War, Profit and the State
by
Stefan Molyneux
by Stefan Molyneux
It has been
often said that war is the health of the State – but the
argument could also be made that the reverse is more true: that
the State is the health of war. In other words, that war – the
greatest of all human evils – is impossible without the State.
The great Austrian
economist Ludwig Von Mises was once asked what the central defining
characteristic of the free market was – i.e., since every economy
is more or less a mixture of freedom and State compulsion, what
institution truly separated a free market from a controlled economy
– and he replied that it was the existence of a stock market. Through
a stock market, entrepreneurs can achieve the externalization
of risk, or the transfer of potential losses from themselves
to investors. In the absence of this capacity, business growth is
almost impossible.
In other words,
when risk is reduced, demand increases. The stagnation of economies
in the absence of a stock market is testament to the unwillingness
of individuals to take on all the risks of an economic endeavour
themselves. When risk becomes sharable, new possibilities
emerge that were not possible before – the Industrial Revolution
being perhaps the most dramatic example.
Sadly, one
of those possibilities – in all its horror, corruption, brutality
and genocide – is war. In this essay, I will endeavour to show that,
in its capacity to reduce the costs and risks of violence, the power
of the State is the root cause of war.
All decent
economists know the ‘fallacy of the broken window’, which is that
the stimulation of demand caused by a vandal breaking a window does
not add to economic growth, but rather subtracts from it,
since the money spent replacing the window is deducted from other
possible purchases. This is self-evident to all of us – we don’t
try to increase our incomes by driving our cars off cliffs or burning
down our houses. However it might please car manufacturers and home
builders, it neither pleases us, nor the people who would have had
access to the new car and house if we didn’t need it for ourselves.
Destruction always diverts resources and so bids up prices, which
costs everyone.
(In fact, breaking
a $100 window removes more than $100 from the economy, since
all the time that must be spent returning the window to its original
state – calling the window repairman, deciding on the replacement,
cleaning up the shards of glass etc. – is also subtracted from the
economy as a whole.)
There will
always be accidents, of course, and so repairs are a legitimate
aspect of any free market. However, war can never be said
to be an accident, is never part of the free market, and yet is
commonly believed to be good for the economy – and must be, for
at least some people, since it is pursued so often. How can these
opposites be reconciled? How can destruction be economically advantageous,
when it is so obviously bad for the economy as a whole?
We can imagine
an unethical window repairman who plans, as part of his nefarious
business strategy, to go around smashing windows in order to raise
demand for his wares. This would certainly help his business – and
yet we see that, in the free market, this course is almost never
pursued in real life. Why not?
One obvious
answer could be that business managers are afraid of going to jail
– and that certainly is a risk, but not a very great one.
Arsonists are notoriously hard to catch, for instance, and there
are many other hard-to-trace sabotages that can be undertaken. Poison
could be added to the water supply in a manner which would incriminate
a water supplier, which would take months to resolve – at which
point the trail would be long cold. Foreign hackers could be paid
to infiltrate competitors’ networks, or mount denial-of-service
attacks on their web sites – sure doom for those who sell over the
Internet.
Not convinced?
Well, what about eBay? If you have a competitor who’s taking away
your business, why not just get a hundred of your closest friends
to give him a bad rating, and watch his reputation – and business
– dry up and blow away?
All of the
above practices, while occasionally partaken of, are very rare in
the free market, for three main reasons. The first is that they
are costly; the second is that they increase risks, and the third
is the fear of retaliation.
The Cost
of Destruction
If you want
to hire an arsonist to torch the factory of your competition, you
have to become an expert in underworld negotiations. You might pay
your money and have the arsonist take off to Hawaii instead of setting
the fire. You also face the risk of your arsonist taking your offer
to your competitor and asking for money to not set the fire
– or, worse, return the favor and torch your factory! It
will certainly cost money to start down the road of vandalism, and
there is no guarantee that your investment will pay off in the way
you want.
