"The Pope v. Capitalism"
Sydney M. Williams
Thought of the Day
“The Pope v. Capitalism”
July 16, 2015
By
all accounts, the Pope is a man who cares deeply for the world’s poor. But he
is less sound when it comes to matters of history and economics.
Like
any vocation, capitalism is a pyramid, with a few successful people at the top.
It is like an army or a ship, where
there is one commander. It is similar to sports and entertainment. Just as
there is only one CEO at a company, there is only one Kobe Bryant and one
Taylor Swift. There is only one Pope. By definition, success reflects
inequality – in aspiration, talent, effort and luck. Equality of opportunity is
a worthy goal. Equality in outcomes is not possible. It cannot be otherwise.
Those on the left who scream loudest about inequality are themselves often at
the pinnacle of a career – a success they would not have had in a flat society.
“Inequality”
is a political “hot-button” word. It plays well in societies addicted to
sound-bites and with people who lack perspective. What exactly do the words
“inequality” and “redistribution,” and the phrase “fairness economy” really
mean? Humpty Dumpty provided an answer when he said to Alice , “When I use a word it means exactly what I choose it to mean – neither
more nor less.” Humpty Dumpty was referring to “glory,” but one may substitute
any number of words whose definitions, in their ambiguity, are convenient for
hedging politicians and moral relativists.
We
must remember democratic capitalism has, over time, done more to reduce poverty
than any other economic system, form of government, religion or church,
including the Catholic Church. Two years ago, “The Economist” estimated that
one billion people had been removed from the ranks of extreme poverty over the
previous twenty years because of trade and free-market capitalism. (Extreme
poverty, as measured by the World Bank, refers to those living on less than
$1.25 per day.) In 2011, researchers at the Brookings Institute concluded that
“…the world – even Sub-Saharan Africa – is in the midst of rapid poverty
reduction.” They credited economic growth brought on by globalization. The
collapse of the Soviet Union ushered in better
standards of living for millions of East Europeans. China ’s incorporation of capitalist
ideas into Communism has, according to researchers at Yale, recorded “great
feats in poverty reduction.”
The
pursuit of profit is critical to a world that demands economic growth – a
necessity to accommodate the natural growth in population and to allow for the
eradication of poverty. Without profits, what incentives do people have to
invest time, labor and capital? Without profits, businesses cannot expand and
hire. Without profits, economies would grind to a halt, people would starve and
disease would run rampant.
Why,
then, did the Pope refer to profits as “the dung of the devil?” His remark was
that of a man combating 19th Century robber barons or tilting at
colonialism. The Western world depicted by Charles Dickens and Edith Wharton
was one that did take advantage of labor. Their novels starkly showed
societies’ inequalities. But today that world exists mainly in novels and
history books. European colonialism did take advantage of third world nations,
but it, too, died in the wake of World War II.
It
is government, not capitalism that abets inequality. Complexity in the tax code
works to the advantage of big corporations and the wealthy. Regulation is
supposed to aid the consumer, when in fact it too often is used to bar
competition. Challengers to the status quo like Uber run afoul of the Left.
So-called liberals claim their interest is to represent (in the case of Uber)
“contract workers,” when in truth they support unions and wealthy owners of cab
companies. European exploiters of labor and natural resources have been
replaced by governments run by totalitarian regimes, like we see in places like
Cuba and Venezuela, and countries recently visited by the Pope – Bolivia,
Ecuador and Paraguay.
Free
market capitalism is not the issue. It is rules in developed economies that
serve the wealthy and regulations designed to protect existing businesses. And
it is regimes that ignore the rule of law and that do not honor property
rights. Profits are not evil; they are necessary for the elimination of
poverty, but they only work in societies where citizens have the rights of a
free people. To blindly demean capitalism is to destroy the goose that laid the
golden egg.
Where
capitalism has failed is in extolling its virtues. Arthur Brooks, president of the
American Enterprise Institute, has done more than anyone to lay out the case
for moral capitalism. In a recent interview in the Wall Street Journal,
he spoke of the paradox between socialism and capitalism: the former has higher
ideals, but fails in practice, while capitalism succeeds in practice, even
though it is based on greed. But it succeeds, he noted, not because it is based
on greed, “but because the freedom to trade and do business with others is in
harmony with our God-given nature.” Mr. Brooks concluded: “In the capitalist
view, poor people aren’t liabilities to be managed by government; they are
human beings with untapped potential.”
Every
system needs critics, including free-market capitalism. It is why capitalism
works best within a framework of democracy. In this instance, the freedom to
criticize provides Left-wing populists like Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren
the opportunity to disagree. A pluralistic society, voting in self-interest,
tends to rein in excess. But none of that should detract from the overwhelming
evidence that free market capitalism has done more to eliminate poverty than
anything else, including, as I wrote, the Church.
If
the Pope truly wanted to focus on raising the well-being of the four or five
hundred million of the earth’s population who still live on less than $1.25 per
day, he should focus on those governments who deprive their citizens of their
basic rights, including the right to succeed. He should call out those
governments that do not abide by the rule of law and that do not protect
private property. He should expound the moral case for democratic, free-market
capitalism.
Labels: TOTD
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