Linux Is Capitalist!
by
Manuel Lora and Juan
Ramón Rallo
by Manuel Lora and Juan Ramón Rallo
In
2000, Microsoft's Steve Ballmer made a questionable
remark: he referred to Linux (and the open source/free software
community) and its development process as "communist." He said that
"Linux is a tough competitor. There's no company called Linux, there's
barely a Linux road map. Yet Linux sort of springs organically from
the earth. And it had, you know, the characteristics of communism
that people love so very, very much about it. That is, it's free."
Ballmer's statements show his ignorance of economics and the nature
of human action.
The praxeological
origin of economics is based on human action. Action is characterized
by the purposeful use of a scarce resource in order to attain some
end. Insofar as individuals plan how to use their scarce resources
to reach their ends, they are behaving in an entrepreneurial way.
Free market
capitalism is not characterized specifically by the existence of
companies, but by individuals who, thanks to private property, plan
the most efficient way of attaining their ends. Companies are in
many cases the most adequate unit of calculation for carrying out
entrepreneurial action but this is not always the case. They are
not the prerequisite of capitalism, but an organizational consequence
of it.
Whether it
is a person changing a tire, selling books or buying a DVD, entrepreneurial
human action permeates these activities; they are all driven by
the desire to reach a particular end. By reaching a particular end,
the acting human is better off now than he was before. Thus, one
must be careful when saying that something is "communist."
Just because
a product is free of charge it does not mean that it is communist.
Communism means complete state ownership of every resource within
its reach and thus the impossibility of human action without the
authorization of the Central Planning Board; it means the absolute
lack of private property, including body ownership and labor. Thus,
when Ballmer exclaimed that Linux had the characteristics of communism,
he completely erred.
Linux is not
socialist. The organization and development process of free software
is nothing but people acting freely to satisfy their intellectual
needs. Economic science has nothing to say regarding any individual
plan itself. Whether that plan is accurate for achieving the end
is something that will only be revealed ex post; ex ante, all the
plans upon which human action is based are the best ones for the
agent. This Misesian insight is crucial when understanding the nature
of human action. It serves to propel the idea that whenever an individual
reaches his proposed goal, he increases his welfare. In other words,
human welfare is the result of human actions, and not necessarily
a monetary magnitude. Welfare is related to an increase in utility,
one which is purely subjective, and not necessarily with the profits
of a company.
Linux and free
software programmers often do not receive any financial compensation
whatsoever. Indeed, the "Free software community" is a group of
people who voluntarily use their time and skills. But just because
they donate time and labor it does not mean that this is communism.
On the contrary, they freely direct their human action to the fulfillment
of their ends, without any centralized imposition about what had
to be done; people are exchanging their scarce resources (time and
labor) to satisfy their ends. In the case of the Linux programmer,
the end can range from fixing a software bug to adding a new feature
or enhancing documentation. Where is the communism here? How is
this socialist? Linux is a market phenomenon, just as charity is.
Charitable
activities imply people freely giving their money, time and skills
towards a cause that they think benefit others. It does not matter
one whit whether the final product (an operating system kernel,
a house, a dollar, an ounce of gold, a meal) is free. Presence of
coercion over the means of production is what determines if a particular
exchange really is free or not.
And as we mentioned
above, communism implies that the invested money, time and skills
(any means of human action) must be state owned. If Mr. Ballmer
were right, then the state must own Linux and direct the time and
labor of the coerced "volunteers." As much as he would
like to believe that, the development of free software is not communist.
Although
Mr. Ballmer would probably deny it, Linux is a product of freedom
and private property and then of capitalism, just as Microsoft is.
Both use scarce means (time and labor) to offer a product (software)
that is valuable to consumers. If a product is priced at $0 and
another one at $100, this still does not imply anything except that
they focus on different ends: one group prefers to offer the software
free of charge and another prefers to sell it. And this does not
change a thing. Whether you are a business owner investing
billions of dollars into free software development and support or
a simple hobbyist contributing in your spare time, everyone involved
with Linux creates value. And this creation of value is based on
entrepreneurial action, not by the government's interventionism
or communism.
Let
it be heard loudly that Linux, and indeed every voluntary transaction,
belongs to the realm of the peaceful and non-coercive free market.
May
18, 2006
Manuel
Lora [send him mail]
is a freelance TV producer and multimedia specialist in New Orleans.
Juan
Ramón Rallo [send him mail]
is a student of economics and law. He is a founding member of the
Spanish libertarian think tank Instituto
Juan de Mariana and writes weekly for the Spanish newspaper
Libertad Digital
whose English version is The
Spain Herald. His weblog can be visited here.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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