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The Culture
of Guilt
by Marian L. Tupy
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here for PDF version
Like
welfare dependency in developed countries, aid dependency
in developing countries has entrenched a ÔhandoutÕ mentalityÑand
anti-Western resentment.
We
live in a world of rights and entitlements. According to the
commonly held view, life in the West Ôentitles usÕ to freedom
from hunger, decent housing and healthcare. All of these entitlements
come at a price. They cost money that someone somewhere had
to earn. It is, therefore, incorrect to talk about ÔfreeÕ
provision of healthcare and welfare. Instead, it is more appropriate
to talk about a Ôwealth transferÕ between different groups
of people. On the one hand are the taxpayers and on the other
hand are the welfare recipients.
Before
the era of the welfare state, such transfers of wealth also
existed. But they were voluntary. They were based on a feeling
of empathy for those in need. In those days, there was a clear
understanding concerning the nature of this transfer. The
giver was seen as a benefactor, while the taker was seen as
a lucky recipient. The rich were expected to be generous,
whilst the poor were expected to be grateful. Under the welfare
state, however, the coercive power of the government compelled
those with higher income to share their wealth with those
on lower incomes. The more a person earned, the more he or
she had to pay in taxes.
That
progressive taxation was sometimes explained and defended
in terms of solidarity, equality and marginal utility. However,
by far the most popular explanation was that of ÔexploitationÕ.
The basis of this explanation rested in a zero-sum understanding
of economics, which assumed that the prosperity of one person
(a businessman, say) was directly dependent on the poverty
of another (a worker, say). According to that premise, wealth
is never produced or increased. Instead, it is only transferred
from the powerless to the powerful. But if this is true, humanity
should have remained in caves forever. Instead, the world
has grown ever richer. In fact, the workers in capitalist
countriesÑwhom Marx and Lenin claimed to be ÔexploitedÕÑare
today much richer than their counterparts in former socialist
countries. Ironically, it was these socialist countries that
claimed to have gotten rid of ÔexploitationÕ.
In
practice, all of the above assumptions contributed to the
growing separation between creation of economic value and
remuneration. The amount of money that both businessman and
worker were left with at the end of the day became disconnected
from the economic value that either of them had created. As
with most governmental actions, the introduction of the welfare
state also had unintended consequences. One of these was the
recognition by all members of society that their well-being
was less dependent on their performance in the marketplace
and more dependent on the goodwill of the government. As a
result, different special interest groups started to lobby
the government to receive better treatment. The other side
of the coin was that elections became the time for politicians
to bribe the electorate by promises of further entitlements.
Over
time, each of these wealth transfers or ÔentitlementsÕ became
less of a gift from a particular government and more of an
expectation to be honoured and even improved upon by any future
government. This structure of entitlements is now so deeply
engrained that any potential cutbacks are seen as illegitimate
transgressions on the legitimate rights of welfare recipients.
Aid
as an ÔentitlementÕ The giving and receiving of foreign aidÑbe
it in the form of outright financial grants, lending at discounted
rates or transfer of technology, machinery and other goodsÑis
increasingly controlled by the same assumptions.
At
its birth, foreign aid was seen as large-scale charity. The
Marshall Plan was thus understood as an American gift to the
war-ravaged continent of Europe. No European felt ÔentitledÕ
to it or implied that the creation of the Marshall Plan was
an American ÔdutyÕ or ÔresponsibilityÕ. Moreover, the plan
was always meant to be a short-term relief package with a
maximum duration of four years. As such, the plan stands in
stark contrast with the open-ended foreign aid programmes
in the underdeveloped world today. Though the benefits of
the Marshall Plan are still debated, the ineffectiveness of
subsequent foreign aid programmes is unambiguous. In Africa,
for example, there has actually emerged an inverse relationship
between foreign aid and development. For decades aid has served
to postpone necessary economic reform and to preserve the
hold on power of some of AfricaÕs most unsavoury dictators.
Part
of this transition from short-term relief of disasters to
long-term subsidies of failed states rests in a plethora of
theories purporting to explain why developed countries should
transfer their wealth to the underdeveloped ones. Past ÔexploitationÕ
of the colonies is often credited with making the developed
world rich. That is plainly not true. Britain, for example,
had become the richest country in the world long before she
acquired any significant colonial possessions. Other rich
countries, Switzerland, Norway and Finland among them, never
had any colonies. Similarly, former colonial status is often
associated with poverty. But both Canada and Australia used
to be colonies. Today, these two countries are very prosperous.
Then there was Ôperiphery theoryÕ. This theory maintained
that the world was permanently divided into rich core and
poor periphery, where the former exploited and impoverished
the latter. The spectacular success of previously poor countries,
such as Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore, Hong Kong and Chile
showed this view to be mistaken.
Despite
irrefutable empirical evidence to the contrary, the above
theories possess remarkable staying power. Implicit in all
these theories is, as with domestic economic arrangements
in welfare states, the separation between economically valuable
activities and reward. In a nutshell, many people do not see
the wealth of the United States, for instance, as a result
of domestic policies conducive to economic growthÑthe most
important of which are a free economy and the rule of law.
