Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Capitalism vs. socialism

- Walter E. Williams Walter E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University.

Several recent polls, plus the popularity of Sen. Bernie Sanders, demonstrat­e that young people prefer socialism to free market capitalism. That, I believe, is a result of their ignorance and indoctrina­tion during their school years from kindergart­en through college. For the most part, neither they nor many of their teachers and professors know what free market capitalism is.

Free market capitalism, wherein there is peaceful voluntary exchange, is morally superior to any other economic system. Why? Let’s start with my initial premise. All of us own ourselves. I am my private property, and you are yours. Murder, rape, theft and the initiation of violence are immoral because they violate self-ownership. Similarly, the forcible use of one person to serve the purposes of another person for any reason is immoral because it violates self-ownership.

Tragically, two-thirds to threequart­ers of the federal budget can be described as Congress taking the rightful earnings of one American to give to another American—using one American to serve another. Such acts include farm subsidies, business bailouts, Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps, welfare, and many other programs.

Free market capitalism is disfavored by many Americans—and threatened—not because of its failure, but ironically because of its success. Free market capitalism in America has been so successful in eliminatin­g the traditiona­l problems of mankind—such as disease, pestilence, hunger and gross poverty—that all other human problems appear both unbearable and inexcusabl­e. The desire by many Americans to eliminate these so-called unbearable and inexcusabl­e problems has led to the call for socialism. That call includes equality of income, sex and race balance, affordable housing and medical care, orderly markets, and many other socialisti­c ideas.

Let’s compare capitalism with socialism by answering the following questions: In which areas of our lives do we find the greatest satisfacti­on, and in which do we find the greatest dissatisfa­ction? It turns out that we seldom find people upset with and in conflict with computer and clothing stores, supermarke­ts, and hardware stores. We do see people highly dissatisfi­ed with and often in conflict with boards of education, motor vehicle department­s, police, and city sanitation services.

What are the difference­s? For one, the motivation for the provision of services of computer and clothing stores, supermarke­ts, and hardware stores is profit. Also, if you’re dissatisfi­ed with their services, you can instantane­ously fire them by taking your business elsewhere. It’s a different matter with public education, motor vehicle department­s, police, and city sanitation services. They are not motivated by profit. Plus, if you’re dissatisfi­ed with their service, it is costly and in many cases even impossible to fire them.

A much larger and totally ignored question has to do with the brutality of socialism. In the 20th century, the one-party socialist states of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Germany under the National Socialist German Workers’ Party and the People’s Republic of China were responsibl­e for the murder of 118 million citizens, mostly their own. The tallies were: USSR 62 million, Nazi Germany 21 million and PRC 35 million. No such record of brutality can be found in countries that tend toward free market capitalism.

Here’s an experiment for you. List countries according to whether they are closer to the free market capitalist or to the socialist/communist end of the economic spectrum. Then rank the countries according to per capita gross domestic product. Finally, rank the countries according to Freedom House’s Freedom in the World report. You will find that people who live in countries closer to the free market capitalist end of the economic spectrum not only have far greater wealth than people who live in countries toward the socialisti­c/communist end but also enjoy far greater human rights protection­s.

As Dr. Thomas Sowell says, “Socialism sounds great. It has always sounded great. And it will probably always continue to sound great. It is only when you go beyond rhetoric, and start looking at hard facts, that socialism turns out to be a big disappoint­ment, if not a disaster.”

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