Do Countries Learn Lessons?
by Juan Fernando Carpio
by Juan Fernando Carpio
As a Latin
American libertarian, one has to hear a plethora of reasons for
the conditions of material poverty that our countries share in varying
degrees. Some blame the climate (you know, people in colder countries
have it harder so they learn to be more "disciplined"
and "organized" because they have…winter), the lack of
real crises ("like Japan and Germany, that really had something
to shock them into reason"), an imperialist past that crippled
our culture and institutions, and so forth.
Without dismissing
those aspects completely, it is clear that the answer for the wealth
vs. poverty dilemma lies elsewhere, since nations/territories such
as Switzerland, Hong-Kong, Spain and Sweden have nothing in common
besides being far more prosperous than the average Latin American
country. The only elements in common among the countries that are
better off are two: ideas and the institutions that result from
them. Nothing else.
But there is
a rationale for the relative backwardness of our region that seems
plainly foolish to me, one that I would like to single out: that
we are young countries/races, so we have yet to mature and become
full-grown (as in "IMF net funders" for example) so we
can take our deserved place in the international order. Of course,
Latin America is a cornucopia of mercantilist (at best) and downright
Marxist (at worst?) political, academic and opinion-setting elites.
Must this, however, imply something on "being young" or
immature as countries or races? Murray N. Rothbard rejected the
idea that some countries are "young" and others are "old."
As the principled individualist that he was, he would have abhorred
the idea of a collective mind or subconscious that would be capable
of establishing a collective memory. I share that sentiment.
Education
Mérida,
México and Quito, Ecuador, just to name two cities, had set
up universities at least two hundred years before Canada and the
U.S. The same goes for the cities themselves, and of course governments.
So, why aren’t we more advanced in the economic and technological
fields than the English-speaking countries mentioned above? The
reason is that knowledge needs to be transmitted and developed in
a way far different from the vertical paradigm we inherited from
Spain and Portugal.
It is not the
same to have a university as to have a free market of ideas such
as the U.S. truly had until the Progressive Era or Europe itself
had during the XIX century. Such a free market is capable of transmitting
knowledge to and from individual minds, in a way that makes experience,
research, thinking and customs a part of a growing body of knowledge
readily available for the following generations.
Political
preferences
The same goes
for political preferences. How can people in Perú be considering
reelecting Alán Garcia the Keynesian who almost wrecked
their economy in the late 1980s as their president again?
And what about leftism and statism in general, in a backswing in
the region: can’t our countries learn the lessons of the past?
The problem
is that with nationalists, protectionists and Marxists involved
in history book writing, media coverage, and academic involvement,
the roots of Garcia’s destructive Keynesianism (a redundancy, I
know) were never truly identified.
Thus, the channels
that convey information from some individuals to others (via the
family, schools, the media, etc.) never had the correct information
to start with. Older people may remember, and young ones may try
to read into the past, but if the paradigm is at odds with reason
and the ethics of liberty, then it will only repeat the same mistakes
over and over.
Conclusion
There is no
collective wisdom. There can be individual assessments of better
or worse things. This knowledge is being continually transmitted
and it definitely shapes our institutions and our ways of looking
at the world.
Countries do
not learn lessons. People do. And only an open society can successfully
enrich itself for the present and the future.
May
19, 2006
Juan
Fernando Carpio [send him mail]
lives in Quito, Ecuador. He is finishing his Master’s Degree in
Entrepreneurial Economics from Universidad Francisco Marroquin in
Guatemala and is the founder of the Movimiento Libertario del Ecuador,
a young libertarian movement in his country.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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