Instead, they see it resulting from a variety of international
financial conspiracies.
The
most popular among these conspiracy theories is price fixing.
It is argued that companies in rich countries keep the poor
countries from receiving a ÔfairÕ price for their produce.
Coffee is often given as an example. But that is untrue. The
daily price of coffee is determined by decisions made by millions
of coffee-drinkers and producers of coffee across the globe.
The more coffee is consumed, the more expensive it becomes.
The less coffee is consumed, the less expensive it becomes.
Thus, if everyone suddenly decided to drink coffee, demand
for coffee would outstrip supply and the price of coffee would
skyrocket. Conversely, if everyone stopped drinking coffee,
supply of coffee would outstrip demand and the price of coffee
would plummet.
The
blame game
Pronouncements of many ill-informed activists and leaders
in the under-developed world seem to suggest that economic
inequality in the world is one of the central reasons why
it is acceptable to hate the West in general and the US in
particular. As with domestic economics, in international economics
it is often wrongly assumed that the prosperity of the developed
world is directly dependent on the poverty of the underdeveloped
world. Thus, it is not unusual to hear some activists claim
that ÔexcessiveÕ consumption in the developed world makes
the underdeveloped world starve. But these two are totally
unconnected. In the developed world, the level of consumption,
for example, of foodstuffs and electricity, is proportionate
to the level of its production of these items. On the other
hand, the level of starvation in the underdeveloped world
is proportionate to the level of its inabilityÑmainly due
to mismanagementÑto produce much.
In
a recent BBC documentary, children at school in Cambridgeshire,
England, were shown a report concerning starving children
in Africa. After watching the report, a number of pupils promised
to stop ÔwastingÕ their food as though their ÔwasteÕ had anything
to do with poverty in Africa. In reality, African children
starve because their countries either do not produce food,
or cannot purchase it in the international markets because
of lack of revenueÑwhich, after all, also needs to be earned
through production. If anything, the pro-foreign aid activists
should encourage children in Britain to consume more not less,
for the Value Added Tax (VAT) which the UK government imposes
on processed food sales would increase the governmentÕs tax-revenue,
which in turn could be used to lavish more aid on the underdeveloped
world. More aid is, of course, what the activists are demanding.
But how is it to be facilitated?
Unlike
in the domestic arena, there is no world government to take
from some and give to others. It is for this reason that many
wish to embolden the United Nations (UN) to spread its activities
into the economic area. The proposal for an Economic Security
Council, voiced at the World Summit on Sustainable Development
in Johannesburg last September, is an example of an ingenious
way in which wealth could be transferred from the prosperous
nations to those the UN will define as ÔneedyÕ. Keeping with
the egalitarian logic of recent decades, there would undoubtedly
be pressure for the Economic Security Council to conduct its
affairs according to a majority vote. It does not take a rocket
scientist to figure out who would constitute the majority
and who would have to pay up.
hus,
foreign aid is no longer what it briefly wasÑcharity. It too
has become a form of entitlement. It is spoken of in terms
of Ôwealth sharingÕ or Ôexpertise sharingÕ. Thus, when a new
foreign aid package is announced, one never hears a word of
gratitude from its intended recipients. In fact, every new
donation is met with disapproving comments about the level
of that aid. The commitments to Ôwealth sharingÕ that the
developed world made in Johannesburg, for example, were universally
derided as unsatisfactory. One South African commentator observed
that ÔThe developed nations have once again failed to meet
foreign aid targetsÕ. But who sets these targets? Clearly,
it is not taxpayers in the developed world, who will have
to pay for this foreign aid.
As
with domestic economic arrangements, the reason for the failure
to take the views of taxpayers in the developed world into
account rests in the separation between creation of economic
value and remuneration. One example shows this clearly. As
South AfricaÕs President Thabo Mbeki recently stated, for
the first time the world has enough resources and expertise
to eradicate poverty. Predictably, Mr Mbeki emphasised that
the only thing needed is the will to do so. Actually, Ôthe
worldÕ has nothing. All the wealth and expertise belongs to
specific individuals residing in specific countries. The proverbial
pot into which all good things flow only to be divided up
among those in need does not exist. As Robert Nozick pointed
out, every dollar comes with rights attached. These rights,
however, are not those of welfare recipientsÑbe they domestic
or internationalÑbut those of producers of economic value.
Conclusion
Contrary to common misconception, the reasons for global economic
inequality rest at a local level. They include the lack of
rule of law, lack of respect for private property, economic
collectivism, corruption and war. That said, the above analysis
of the nature of the problem is the easy part. The difficulty
rests in ascertaining how to address decades of misinformation
regarding international economics. Perhaps the most obvious
first step is for Western countries like Australia and the
United States to stop subsidising regimes which treat foreign
aid as an entitlement and a matter of justice. The governing
elites in the underdeveloped world must assume responsibility
for decades of misgovernance.
Marian L.
Tupy is Assistant Director of the Project for Global Economic
Liberty at the Cato Institute. This is adapted from a recent
piece posted at www.techcentralstation.be.
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