What We Mean By Decentralization
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
The
Kelo decision, in which the Supreme Court refused to intervene in
the case of a local government taking of private property, touched
off a huge debate among
libertarians on the question of decentralization. The most common
perspective was that the decision was a disaster because it gave
permission to local governments to steal land. Libertarians are
against stealing land, and so therefore must oppose the court decision.
And
yet stealing isn't the only thing libertarians are against. We are
also opposed to top-down political control over wide geographic
regions, even when they are instituted in the name of liberty.
Hence
it would be no victory for your liberty if, for example, the Chinese
government assumed jurisdiction over your downtown streets in order
to liberate them from zoning ordinances. Zoning violates property
rights, but imperialism violates the right of a people to govern
themselves. The Chinese government lacks both jurisdiction
and moral standing to intervene. What goes for the Chinese government
goes for any distant government that presumes control over government
closer to home.
How
is the libertarian to choose when there is a conflict between the
demands of liberty and strictures against empire? The answer is
not always easy, but experience and the whole intellectual history
of liberalism suggest that decentralized government is most compatible
with long-run concerns for liberty. This is why all the founders
were attached to the idea of federalism: that the states within
the union were the primary governing units, and the Bill of Rights
was to protect both individuals and the states from impositions
by the central government—even when liberty is invoked as
a justification.
Just
so that we are clear on this last point: the purpose of the Bill
of Rights was to state very clearly and plainly what the Federal
Government may not do. That's why they were attached to the
Constitution. The states, under the influence of skeptics of
the Constitution's limits on the central power, insisted that
the restrictions on the government be spelled out. The Bill
of Rights did not provide a mandate for what the Federal Government
may do. You can argue all you want about the 14th
amendment and due process. But a reading that says it magically
transforms the whole Bill of Rights to mean the exact opposite of
its original intent is pure fantasy.
Back
to the libertarian presumption in favor of decentralization. There
are several reasons for it.
First,
under decentralization, jurisdictions must compete for residents
and capital, which provides some incentive for greater degrees of
freedom, if only because local despotism is neither popular nor
productive. If despots insist on ruling anyway, people and capital
will find a way to leave. If there is only one will and one actor,
you cannot escape.
Second,
localism internalizes corruption so that it can be more easily spotted
and uprooted. Along the same lines, local government corruption
can be rather benign by comparison; it is easier, on a middle-class
budget, to pay off the zoning board than to bribe the State Department.
Third,
tyranny on the local level minimizes damage to the same extent that
macro-tyranny maximizes it. If Hitler had ruled only Berlin, Stalin
only Moscow, and FDR only Washington, the effects of their demented
policies might have been contained. This is not only a utilitarian
consideration. It means that evil people are prevented from violating
the rights of people outside their jurisdiction.
Fourth,
no government can be trusted to use the power to intervene wisely.
With such power, central governments will always invoke good motives
even when they are a mere mask for power grabs (as when the US invaded
Iraq, for example). The typical path goes this way. An intervention
takes place that might be celebrated by good liberals, such as the
Lochner
decision (1905) by the Supreme Court that invalidated New York's
labor regulations. But once that power is gained, it is used to
put a legal imprimatur on central planning and prevent local governments
from finding an escape (the central planning of World War I was
Lochner's daughter).
Fifth,
a plurality of governmental forms—a "vertical separation of
powers," to use Stephan
Kinsella's phrase
prevents the central government from accumulating power. Lower governments
are rightly jealous of their jurisdiction, and resist. This is to
the good. In fact, the whole history of liberty is bound up with
the glorious results of competing institutional structures, no one
of which can be trusted with complete control.
To
be sure, this does not mean that libertarians must be agnostic on
the question of what government should look like. Law should protect
person and property against invasive force. This principle applies
in all times and in all places. But that does not mean that there
must be a single lawgiver and enforcer. To maximize the chance that
good law will prevail over bad, over the long haul, and prevent
power grabs from the top, we need a multiplicity of legal forms.
Murray
N. Rothbard had a nice phrase that he used to summarize this position:
universal rights, locally enforced. Those two principles are frequently
in tension. But if you give up one of the two principles you risk
giving up liberty. Both are important. Neither should prevail over
the other. A local government that violates rights is intolerable.
A central government that rules in the name of universal rights
is similarly intolerable. Heaven on earth is universal rights, locally
enforced. No, it's not here yet. That's why libertarians exist,
to work for the ideal.
Now,
there is another form of decentralization you often hear about.
It comes from those who regret globalization in all forms, including
multinational corporations and the like. They complain about the
centralization of life in the modern age and long for simpler times.
Here's the problem: the kind of centralization they regret is a
result of voluntary decision-making in the marketplace. It is freely
chosen centralization. Their plans for scaling back would require
massive coercion and bring about an economic calamity.
In
matters of private association and market economics, libertarians
can make no a priori decision concerning the best means
to organize. Rothbard was a defender of multinational corporations
and global trade, but he also saw that too much integration in the
production structure is bad for business. Firms lose the ability
to calculate their profits and losses when they are responsible
for too great a degree of internal production for their own capital
goods.
How
does this impact the organization of other institutions in society,
like church, extended family, civic associations, and ideological
movements? Is centralization best or is decentralization best? The
answer must be left to experience. The Catholic Church is centralized
doctrinally but decentralized managerially. The family in the American
context is not centralized between generations. Grandparents are
there to dote, not rule. Civic associations take many forms, from
national organizations to local ones.
Rothbard
himself, in the course of experience, changed his view on the
best method for organizing ideological movements. Early on, he was
attracted to the idea of top-down management, with cadres and followers
and cells of every sort. He saw that this worked for the Communists,
so why not for the libertarians? He was right to say that nothing
in libertarian theory prohibits top-down management insofar as it
is voluntary and rooted in private property.
But
later on in life, he changed his mind and wrote that he found serious
problems with this model, and they are related to the same problems
that appear with political centralization. In the Libertarian
Forum, August
1981, he writes:
"I
would like to take this opportunity to admit my previous error in
calling for an ultra-centralist model for the [Libertarian Party].
Several years in the [LP] have soured me on centralism permanently.
Putting the rule of the Party, or of the movement as a whole, into
the hands of one man or of one tight group is a recipe for disaster.
First, it means that if a few people sell out to opportunism, the
rest of the movement is dragged along with it. But second, and more
generally, even if the Machiners were a bunch of wonderful people,
since they are not omniscient they are bound, as are all of us to
make mistakes. And just as the mistakes of a government-controlled
economy can ruin a nation, so the inevitable mistakes of a tight
ruling clique can ruin a party or a movement. I still think it absurd
to think of decentralism as 'the libertarian' form of organization.
How we organize is not a matter of libertarian
principle, so long as we do not violate the non-aggression axiom.
But it appears that neither radical decentralism nor ultra-centralism
will work in any organization…. [M]oderation and balance
should be our organizational mode."
How
right he is! Imagine if the only forms of ideology available to
us were those offered by Washington, D.C. organizations, with their
hyper-policy focus and tendency to kowtow to the state. In intellectual
life, we need a vast multiplicity of forms in order to check corruption
and compromise. Even in the libertarian movement, we need diversity
and experimentation, not centralization, command, and control.
In
the organization of business, ideas, and life itself, Rothbard recommends
balance and moderation. So we might articulate two Rothbardian principles.
In public affairs, we need universal rights, locally enforced. In
private and economic affairs, we need neither centralization
nor decentralization, but moderation and balance, trial and error.
To me, these formulations represent the height of good thinking,
good law, and the good society.
July
22, 2005
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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