Anti-Federalist #3
by
Michael S. Rozeff
by Michael S. Rozeff
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Introduction
I would like
to see the American system of government peacefully evolve toward
market anarchism.
This will probably happen when 10–20 percent of Americans fully
understand that this is the right direction to go in. An educational
effort along these lines looks to benefit from a twofold emphasis:
why the ideas of market anarchism are correct and why the ideas
motivating our current directions are incorrect.
At the heart
of our system lie the supporting ideas and beliefs that were born
hundreds of years ago and have been inculcated ever since. If we
are headed in wrong directions, then some of these ideas must be
faulty. The Federalist
Papers are a useful source of such ideas. This article,
like my earlier article, Anti-Federalist
#2, evaluates arguments of the Founding Fathers.
The arguments
that John Jay made in Federalist #3 focus on the notion that union
of the states is a means to reduce warfare. If a union of states
is weak, then clearly union cannot and does not reduce warfare.
If the union is moderately strong, then the incentive of the federal
state is to combine several stronger states and suppress the weaker
states so as to create a strong union, that is, a stronger federal
state. This suppression may or may not involve traditional warfare,
but it will involve aggression and levering the power of the state
to gain more power. The War Between the States can be interpreted
as such a situation in which outright war occurred, and the federal
government gained power. Once a union of states is strong, meaning
the resulting federal state is strong, then it has incentives to
suppress all the individual states and other centers of power in
the society. It also has incentives to look outside its borders
in order to expand further. The state may move in these directions
because of or hand-in-hand with business and financial interests
and/or there may be intellectual and bureaucratic interests associated
with the state’s rise. These are other parts of the overall picture.
No matter how these fit in, the fact is that once a state exists,
it has the incentive to gain power, internally and externally. This
implies that a union of states into a stronger state will not reduce
warfare, as Jay supposed. It encourages aggression of the stronger
state. Even if there are limitations on the central state’s powers,
the incentives exist to break down those limitations.
The best
of all worlds
I have heard
it strongly argued by Chicago-school economists that the state is
an optimal institution because it is the situation or equilibrium
that we and other societies have arrived at. These economists come
to this view by generalizing from free market behavior. For example,
suppose that in a free market we observe automobiles with tail fins
being made and sold. A critic like John Kenneth Galbraith will incorrectly
attribute this to the oligopoly position of the auto manufacturers
or to their concerted advertising. The suppliers or producers, in
his view, tell the consumers what they shall buy. An economist like
Ludwig von Mises as well as Chicago school economists have in common
that they correctly attribute product attributes to the tastes of
the consumers making themselves felt. Consumer demand is essential
to observing products being produced with particular characteristics.
Consumers demand tail fins or Chinese restaurants in every third
mall. The Chicagoans then ask: Don’t voters then also demand the
state? Don’t they shape the state to their liking? And isn’t the
state then an optimal institution for the consumers (or voters)?
Don’t we have a state because we want a state?
John Jay begins
Federalist #3 with the same argument, namely, "that the people
of any country (if, like the Americans, intelligent and well informed)
seldom adopt and steadily persevere for many years in an erroneous
opinion respecting their interests." And since the American
people (pre-adoption of the Constitution) have in the past been
"firmly united under one federal government," they have
already shown what they want. They want union and a central government
"vested with sufficient powers for all general and national
purposes."
In a way, the
argument in short says "What is, is what is best or what people
want." This is Dr. Pangloss in Voltaire’s Candide telling us
that "This is the best of all possible worlds."
Political
systems are not free markets
There are good
reasons, however, to think that the state is not what we want. First
of all, we do not influence the existence of the state in
the same way we influence the existence of a car manufacturer. Every
time a consumer decides whether or not to buy a car, he votes on
the existence of car manufacturers. It is true that his influence
is small, but it is continual and direct. Collectively,
all consumers quickly target their preferences right at the auto
producer. If the consumer doesn’t want a Lexus, he can buy a Mercedes-Benz.
But if a voter doesn’t want the union, what does he do? Never since
the Constitution came into force has the U.S. had an up or down
vote on the federal union itself.
Second, if
we try to walk away from the state (while remaining where we are
territorially), we can’t. If we have a state, it is not simply or
solely because we want one, it is surely also the case that the
state forces itself on us and we can’t get out of it. When we observe
the high frequency of rebellions, revolutions, civil wars, secessionist,
and separatist movements against states, is this not the clearest
possible evidence that many people in many places and times do not
accept a state’s existence or at least the form of a state? They
apparently are not getting the state they want. And if the state
wins some of these battles, it does not mean that the losers either
want the state or deserve it. It means they are under compulsion
to accept it. Conversely, when states violently or through various
wiles conquer and incorporate territories, are we to believe it
is because the conquered citizens want that outcome? By contrast,
apart perhaps from some violent environmentalists, one rarely hears
of mass movements to overturn auto companies or other enterprises.
A consumer peacefully secedes by not buying the product. A boycott
will do the job even more strongly.
Even if we
have a state that many if not most people want, this still does
not mean that the resulting equilibrium is optimal. It may be profitable
to change to a new situation. Because there is human ignorance that
can be overcome, we may discover a better political arrangement.
