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Published
in January, 2001, issue of Liberty Magazine:
THE
TROUBLED ECONOMICS OF AYN RAND
by Mark Skousen
"No
creator was prompted by a desire to serve his brothers..."
--Howard
Roark, The Fountainhead (1994:710)
Ayn
Rand, author of the celebrated Capitalism: The Unknown
Idea, is honored almost universally as the fountainhead
of market capitalism, an impassioned proponent of reason,
individualism, and rational self-interest.
There is much to praise in Ayn Rand's novels and writings,
especially her uncompromising defense of freedom and her unrelenting
denunciations of collectivism. No one has written more persuasively
about property rights, the right of an individual to safeguard
his wealth and property from the agents of coercion. Her novels
The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged have probably
done more than any other works of fiction to vindicate and
honor the glories of "making money."
Yet in reading her novels and writings, I was surprised to
learn that her work often portrays a strange, distorted view
of the money-making process. In a perverse way, her model
of business may even give aid to the cause of the enemies
of liberty--by giving capitalism a bad name.
Consumer Sovereign in The Fountainhead
Take, for example, Howard Roark's philosophy toward his architectural
work in The Fountainhead. In the beginning, Roark indicates
that he chose architecture as a profession because he loves
his work. He seeks to set the highest standards of excellence.
He tries to be creative. All of these traits are to be admired.
But then Roark denies a basic tenet of sound economics--the
principle of consumer sovereignty. When the dean of the architectural
school tells Roark, "Your only purpose is to serve him [the
client]," Roark objects. "I don't intend to build in order
to serve or help anyone. I don't intend to build in order
to have clients. I intend to have clients in order to build."
(1994:14) This bizarre, almost anti-social, attitude sounds
like a perverse rending of Say's Law, "supply creates its
own demand," or the statement made in the film Field of Dreams,
"If you build it, they will come." But supply only creates
demand if the supply can be sold to customers; and people
come to a new baseball field only if they want to play or
watch. Supply must satisfy demand, or it becomes a wasted
resource.
Now I have no problem with an architect who tries to set new
standards of design, just as I would applaud entrepreneurs
who seek to invent a new product or design a new process.
Such actions are often highly risky and financially dangerous,
and are often met with derision at first. Ayn Rand rightly
points out that they are a major cause of economic progress.
History is full of examples of "men who took first steps down
new roads armed with nothing but their own vision." (Rand
1994:710)
But the goal of all rational entrepreneurship must be to satisfy
the needs of consumers, not to ignore them! Discovering and
fulfilling the needs of customers is the essence of market
capitalism. Imagine how far a TV manufacturer would get if
he decides to build TVs that only tune into his five favorite
channels, the consumer be damned. It wouldn't be long before
he would be on the road to bankruptcy.
Rand Denies the Essence of Business Enterprise
In short, Howard Roark's conviction is irrational and contradicts
a basic premise of Rand's Objectivist philosophy. For Roark,
A is not A. He wants A to be B--his B, not his customer's
A. Thus, Ayn Rand's ideal man misconceives the very nature
and logic of capitalism--to fulfill the needs of customers
and thereby advance the general welfare. As Ludwig von Mises
writes in his book, The Anti-Capitalist Mentality,
"The profit system makes those men prosper who have succeeded
in filling the wants of the people in the best possible and
cheapest way. Wealth can be acquired only by serving the consumers."
(1972:2) Apparently Howard Roark doesn't believe in consumer
sovereignty. As he states in his final court defense, "An
architect needs clients, but he dos not subordinate his work
to their wishes." (1994:714) Really?
Talk to any architects about The Fountainhead. Yes,
they will tell you that there are a few self-centered, highly-egotistical,
elitist Howard-Roark types in architecture who can get away
with making monuments to their egos at their client's expense.
Frank Lloyd Wright, an architect Rand deeply admired, may
be one of them. But the book's thesis is entirely unrealistic
in the everyday world of commercial building. Occasionally
a client values more the notoriety of living in a home built
by a signature designer than getting what he really wants,
but not many. Almost all of Rand's scenarios are extreme and
idealistic, a strategy that works to sell novels, but does
violence to all sense of reality. Normally architects work
closely with the client and make numerous changes in order
to fit the client's needs.
Compromise is a necessary element to a successful completion
of a project. And this consumer-oriented approach is true
in all areas of capitalistic production. An architect or producer
of any product who acts like Roark in The Fountainhead
is likely to be out of work. Roark's fate is even worse--he
is guilty of his crime, blowing up a much-needed housing project
rather than permit the slightest alteration in his designs.
The jury may have exonerated him, but the market punishes
his kind of behavior.
Ironically, Ayn Rand herself compromised in the making of
the movie "The Fountainhead." She insisted that only Frank
Lloyd Wright would design the models for the film, but her
demand was later rejected due to Wright's outrageous fee.
In the end, the models were done by a studio set designer.
Rand called them "horrible" and "embarrassingly bad." But
the film was made and released. (Branden 1986:209) Oh, the
agonies of dealing with other people!
The fact that Howard Roark represents the ideal man in Ayn
Rand's novel and the fact that she denigrates other characters
in The Fountainhead who "compromise" with client's
demands suggest that Ayn Rand is philosophically in denial
when it comes to comprehending the nature of business. She
denies the very raison d'etre of capitalism--consumer sovereignty.
