happiness
from domestic violence (crime) as well as external (foreign) aggression
(war).
Both propositions
are apparently incompatible with each other. This has rarely caused
concern among philosophers and economists, however, and in so
far as it has, the typical reaction has been one of taking exception
to the first proposition rather than the second. Yet there exist
fundamental theoretical reasons (and mountains of empirical evidence)
that it is indeed the second proposition that is in error.
As a territorial
monopoly of ultimate decision-making and law enforcement, the
state is not just like any other monopoly, such as a milk or a
car monopoly that produces milk and cars of comparatively lower
quality and higher prices. In contrast to all other monopolists,
the state not only produces inferior goods, but "bads"
(non-goods). In fact, it must first produce bads (such as taxes)
before it can produce anything that might be considered a (inferior)
good.
If an agency
is the ultimate judge in every case of conflict, then it is also
judge in all conflicts involving itself. Consequently, instead
of merely preventing and resolving conflict, a monopolist of ultimate
decision-making will also cause and provoke conflict in
order to settle it to his own advantage. That is, if one can only
appeal to the state for justice, justice will be perverted in
the favor of the state, constitutions and supreme courts notwithstanding.
These constitutions and courts are state constitutions
and courts, and whatever limitations on state action they may
set or find is invariably decided by agents of the very same institution
under consideration. Predictably, the definition of property and
protection will be continually altered and the range of jurisdiction
expanded to the state’s advantage. The idea of some ‘given,’ eternal
and immutable law that must be discovered will disappear
and be replaced by the idea of law as legislation as
arbitrary, state-made law.
Moreover,
as ultimate judge the state is also a monopolist of taxation,
i.e., it can unilaterally, without the consent of everyone affected,
determine the price that its subjects must pay for the state’s
provision of (perverted) law. However, a tax-funded life-and-property
protection agency is a contradiction in terms: an expropriating
property protector. Motivated, as everyone is, by self-interest
and the disutility of labor, but equipped with the unique power
to tax, state agents will invariably strive to maximize expenditures
on protection, and almost all of a nation’s wealth can conceivably
be consumed by the cost of protection, and at the same time to
minimize the actual production of protection. The more
money one can spend and the less one must work for it, the better
off one will be.
The Error
Compounded: the Democratic State
Apart from
the fundamental error of statism generally, additional errors
are involved in the special case of a democratic state.
A detailed treatment of this subject has been provided elsewhere,
but a brief mention is indicated.
The traditional,
pre-modern state-form is that of a (absolute) monarchy. Yet monarchy
was faulted, in particular also by classical liberals, for being
incompatible with the basic principle of "equality before
the law." Monarchy instead rested on personal privilege.
Thus, the critics of monarchy argued, the monarchical state had
to be replaced by a democratic one. In opening participation and
entry into state-government to everyone on equal terms, not just
to a hereditary class of nobles, it was thought that the principle
of the equality of all before the law had been satisfied.
However,
this democratic equality before the law is something entirely
different than and incompatible with the idea of one universal
law, equally applicable to everyone, everywhere, and at all times.
In fact, the former objectionable schism and inequality of a higher
law of kings versus a subordinate law of ordinary subjects is
fully preserved under democracy in the separation of "public"
versus "private" law and the supremacy of the former
over the latter. Under democracy, everyone is equal insofar as
entry into government is open to all on equal terms. Everyone
can become king, so to say, not only a privileged circle of people.
Thus, in a democracy no personal privileges or privileged
persons exist. However, functional privileges and privileged
functions exist. Public officials, as long as they act in an official
capacity, are governed and protected by public law and occupy
thereby a privileged position vis-à-vis persons
acting under the mere authority of private law. In particular,
public officials are permitted to finance or subsidize their own
activities through taxes. That is, they do not, as every private
law subject must, earn their income through the production and
subsequent sale of goods and services to voluntarily buying or
not-buying consumers. Rather, as public officials, they are permitted
to engage in, and live off, what in private dealings between private
law subjects is considered "theft" and "stolen
loot." Thus, privilege and legal discrimination – and the
distinction between rulers and subjects will not disappear under
democracy. To the contrary. Rather than being restricted to princes
and nobles, under democracy privileges will be available to all:
everyone can engage in theft and live off stolen loot if only
he becomes a public official.