The wheel may have been invented around 8,000 B.C. For a million
years before then, there may not have been such a thing. The germ
theory of disease developed only in the last few hundred years.
Similarly, the state as we know it has only been around for a few
hundred years, and the welfare and warfare state an even shorter
length of time. Looked at this way, the probability is near 1, that
is, it is a virtual certainty that the modern state is not optimal
and that it will be replaced by new political forms. And a scholar
like Martin van Creveld argues that the state is already passing
from the world scene as the predominant political form.
Even without
ignorance and discovery, there is re-discovery. People may decide
that the state is an error and they may go back to some variant
of earlier forms. Jay specifically argues that errors do not persevere
for "many years," but they can. Voltaire made sure to
point out the many persistent manmade evils of this world such as
war. Will Jay (if he could) and the Chicagoans argue that since
everyone is acting in his or her best interests, then World War
I must have been an optimal affair with millions of men killing
and maiming each other across a static battle front for years on
end? Some may so argue, but most will not because such an assertion
is so implausible. Instead, they will argue that the war or its
continuation involved errors of anticipation or miscalculations.
This is a legitimate idea. We all agree that human action anticipates
an improvement in utility, but we do not always get it.
But if World
War I involved errors, can’t acceptance of the state itself also
involve error? In theory, the answer has to be "Yes."
Jay’s answer, also that of the Chicagoans, is that so much time
has elapsed and so much knowledge has accumulated that voters would
have been able to correct such a basic error. If Americans accept
their state after 220 years, they can’t be mistaken in their choice
or they would have found this out (ignoring the fact that Americans
fought a war over the very issue of acceptance in 1861-1865.) This
is an empirical answer, not a theoretical one. Yet the fact is that
errors can persist. People can believe for hundreds of years that
witches cause disease, or that states foster prosperity when they
do not. Why? The errors committed by political institutions cannot
be discovered as quickly as errors made in buying a product from
a manufacturer. There are too many confounding variables that operate
simultaneously; and the costs of political errors are sometimes
not realized until many years after the original sins. The causes
of Pearl Harbor and 9/11 reach back many years, perhaps 40 years
in each case. By the time these tragedies occur, the average person
cannot remember earlier causes or causes before his or her birth.
They are unable to decipher why the bad event is happening. Nor
does it pay them (a) to understand the causes, since they can’t
change the state anyway, or (b) to go out of their way to communicate
the problems to others who may have little or no interest in changing
the situation. Beside these factors, the state is constantly engaged
in teaching Americans that it makes no errors, that all bad events
are caused by others, and that it (the state) is, in any event,
indispensable.
For these reasons,
errors in selecting a political framework persist for a much longer
time than errors in choosing a Ford with a transmission problem.
The Chicago-style view that errors can’t persist is not persuasive.
I have spent
a good deal more space on this argument than Jay gave to it for
the reason that many people argue it today in the Chicago optimality
form. The basic rebuttals arise from the fact that political systems
are not equivalent to free markets.
More states,
more wars?
Jay argues
that the security against hostile foreign powers is best assured
by "an efficient national government." Looking backwards
at the twentieth century and its wars, the gross facts do not bear
out this contention either here in the U.S. or in many other countries.
National governments have been efficient at bringing grief. Since
historical interpretations are always disputable, we turn to Jay’s
reasoning.
Wars, he points
out first, arise from broken treaties and from invasions. With more
states making more treaties, the argument goes, the odds of wars
rise. Therefore, it’s better to have a single state making treaties.
Jay is correct that more treaties raise the chances of wars, ceteris
paribus. However, not all other things are held equal. (A) An individual
state, being smaller and knowing its interests better than a central
state, has more incentive to make a treaty on terms that will not
lead to conflict. This is because it will bear the full costs of
a war should the treaty break down. It won’t shift some costs to
other states via a union. (B) Within a union, a state has more incentive
not to live up to a treaty’s terms and drag the union into war because
the state does not bear the full costs of the war. (C) Treaties
often end wars or contentious negotiations. That is, they come about
because there are disagreements in the first place. If the disagreements
are already present, then having more or fewer states does not necessarily
alter the potential sources of friction with hostile powers. (D)
The central state will be pressured by regional and other interests,
including pro-war interests. These pressures can lead to just as
many wars as individual states might instigate, and they are likely
to be larger wars because they will involve all the states in the
union.
Jay then argues
that a single union is less likely to break the "law of nations"
than several states. One reason is that wiser, more experienced,
and more judicious men will serve a national government than state
governments. This, by the way, is an argument for world government.
It is true that one might choose 100 men with a particular characteristic
from a pool of 1,000,000 and achieve more success than choosing
100 men from a pool of 100,000. But we now know from statistical
sampling theory that the difference in the average will be trivial
and the dispersion in the characteristic will be a second order
effect. National leaders will not be significantly different from
the leaders of individual states. In addition, enormous noise is
introduced into the selection process by all the procedures of candidate
selection, ballot access, campaigning, and voting, making it a tenuous
proposition that federal officials will be wiser than state officials.
And if they are more experienced, what are they experienced at?
