Profits Are for People
by
Walter E. Williams
Recently
by Walter E. Williams: Pitting
Us Against Each Other
The Occupy
Wall Street demonstrators are demanding "people before profits"
– as if profit motivation were the source of mankind's troubles
– when it's often the absence of profit motivation that's the true
villain.
First, let's
get both the definition and magnitude of profits out of the way.
Profits represent the residual claim earned by entrepreneurs. They're
what are left after other production costs – such as wages, rent
and interest – have been paid. Profits are the payment for risk
taking, innovation and decision-making. As such, they are a cost
of business just as are wages, rent and interest. If those payments
are not made, labor, land and capital will not offer their services.
Similarly, if profit is not paid, entrepreneurs won't offer theirs.
Historically, corporate profits range between 5 and 8 cents of each
dollar, and wages range between 50 and 60 cents of each dollar.
Far more important
than simple statistics about the magnitude of profits is the role
played by profits, namely that of forcing producers to cater to
the wants and desires of the common man. When's the last time we've
heard widespread complaints about our clothing stores, supermarkets,
computer stores or appliance stores? We are far likelier to hear
people complaining about services they receive from the post office,
motor vehicle and police departments, boards of education and other
government agencies. The fundamental difference between the areas
of general satisfaction and dissatisfaction is the pursuit of profits
is present in one and not the other.
The pursuit
of profits forces producers to be attentive to the will of their
customers, simply because the customer of, say, a supermarket can
fire it on the spot by taking his business elsewhere. If a state
motor vehicle department or post office provides unsatisfactory
services, it's not so easy for dissatisfied customers to take action
against it. If a private business had as many dissatisfied customers
as our government schools have, it would have long ago been out
of business.
Free market
capitalism is unforgiving. Producers please customers, in a cost-minimizing
fashion, and make a profit, or they face losses or go bankrupt.
It's this market discipline that some businesses seek to avoid.
That's why they descend upon Washington calling for crony capitalism
– government bailouts, subsidies and special privileges. They wish
to reduce the power of consumers and stockholders, who hold little
sympathy for blunders and will give them the ax on a moment's notice.
Having Congress
on their side means business can be less attentive to the will of
consumers. Congress can keep them afloat with bailouts, as it did
in the cases of General Motors and Chrysler, with the justification
that such companies are "too big to fail." Nonsense! If General
Motors and Chrysler had been allowed to go bankrupt, it wouldn't
have meant that their productive assets, such as assembly lines
and tools, would have gone poof and disappeared into thin air. Bankruptcy
would have led to a change in ownership of those assets by someone
who might have managed them better. The bailout enabled them to
avoid the full consequences of their blunders.
By
the way, we often hear people say, with a tone of saintliness, "We're
a nonprofit organization," as if that alone translates into decency,
objectivity and selflessness. They want us to think they're in it
for the good of society and not for those "evil" profits. If we
gave it just a little thought and asked what kind of organization
throughout mankind's history has accounted for his greatest grief,
the answer wouldn't be a free market, private, profit-making enterprise;
it would be government, the largest nonprofit organization.
The Occupy
Wall Street protesters are following the path predicted by the great
philosopher-economist Frederic Bastiat, who said in The Law that
"instead of rooting out the injustices found in society, they make
these injustices general." In other words, the protesters don't
want to end crony capitalism, with its handouts and government favoritism;
they want to participate in it.
October
25, 2011
Walter
E. Williams is the John M. Olin distinguished professor of economics
at George Mason University, and a nationally syndicated columnist.
To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other
Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators
Syndicate web page.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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