Predictably,
then, under democratic conditions the tendency of every monopoly
of ultimate decision-making to increase the price of justice and
to lower its quality and substitute injustice for justice and
is not diminished but aggravated. As hereditary monopolist, a
king or prince regards the territory and people under his jurisdiction
as his personal property and engages in the monopolistic exploitation
of his "property." Under democracy, monopoly and monopolistic
exploitation do not disappear. Rather, what happens with democracy
is this: instead of a prince and a nobility who regard the country
as their private property, a temporary and interchangeable caretaker
is put in monopolistic charge of the country. The caretaker does
not own the country, but as long as he is in office he is permitted
to use it to his and his proteges' advantage. He owns its current
use usufruct but not its capital stock. This
does not eliminate exploitation. To the contrary, it makes exploitation
less calculating and carried out with little or no regard to the
capital stock. Exploitation becomes shortsighted and capital consumption
will be systematically promoted.
The Solution:
Private Law Society instead of State
If the state,
and especially the democratic state, is demonstrably incapable
of creating and maintaining social order; if, instead of helping
avoid conflict, the state is the source of permanent conflict;
and if, rather than assuring legal security and predictability,
the state itself continuously generates insecurity and unpredictability
through its legislation and replaces constant law with "flexible"
and arbitrary whim, then inescapably the question as to the correct
– obviously: non-statist – solution to the problem of social
order arises.
The solution
is a private law society, i.e., a society in which every
individual and institution is subject to one and the same set
of laws. No public law granting privileges to specific persons
of functions (and no public property) exists in this society.
There is only private law (and private property), equally applicable
to each and everyone. No one is permitted to acquire property
by any means other than through original appropriation, production
or voluntary exchange, and no one possesses a privilege to tax
and expropriate. Moreover, in a private law society no one is
permitted to prohibit anyone else from using his property in order
to enter any line of production he wishes and compete against
whomever he pleases.
Specifically
regarding the problem at hand: in a private law society the production
of security – of law and order – will be undertaken by freely
financed individuals and agencies competing for a voluntarily
paying (or not-paying) clientele, just as the production of all
other goods and services.
It would
be presumptuous wanting to predict the precise shape and form
of the security industry emerging within the framework of a private
law society. However, it is not difficult to predict a few central
changes that would fundamentally = and favorably distinguish
a competitive security industry from the present, all-too-well-known
statist production of (in)justice and (dis)order.
First off,
while in a complex society based on the division of labor self-defense
will play only a secondary role (for reasons yet to be explained),
it should be emphasized from the outset that in a private law
society everyone’s right to defend oneself from aggression against
one’s person and property is entirely undisputed. In distinct
contrast to the present, statist practice, which renders people
increasingly unarmed and defenseless against aggressors, in a
private law society no restrictions on the private ownership of
firearms and other weapons exist. Everyone’s elementary right
to engage in self-defense to protect his life and property against
invaders would be sacrosanct, and as one knows from the experience
of the not-so-wild Wild West as well as numerous recent
empirical investigations into the relationship between the frequency
of gun ownership and crime rates: more guns imply less crime.
Just as in
today’s complex economy we do not produce our own shoes, suits
and telephones, however, but partake in the advantages of the
division of labor, so it is to be expected that we will also do
so when it comes to production of security, especially the more
property a person owns and the richer a society as a whole. Hence,
most security services will without doubt be provided by specialized
agencies competing for voluntarily paying clients: by various
private police-, insurance-, and arbitration-agencies.