Assault on the Common Man
In this sense, Ayn Rand is not much different from other artists
and intellectuals. Artists often bash the capitalist system.
They hate the idea of subjecting their talents to crass commercialism
and the crude tastes of the common man. Yet Ludwig von Mises
chastised this snobbish attitude in The Anti-Capitalist Mentality:
"The judgment about the merits of a work of art is entirely
subjective. Some people praise what others disdain. There
is no yardstick to measure the aesthetic worth of a poem or
of a building." (1972:75) Mises adds that only through economic
progress -- the creation of surplus wealth -- has the level
of taste and art been raised to meet the criteria of the more
sophisticated artist. "When modern industry began to provide
the masses with the paraphernalia of a better life, their
main concern was to produce as cheaply as possible without
any regard to aesthetic values. Later, when the progress of
capitalism had raised the masses' standard of living, they
turned step by step to the fabrication of things which do
not lack refinement and beauty." (1972:80)
The Flaw in Atlas Shrugged
This brings us to the fatal flaw in Atlas Shrugged.
Rand's basic plot violates the whole rationale of business's
existence--constantly working within the system to find ways
to make money. There will never be a Galt's Gulch, where the
world's greatest entrepreneurs isolated themselves from the
rest of the world. There will never be enough principled business
leaders to fight the system. The business world does not typically
attract ideologues and true believers; it attracts people
primarily interested in money making by whatever means. They
wouldn't give John Galt the time of day. As Mises states,
"There is little social intercourse between the successful
businessmen and the nation's eminent authors, artists and
scientists...Most of the 'socialites' are not interested in
books and ideas." (Mises 1972:19) Ayn Rand admired Mises,
but apparently she didn't learn much from his writings. Pity.
Altruism Vs. Selfishness
Howard Roark's diatribe against consumer sovereignty is undoubtedly
a way to introduce Rand's philosophy of selfishness. There
are two extremes here: The philosophy of those who serve and
satisfy themselves only, and the philosophy of those who believe
that they should strive at all times to serve and sacrifice
for others. Rand labels the latter "altruism." In The Virtue
of Selfishness, she opines, "Altruism declares that any
action taken for the benefit of others is good, and any action
taken for one's own benefit is evil." (Rand 1999:80) Obviously,
Rand protests against altruism and espouses the opposite extreme.
As Francisco d'Anconias tells Dagny Taggart in Atlas Shrugged:
"Don't consider our interests or our desires. You have no
duty to anyone but yourself." (Rand 1992:802) No sacrifice,
no altruism, just pure egotistical selfishness.
The Adam Smith Solution
The founder of modern economics, Adam Smith, takes a different
approach by trying to incorporate both concepts in his "system
of natural liberty." Smith and Rand are in agreement about
the universal benefits of a free capitalistic society. But
Smith rejects Rand's vision of selfish independence. He teaches
that there are two driving forces behind man's actions--in
his Theory of Moral Sentiments, he identifies the first
as "sympathy" or "benevolence" toward others in society, while
in his Wealth of Nations, he focuses on the second,
"self interest," the right to pursue one's own business. Smith
believes that as the market economy develops and individuals
move away from their community, "self interest" becomes a
more dominant force than "sympathy." But both are essential
to achieve "universal opulence." (Smith 1965:11)
Adam Smith is famous for making a statement that sounds Randian
in tone: "It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the
brewer, or the baker, that we expect our dinner, but from
their regard to their own interest." (Smith 1965:14) But this
statement is often taken out of context. Smith's self-interest
never reaches the Randian selfishness that ignores the interest
of others. On the contrary, in Smith's mind, an individual's
goals cannot be fully achieved in business unless he appeals
to the self-interest of others. Smith says so in the very
next sentence: "We address ourselves, not to their humanity
but to their self-love, and never talk to them of our own
necessities but of their advantages." (Ibid.) Moreover, he
writes earlier on the same page, "He will be more likely to
prevail if he can interest their self-love in his favour....Give
me that which I want, and you shall have this which you want,
is the mean of every such offer." (Ibid.) Smith's theme echoes
his Christian heritage, particularly the golden rule, "do
unto others as you would have them do unto you." (See Matthew
7:12)
Perhaps a true capitalist spirit can best be summed up in
the Christian commandment, "Love thy neighbor as thyself."
(Matthew 22:39) Adam Smith and Ludwig von Mises would undoubtedly
agree with this creed, but apparently Howard Roark and John
Galt -- and their creator -- would agree with only half. And
that's a great tragedy for the greatest novelist of the 20th
century.
References
- Branden,
Barbara. 1986. The Passion of Ayn Rand. Doubleday.
- Mises,
Ludwig von. 1972 [1956]. The Anti-Capitalist Mentality.
Libertarian Press.
- Rand,
Ayn. 1992 [1957]. Atlas Shrugged. Dutton Books.
- Rand,
Ayn. 1994 [1943]. The Fountainhead. Penguin Books.
- Rand,
Ayn. 1999. The Ayn Rand Reader, ed. by Gary Hull
and Leonard Peikoff. Penguin Books.
- Smith,
Adam. 1965 [1776]. The Wealth of Nations. Modern
Library.
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