There are other
tertiary costs to pursuing a path of ‘competition by destruction’.
You can only target one competitor at a time, which is only partially
helpful, since most businesses face many competitors simultaneously
– some local, and some overseas and probably out of reach. Even
if you are successful in destroying your competitor, you have opened
a ‘hole’ in the market, which will just invite others to come in
– and perhaps compete even more fiercely with you. When it comes
to competition, in most cases it is better to stay with ‘the devil
you know’. It wouldn’t make much sense to knock out a software competitor,
for instance, and end up giving Microsoft a good reason to enter
the market.
Also, if you
are a business owner, competition is very good for you. Just as
a sports team gets lazy and unskilled if it never plays a competent
opponent, businesses without competition get unproductive, lazy
and inefficient – a sure invitation to others to come in and compete.
Successful businesses need competition to stay fit. Resistance
breeds strength.
Also, what
happens if you do manage to successfully sabotage your opponents?
If you do it right, no one has any idea that you are behind the
sudden spate of arson. Well, what happens to your insurance? It
goes through the roof – if you can even get any! With random arsonists
around, your most competent employees will probably start looking
for other jobs, hoping to avoid being burned to death – or even
just face the risk of a work stoppage due to arson. Thus you have
increased your costs and destabilized the loyalty of your best employees
– creating a dangerous situation where competitors are highly motivated
to enter your field just when you are the most vulnerable to competition!
Overall, not a very bright idea!
The Risk
of Destruction
Let’s say you
decide to pay Stan to go and torch your competitor’s factory – well,
the basic fact of the transaction is that Stan, as a professional
arsonist, knows how to work the situation to his advantage far better
than you do, since you are, ahem, new to the field. Stan knows that
no matter what he does, you cannot go to the police for protection.
What if he tapes your conversation and then blackmails you? Then
your exercise in amoral competition suddenly becomes a lifelong
nightmare of expense, guilt, fear and rage! Verrry bad!
As mentioned
above, what if Stan decides to go to your competitor and reveal
your plan? Surely your competitor would pay good money for that
information, since he could then go to the police and destroy you
legally even more completely than you were hoping to destroy him
illegally? No, a basic fact of criminal activity is that once the
gloves come off, the results become very hard to predict indeed!
And what if
Stan goes to your competitor and says: "For $25,000, I was
supposed to torch this place – for $30,000 I can just turn around
and set quite a different fire!" This pendulum bidding war
can turn into a desperately stressful money-loser for everyone concerned
(except Stan, of course!).
And who is
to say that Stan is even a ‘legitimate’ arsonist? What if he is
an undercover agent of some kind? What if he has been sent by someone
else in order to get some dirt on you? What if it turns to be blackmail
or a set-up by your competitor. How would you know? Again – very
risky!
The Risk
of Retaliation
Let’s say that
all of the above works out just the way you want it, and Stan goes
and torches your competitor’s factory – well, what might happen
then? You have just created a bitter enemy with nothing to lose
who suspects foul play and knows that you have a good motive for
torching his place! He’s going to hire private investigators and
put an ad in every local paper offering a cash reward of a million
dollars for information leading to proof of your participation –
so he can sue you and recover far more than a million dollars!
Either your
new enemy will find out actionable information, and then go to the
police, or he will find out unactionable information – hints,
not proof – in which case he may choose to retaliate against you.
Since you’ve been able to do it in a way that cannot be proven –
and he now knows how – you have just educated a bitter and angry
man on how to torch a factory and escape detection. Are you going
to sleep safe in your bed? Are you sure that he’s going to only
target your factory?
What does all
this look like in terms of economic calculation? Have a look at
a sample table below showing costs and benefits of competition through
arson. If we assign arson a cost of $50k, with a 50% probability
of success, and a resulting economic benefit of $1m, we see a net
benefit of $450k (50% of $1m $50k in costs). So far so good.