If one wanted
to summarize in one word the decisive difference and advantage
of a competitive security industry as compared to the current
statist practice, it would be: contract. The state, as
ultimate decision-maker and judge, operates in a contract-less
legal vacuum. There exists no contract between the state and its
citizens. It is not contractually fixed, what is actually owned
by whom, and what, accordingly, is to be protected. It is not
fixed, what service the state is to provide, what is to happen
if the state fails in its duty, nor what the price is that the
"customer" of such "service" must pay. Rather,
the state unilaterally fixes the rules of the game and can change
them, per legislation, during the game. Obviously, such behavior
is inconceivable for freely financed security providers. Just
imagine a security provider, whether police, insurer or arbitrator,
whose offer consisted in something like this: I will not contractually
guarantee you anything. I will not tell you what specific things
I will regard as your to-be-protected property, nor will I tell
you what I oblige myself to do if, according to your opinion,
I do not fulfill my service to you – but in any case, I reserve
the right to unilaterally determine the price that you must pay
me for such undefined service. Any such security provider would
immediately disappear from the market due to a complete lack of
customers. Each private, freely financed security producer instead
must offer its prospective clients a contract. And these
contracts must, in order to appear acceptable to voluntarily paying
consumers, contain clear property descriptions as well as clearly
defined mutual services and obligations. Moreover, each party
to a contract, for the duration or until the fulfillment of the
contract, would be bound by its terms and conditions; and every
change of terms or conditions would require the unanimous consent
of all parties concerned.
Specifically,
in order to appear acceptable to security buyers, these contracts
must contain provisions about what will be done in the case of
a conflict or dispute between the protector or insurer and his
own protected or insured clients as well as in the case of a conflict
between different protectors or insurers and their respective
clients. And in this regard only one mutually agreeable solution
exists: in these cases the conflicting parties contractually agree
to arbitration by a mutually trusted but independent third
party. And as for this third party: it, too, is freely financed
and stands in competition with other arbitrators or arbitration
agencies. Its clients, i.e., the insurers and the insured, expect
of it that it come up with a verdict that is recognized as fair
and just by all sides. Only arbitrators capable of forming such
judgments will succeed in the arbitration market. Arbitrators
incapable of this and viewed as biased or partial will disappear
from the market.
From this
fundamental advantage of a private law society all other advantages
follow.
First off,
competition among police, insurers and arbitrators for paying
clients would bring about a tendency toward a continuous fall
in the price of protection (per insured value), thus rendering
protection increasingly more affordable, whereas under monopolistic
conditions the price of protection will steadily rise and become
increasingly un-affordable.
Furthermore,
as already indicated, protection and security are goods and services
that compete with others. If more resources are allocated to protection,
fewer can be expended on cars, vacations, food, or drink, for
example. Also, resources allocated to the protection of A or group
A (people living along the Pacific) for instance, compete with
resources expended on the protection of B or group B (people living
along the Atlantic). As a tax-funded protection monopolist, the
state's allocation of resources will necessarily be arbitrary.
There will be overproduction (or underproduction) of security
as compared to other competing goods and services, and there will
be overprotection of some individuals, groups, or regions and
under-protection of others. In distinct contrast, in a system
of freely competing protection agencies all arbitrariness of allocation
(all over- and underproduction) would disappear. Protection would
be accorded the relative importance that is has in the eyes of
voluntarily paying consumers, and no person, group, or region
would receive protection at the expense of any other one. Each
and everyone would receive protection in accordance with his own
payments.
The most
important advantage of a private, contract-based production of
law and order, however, is of a qualitative nature.
First, there
is the fight against crime. The state is notoriously inefficient
in this regard, because the state-agents entrusted with this task
are paid out of taxes, i.e., independent of their productivity.