They know better how to gain power. This is not necessarily a good
thing.
Another supposed
reason for federal superiority is that the federal government will
have a more uniform interpretation and execution of the law of nations
than will several states. It is almost true by definition that a
single government will be more uniform than several inasmuch as
it has one law code. But that single code might be a patchwork,
taking bits and pieces from many states. This does not necessarily
enhance the welfare of the citizens of the several states. A single
government will reach compromises. It will have to ignore the specific
interests of some areas. It may be heavily influenced by some interests
to the exclusion of others. When it comes to interacting with other
states via the law of nations, it might act just as arbitrarily
as any other state government simply because it is a government
of men like any other government.
Jay argues
that the more states there are, the greater the chance that some
will find it advantageous to make war. Union, he says, is better
because a given state will have less influence within a union in
getting the federal government to go to war. This argument can be
restated as follows. Suppose each ruffian in a city can individually
start a fight with others. There may be quite a few fistfights.
Now suppose they all are in a club, and no one can fight without
the permission of the rest. There will be fewer fights. This argument
makes sense as far as it goes, but it does not go far enough. With
side payments and logrolling or with each member coming to share
the grievances of the other members, there may be almost as many
fights by the club as by individuals. If the combined power of all
the ruffians joined together encourages them, they may even engage
in more fights. They may go out and bully individuals. No matter
how many fights there are, they may be more serious in a club than
if the individuals fought single bouts. These possibilities exist
for states joined into a union too.
If a war does
begin, it may be more devastating if a single union prosecutes it,
since many states will be dragged into a conflict that may be regional
in nature. A more powerful union may be inclined to take more chances
or use its power more than would a single state. It may represent
more of a threat to other nations and elicit hostility from them.
At the same time, fear of a larger power may cause more deference
to it.
The feds
are more objective
Jay argues
that individual states are more subject to passions, to an inability
to control the passions and interests of groups within the states,
and to bias in favor of their own causes. These all lend themselves
to more squabbles and wars, as with Indians. He pictures the federal
government, removed from these passions, stronger, and unbiased,
as better able to smooth over conflicts and end difficulties. The
particular parties he had in mind were those of the Indians, the
Spanish, and the British, and sometimes these were all linked together.
The problem with this argument is that if the federal government
were too weak to stop the infringements of settlers upon Indian-occupied
lands, then union would not stop the low and medium-intensity warfare
at the borders. And if the union became strong enough to control
the states, then the danger became that it would not be unbiased
but would tyrannize the states and the Indians for its own ends.
In view of human nature and self-interest, one cannot have a federal
government that is both strong and unbiased.
In fact, the
union did not and could not remove the root cause of the conflicts
between the settlers and the Indians. The Indians were continually
pushed back. In the case of the Cherokee Nation, apart from the
powerless Supreme Court, the federal government sided with Georgia.
As early as 1802, Congress promised Cherokee land to Georgia. Presidents
Jefferson and Monroe favored Indian removal (ethnic cleansing.)
President Jackson did not enforce treaties with the Cherokee, allowing
Georgia to seize Cherokee land and run rampant. After the Cherokee
won several Supreme Court cases, Jackson replied: "Justice
Marshall has made his decision. Let him enforce it." The end
result was that federal troops in 1838 forcibly evacuated the Cherokee,
a despicable example of ethnic cleansing.
With the benefit
of hindsight, it is easy to see that Jay’s argument about federal
"moderation," about its being more "temperate and
cool," and about acting with more "wisdom and prudence"
than the states was off the mark. The reasons were simple. The federal
government was still a government, a means of power wielded by men
with their own interests and passions. It was still a political
institution subject to the complex influences of the states and
internal alliances. It shared the expansionist objectives of the
states. The federal government turned out to be as subjective as
any other government; its officials had their own prejudices, fixed
ideas, and biases. What was worse, they learned how to accumulate
and wield more power than any individual state had.
Conclusion
John Jay paints
a picture that persists to this day, of a federal government peopled
by public-minded servants who are the cream of the crop and who
place the national interest above tawdry sectional rivalries. They
keep the narrow-minded and hot-headed states in line and prevent
what would otherwise be continual warfare brought on by states out
of control. Logic suggests a far different picture. The federal
government is peopled by rulers whose passions, interests, and prejudices
are every bit as strong as people in the states. Federal officials
are pressured by regional and other interests who might wish to
promote wars because the costs will partially be borne by other
states. There is no guarantee that wars will be fewer with a central
state than without. Moreover, since the central state has greater
power than the individual states, wars may become larger. Once the
central state reaches the point where it can command the collective
resources of all the states, wars will become larger and last longer
as the central state has less incentive to settle conflicts.
What
history seems to show is the opposite of Jay’s prognosis. Instead
of greater peace through a union government manned by the country’s
wisest men who stood above petty squabbles, the country saw a great
deal of warfare, internal and external, linked to expansion and
promoted and aided by a strong central government that grew stronger
and stronger over time. The federal government looks to have been
the engine of greater and more severe warfare, rather than less.
September
16, 2006
Michael
S. Rozeff [send him mail]
is the Louis M. Jacobs Professor of Finance at University at Buffalo.
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© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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