But if we include a 10% risk of blackmail, a 20% chance of retaliation,
a 25% chance of increased competition – all very low numbers – and
finally $100k in increased insurance and security costs – we can
see that the economic benefits are erased very quickly (see below).

(Note that
the above table only shows the economic calculations – these
do not include the emotional factors of guilt, fear and worry,
which are of great significance but hard to quantify. This is important
because even if the above numbers are disagreeable, the emotional
barrier would still have to be overcome.)
No, as the
above conservative example shows, it’s not really worth it to attempt
economic gain through the destruction of property. And that is exactly
how it should be. We want people to be good, of course, but we also
want strong economic incentives for virtue as well, to shore up
the uncertain integrity of free will!
How does this
relate to war and the State? Very closely, in fact – but with very
opposite effects!
The economics
of war are, at bottom, very simple, and contain three major players:
those who decide on war, those who profit from war,
and those who pay for war. Those who decide on war are the
politicians, those who profit from it are those who supply military
materials or are paid for military skills, and those who pay
for war are the taxpayers. (The first and second group, of course,
overlap.)
In other words,
a corporation which profits from supplying arms to the military
is paid through State taxation – and under no other circumstances
could the transaction exist, since the risks associated with destruction
(as outlined in the table above) are equal to or greater than any
profit that could be made.
Now if those
who decided on war also paid for it, there would be
no such thing as war, since war follows the same economic incentives
and costs outlined above. However, those who decide on war do not
pay for it – that unpleasant task is relegated to the taxpayers
(both current, in the form of direct taxes, and future, in the form
of national debts). The risk of war is delegated to the front line-soldiers,
of course, but those soldiers would never be in the line of fire
if they weren’t paid and armed by State taxation.
Let’s see how
the above analysis of the costs of destruction change when the State
enters the equation.
The Cost
of Destruction
If you want
to start a war, you need a very expensive military – which must
also be maintained when there is no war. How can that vast expense
be paid for? Invasion? No. There is simply no way to recover the
costs of that military by invading another country – otherwise,
the free market would directly and voluntarily fund armies and occupations,
which it never does. Trade benefits free market businesses; invasions
do not.
To understand
this from a different angle: you can only invade another country
by destroying large portions of it, killing many of its citizens,
and then fighting endless insurgencies. Given the costs of invasions
and occupations – always in the hundreds of millions or billions
of dollars – what profit could be conceivably gained from the bombed-out
country you are occupying? That would be like asking a thief to
make money by fire-bombing the house he wanted to rob – and then
staying and holding the occupants hostage! Nonsense. Theft doesn’t
operate that way – and neither would war, without the presence of
the State and the economic distortion of forced taxation.
To those aiming
to profit from war, the costs of destruction can be reduced to almost
nothing by forcing the taxpayers to pay those costs. While it’s
true that those who profit from a war also pay the taxes needed
to support the war effort, they pay it to an equal degree as all
their competitors, and the amount they pay in taxes is far less
than they receive in profits – again, facts we know because there
are always people willing and eager to supply the military.
Thus are the
costs of destruction eliminated through the power of State taxation
– and the first central barrier against the prosecution of war is
removed.
The Risk
of Destruction
Those who decide
on war and those who profit from war only do so when there is no
real risk of destruction. This is a simple historical fact, which
can be gleaned from the fact that no nuclear power has even declared
war on another nuclear power. The US gave the USSR money and wheat,
and yet invades Grenada, Haiti and Iraq. (In fact, one of the central
reasons it was possible to know in advance that Iraq had no weapons
of mass destruction capable of hitting the US was that Washington
politicians were willing to invade it!)
Avoiding the
risk of destruction was the reason that the USSR and the US (to
take two obvious examples) fought ‘proxy wars’ in out-of-the-way
places like Afghanistan, Vietnam and Korea. As we shall see below,
the fact that the risk of destruction is shifted to taxpayers (and
taxpayer-funded soldiers) completely reverses the economic equation,
turning a net loss into a net profit – thus creating a whole new
industry of death!