Why should one work, if one is also paid for doing nothing at
all? In fact, it can be expected that state agents take an interest
in maintaining a moderately high crime rate, because this way
they can justify ever increased funding. Worse, for state agents
the victims of crime and the indemnification and compensation
of such victims play an at best negligible role. The state does
not indemnify the victims of crime. To the contrary, the harmed
victims are still further insulted in making them, qua taxpayers,
pay for the incarceration and "rehabilitation" of the
criminal (should he be captured). The situation in a private law
society is entirely different. Security providers, in particular
insurers, will have to indemnify their clients in the case of
actual damage (otherwise they would find no clients) and hence,
they must operate efficiently. They must be efficient in the prevention
of crime, for unless they can prevent a crime, they would have
to pay up. Further, even if a criminal act could not be prevented,
they must be efficient in detecting and recovering stolen loot,
because otherwise they must pay to replace theses goods. In particular,
they must be efficient in the detection and apprehension of the
criminal, for only if the criminal is apprehended is it possible
for them to make him pay for the compensation owed to the
victim and thus reduce their costs.
Moreover,
a private, competitive and contract-based security industry has
a general peace-promoting effect. States are, as already explained,
by nature aggressive. They can cause or provoke conflict in order
to then "solve" it to their own advantage. Or put differently:
as tax-funded monopolists of ultimate decision-making states can
externalize the costs associated with aggressive behavior onto
others, i.e., the hapless taxpayers, and accordingly will tend
to be more aggressive vis-à-vis their own population as
well as "foreigners." In distinct contrast, competing
private insurers are by nature defensive and peaceful. On the
one hand this is because every act of aggression is costly, and
an insurance company engaged in aggressive conduct would require
comparatively higher premiums, involving the loss of clients to
cheaper non-aggressive competitors. On the other hand, it is not
possible to insure oneself against every conceivable "risk."
Rather, it is only possible to insure oneself against "accidents,"
i.e., risks over whose outcome the insured has no control and
to which he contributes nothing. Thus, it is possible to insure
oneself against the risk of death and fire, for instance, but
it is impossible to insure oneself against the risk of committing
suicide tomorrow or setting one’s own house on fire. Similarly,
it is impossible to insure oneself against the risk of business
failure, of unemployment, or of disliking one’s neighbors, for
in each case one has some control over the event in question.
Most significantly, the un-insurability of individual actions
and sentiments (in contradistinction to accidents) implies that
it is also impossible to insure oneself against the risk of damages
resulting from one’s own prior aggression or provocation. Instead,
every insurer must restrict the actions of his clients so as to
exclude all aggression and provocation on their part. That is,
any insurance against social disasters such as crime must be contingent
on the insured submitting themselves to specified norms of civilized,
non-aggressive conduct.
Further,
due to the same reasons and financial concerns, insurers will
tend to require that their clients abstain from all forms of vigilante
justice (except perhaps under quite extraordinary circumstances),
for vigilante justice, even if justified, invariably causes uncertainty
and provokes possible third party intervention. By obliging their
clients instead to submit to regular publicized procedures whenever
they think they have been victimized, these disturbances and associated
costs can be largely avoided. Lastly, it is worthwhile pointing
out that while states as tax funded agencies can and do
engage in the large-scale prosecution of victimless crimes
such as "illegal drug" use, prostitution or gambling,
these "crimes" would tend to be of little or no concern
within a system of freely funded protection agencies. "Protection"
against such "crimes" would require higher insurance
premiums, but since these "crimes," unlike genuine crimes
against persons and property, do not create victims, very few
people would be willing to spend money on such "protection."
Still more:
While states, as already noted, are always and everywhere eager
to disarm its population and thus rob it of an essential means
of self-defense, private law societies are characterized by an
unrestricted right to self-defense and hence by widespread private
gun and weapon ownership. Just imagine a security producer who
demanded of its prospective clients that they would first have
to completely disarm themselves before it would be willing to
defend the clients’ life and property. Correctly, everyone would
think of this as a bad joke and refuse such on offer. Freely financed
insurance companies that demanded potential clients first hand
over all of their means of self-defense as a prerequisite of protection
would immediately arouse the utmost suspicion as to their true
motives, and they would quickly go bankrupt. In their own best
interest, insurance companies would reward armed clients, in particular
those able to certify some level of training in the handling of
arms, charging them lower premiums reflecting the lower risk that
they represent. Just as insurers charge less if homeowners have
an alarm system or a safe installed, so would a trained gun owner
represent a lower insurance risk.
