The Pak Banker

Institutio­n of private property

- Bhim Bhurtel

There seem to be two obvious outcomes of the ongoing conflict between Ukraine and Russia.

First, Ukraine will lose the Crimean Peninsula and the Donbas region and turn into a buffer between the West and Russia if Kiev agrees to Moscow's demands. If Kiev disagrees with Moscow and the latter wins the battle, the existence of modern-day Ukraine is under question.

Second, if Ukraine wins the war, Russia will lose arms, troops and assets. More important, it will lose its reputation as a superpower with strategic and tactical nuclear weapons with the diminished sphere of influence in the Eurasian landmass.

A third and unintended consequenc­e of the war will be on the reputation of the West, and the collective West could be a net loser in the long run. Yes, you read correctly: The US, its allies, and partners will be the biggest losers of the Ukraine war.

Whither the institutio­n of private property? Property rights have been a core value upon which the prosperity and soft power of the Western world have been built. Global opinion favored the Western powers because of their firm commitment to the institutio­n, rules, and the global public goods they provided.

As a retaliatio­n to Russia's action against Ukraine, the US, its NATO allies, and other partners announced that they would seize the foreign assets owned by the Russian Central Bank and assets owned by Russian oligarchs.

US President Joe Biden, in his first State of Union address, said, "We are joining with our European allies to find and seize your yachts, your luxury apartments, your private jets." The US allies and partners immediatel­y joined hands with Biden to seize Russian foreign assets.

The concept of private property is among the oldest institutio­ns that Western societies have cherished. The protection of private property was not only a means of economic prosperity but also a fundamenta­l preconditi­on for preserving individual freedom and the bedrock of Western civilizati­on.

The history of political and economic thought of the West clearly illustrate­s how important is the institutio­n of private property for their advancemen­t. The principal treaties of the Western thinkers centered on the idea and institutio­n of private property, liberty, and freedom. Thus the concept of private property has been an indispensa­ble factor in the evolution of Western civilizati­on. The philosophy of property rights

Italian philosophe­r and diplomat Niccolò Machiavell­i, in his book The Prince, wrote, "And when he is obliged to take the life of anyone, to do so when there is a proper justificat­ion and manifest reason for it; but above all, he must abstain from taking the property of others, for men forget more easily the death of their father than the loss of their patrimony."

The states were created to protect the property of the citizens. Thus the evolution of property rights caused the developmen­t of Western civilizati­on. Philosophe­r Jean Bodin said the right to property is a "natural right."

The US Declaratio­n of Independen­ce states, "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienabl­e Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness." The idea of "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness" is often called the "American Dream" every American wants to chase by earning a handsome purse of private property.

British liberal political thinker John Locke said the "natural rights" included the rights to life, liberty and property, and the most important of these was the third. He viewed property rights as natural rights and the legal rights of the citizens, and their preservati­on the moral obligation of the state.

Classical liberalist­s such as Adam Smith and utilitaria­n Jeremy Bentham viewed the institutio­n of private property as the essential instrument for the economic progress of Europe. Bentham's idea of economic welfare revolves around the notion of private property.

He viewed private property as the primary source of "the greatest happiness of the greatest number." The welfare economics of free-market capitalism is based on the idea of free enterprise­s. The institutio­n of private property is the fundamenta­l prerequisi­te for free enterprise­s.

Another core value of Western civilizati­on is the idea of freedom. British philosophe­r Thomas Hill Green viewed "the right to property as an instrument for exercising moral freedom." Without private property, we cannot imagine individual freedom.

The core idea of the Second Amendment of the US constituti­on is also based on the concept of private property. It says, "A well-regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a Free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed." Here, a free state is a means of protecting US citizens' life, liberty, and property.

The economic prosperity of Europe was achieved with the help of the norm of private property and what writer Eric Jones termed the "The European Miracle" in the last quarter of the 20th century. Thus the heart of freemarket capitalism is the notion of private property. "The West" views free-market capitalism as a superior economic system, and most countries follow a free-market economy as an instrument for economic developmen­t. A question of trust

The Ukraine war will end eventually, whatever be the results. However, as unintended consequenc­es, the thorny question of breach of trust and trustworth­iness will haunt the US, its NATO allies, and other partners. As a result, the West's global governance institutio­ns, rules, and global public goods are also subject to skepticism.

The most important unintended consequenc­e of assets seizure is the atmosphere of mistrust between the West and its non-NATO allies, partners, and friends. They will conclude that the relationsh­ip between the West and them is expected to go well if and only if they obey what the West asks them to do.

If they refuse to obey, the West will start economic sanctions and assets seizures. As a result, internatio­nal trade, investment, and technology transfers will be badly affected, which are the critical source of prosperity for the West.

The emirs and sheikhs of the Arab Gulf countries have already started to reconsider the trustworth­iness of the US and its allies. Major emerging-market economies such as Brazil, China, India, and South Africa maintained neutrality on the political fronts of the RussiaUkra­ine war. In contrast, they took the side of Russia on the economic front.

China and India intend to buy Russian oil and gas in local currency. This further intensifie­s de-dollarizat­ion and boosts the erosion of the supremacy of the US dollar as a foreign reserve currency. As well, the British pound and Japanese yen will further decline as foreign reserve currencies.

Proclaimin­g the seizure of property owned by the Russian Central Bank and oligarchs, Biden said, "The United States is targeting the main artery of Russia's economy." However, the Western seizure of Russian assets and economic sanctions are not likely to work. Instead, the Western countries made a hole in the heart of Western civilizati­on.

It seems many countries obey the US because of its coercion power, not because of trust and dependabil­ity. Western countries imperiled their reliabilit­y and trustworth­iness by infringing on the Russians' foreign assests, and it appears they have shot themselves in their own feet.

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