Thus are the
risks of destruction eliminated through the power of the State –
and the second central barrier against the prosecution of
war is removed.
The Risk
of Retaliation
The ‘risk of
retaliation’ in economic calculations regarding war should not be
taken as a general risk, but rather a specific one
– i.e., specific to those who either decide on war or profit from
it. The entire military-industrial complex survives and flourishes
on the simple fact that profit accrues to the willing few, while
the costs of destruction and the risks of retaliation are forced
on the unwilling many. Since other people are exposed
to the risk of retaliation, the risks of war become almost irrelevant
from an amoral economic standpoint. If I receive the pleasures
of smoking, but you take the risk of lung cancer, my decision
to continue smoking will certainly be affected!
Thus are the
risks of retaliation eliminated – and the third central barrier
against the prosecution of war is removed.
Externalizing
Military Risk
The power of
the State to so fundamentally shift the costs and benefits of violence
is one of the most central facts of warfare – and the core reason
for its continued existence. As we can see from the above table
regarding arson, if the person who decides to profit through destruction
faces the consequences himself, he has no economic and emotional
incentive to act violently. However, if he can shift the risks and
losses to others – but retain the benefit himself – the economic
landscape changes completely! Sadly, it then becomes profitable,
say, to tax citizens to pay for 800 US military bases around the
world, as long as strangers in New York bear the brunt of the inevitable
retaliation! It also becomes profitable to send uneducated youngsters
to Iraq to bear the brunt of the insurgency. Halliburton wins; the
taxpayers and soldiers lose – and wounded soldiers are further
supported by forced tax dollars!
Externalizing
Emotional Discomfort
The fact that
the State shifts the burden of cost and risk to the taxpayers and
soldiers is very important in emotional terms. If the ‘arson’ example
outlined above could be tweaked to provide a profit – say, by reducing
the risks of blackmail or retaliation – then all the other risks
would still accrue to the man contemplating such violence.
Such risks would cause great emotional discomfort in all but the
most rare and sociopathic personalities – and the generation of
fear, guilt and worry would still require more profit than
the model can conceivably generate.
Once the power
of taxation externalizes almost all the risks and costs of
destruction, however, the terror and fear of war must still be obscured.
Thus we can see in warlike States an endless dissemination of pro-war
propaganda (or war-nography). This destruction of healthy
emotional functioning – i.e., a fear of death and a hatred of murder
– helps ensure that wars will continue until the State collapses
or the world flames into ash.
The State
Is War
If the above
is understood, then the hostility of anarcho-capitalists towards
the State should now be a little clearer. In the anarcho-capitalist
view, the State is a fundamental moral evil not only because it
uses violence to achieve its ends, but also because it is the only
social agency capable of making war economically advantageous to
those with the power to declare it and profit from it. It is only
through the governmental power of taxation that war can be subsidized
to the point where it becomes profitable to certain minorities.
Destruction can only ever be ‘profitable’ when the costs and risks
of violence are shifted to the taxpayers, while the benefits accrue
to the few who directly control or influence the State.
Why Not
Just Reform The State?
As
long is the State exists, this violent distortion of costs, incentives
and rewards can never be controlled or alleviated, since
an artificial imbalance of economic incentives will always self-perpetuate
and escalate (at least, until the inevitable bankruptcy of the public
purse). As long as the State exists, mankind shall always live with
the terror of war. One cannot oppose war without opposing the State.
They can neither be examined in isolation nor combated separately,
since – much more than metaphorically – the State and war are two
sides of the same bloody coin.
January
24, 2006
Stefan
Molyneux [send him mail]
has been an actor, comedian, gold-panner, graduate student, and
software entrepreneur. His first novel, Revolutions
was published in 2004, and he maintains a
blog. Listen to his podcast, which you can get by clicking here
or, you like iTunes better, you can click here.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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