Last and
most importantly, a system of competing protection agencies would
have a two-fold impact on the development of law. On the one hand,
it would allow for greater variability of law. Rather than
imposing a uniform set of standards onto everyone (as under statist
conditions), protection agencies could compete against each other
not just via price but also through product differentiation.
There could exist side by side, for instance, Catholic protection
agencies or insurers applying Canon law, Jewish agencies applying
Mosaic law, Muslim agencies applying Islamic law, and agencies
applying secular law of one variety or another, all of them sustained
by a voluntarily paying clientele. Consumers could choose the
law applied to them and their property. No one would have to live
under "foreign" law.
On the other
hand, the very same system of private law and order production
would promote a tendency toward the unification and harmonization
of law. The "domestic" Catholic, Jewish, Roman,
etc. law would apply only to the person and property of those
who had chosen it. Canon law, for instance, would apply only to
professed Catholics and deal solely with intra-Catholic conflict
and conflict resolution. Yet it is also possible, of course, that
a Catholic might come into conflict with the subscriber of some
other law code, e.g., a Muslim. If both law codes reached the
same or a similar conclusion, no difficulties exist. However,
if competing law codes arrived at distinctly different conclusion
(as they would at least in some cases), a problem arises. "Domestic"
(intra-group) law would be useless, but naturally every insured
person would want protection against the contingency of inter-group
conflicts as well. In this situation, it cannot be expected that
one insurer and the subscribers of its law code simply subordinate
their judgment to that of another insurer and its law. Rather,
as I have already explained, in this situation there exists only
one credible and acceptable way out of this predicament: From
the outset, every insurer would have to be contractually obliged
to submit itself and its clients to arbitration by an independent
third party. This party would not only be independent,
but at the same time the unanimous choice of both parties. It
would be agreed upon, because of its commonly perceived ability
to find mutually agreeable (fair) solutions in cases of inter-group
disagreement. If an arbitrator failed in this task and arrived
at conclusions that were perceived as "unfair" or "biased"
by either one of the insurers or their clients, this person or
agency would not likely be chosen as an arbitrator in the future.
As a result of the constant cooperation of various insurers and
arbitrators, then, a tendency toward the unification of property
and contract law and the harmonization of the rules of procedure,
evidence, and conflict resolution would be set in motion. Thus,
in buying protection-insurance, every insurer and insured becomes
a participant in an integrated system of conflict-avoidance and
peace-keeping. Every single conflict and damage claim, regardless
of where and by or against whom, would fall in the jurisdiction
of one or more specific insurance agency and would be handled
either by an individual insurer’s "domestic" law or
by the "international" or "universal" law
provisions and procedures agreed upon by everyone in advance.
Hence, instead
of permanent conflict, in-justice and legal insecurity, as under
the present statist conditions, in a private law society peace,
justice and legal security would hold sway.
Bibliography
Hans-Hermann
Hoppe, Eigentum,
Anarchie und Staat. Studien zur Theorie des Kapitalismus (1987)
Hans-Hermann
Hoppe, A
Theory of Socialism and Capitalism. Economics, Morals, and Politics
(1989)
Hans-Hermann
Hoppe, The
Economics and Ethics of Private Property. Studies in Political
Economy and Philosophy (1993; enlarged 2003)
Hans-Hermann
Hoppe, Democracy
the God That Failed. The Economics and Politics of Monarchy, Democracy
and Natural Order (2001)
Hans-Hermann
Hoppe, Ed., The
Myth of National Defense (2005)
See also
my annotated
bibliography.