Economics on Trial
- Ideas on
Liberty - July 2000
Neither
Left nor Right
by Mark Skousen
"Those who control the adjectives win." -- Larry
Abraham
The
use of the political labels "left" and "right" may
be popular in today's media,
but there are several reasons why the dichotomy is a false
and misleading guide to political and economic philosophy.
It implies that "left" is equally as extreme as "right,"
while the "middle of the road" position appears the more
moderate and balanced
position.
I call this system the pendulum approach, where each individual
is categorized along a political
spectrum
from "extreme left" to "extreme right." Recently
I encountered an
example in an economics textbook.
|
Radical
|
Liberal
|
Conservative
|
| Extreme
Left |
|
Extreme
Right
|
|
MARX
|
KEYNES
|
ADAM
SMITH
|
Source:
Mark Maier and Steve White, The First Chapter, 3rd
ed. (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1998),
p. 42.
The
problem with the pendulum approach
is that Adam Smith is characterized as "extreme" as Karl
Marx. By implication, neither economist is sensible. Yet the
evidence is overwhelming that Adam Smith's system of
natural liberty has advanced civilization far more than Karl
Marx's inexorable system of alienation and exploitation.
Moreover, in the pendulum approach, the middle-of-the-road
position held by John Maynard Keynes appears to be the moderate
ideal. A pendulum
that experiences friction will eventually come to
rest in the middle,
between
both extremes. But is that the best way to go?
A New Alternative: The Totem-Pole Approach
I
prefer a fresh approach,
which I call the
top-down or "totem pole" way. Instead of left to right,
I use top to bottom. In Indian folklore, the most-favored
chiefs are placed at the top of the totem pole, followed by
less impor tant chiefs below. Look at the next page for my
rendition of the same three economists according to the totem-pole
method.
In
this system, I rank Adam Smith first, Keynes second, and Marx
third.
Of the three,
Adam Smith advocated the highest degree of
economic
freedom. Nations that
have
adopted Smith's
vision
of laissez-faire capitalism have fared the best. Next is Keynes.
He usually favored maximum freedom in the microeco nomic sphere,
but frequently endorsed heavy intervention (inflation and
deficit spending) in the macro sphere. His big-government
formula has resulted in slower economic growth in many industrial
nations. The low man on the totem pole is Marx, who advocated
a command economy at both the micro and macro level. Historically,
centrally planned Marxist nations have vastly underperformed
the market economies.
Political and economic positions should not be divided by
left and right. They are either right or wrong. As Milton
Friedman has said many times, "There's only good economics
and
bad economics."
Avoid Being Close-Minded
A second reason why I avoid the left-right labels is that
it puts people and ideas into boxes. When someone's theories
are labeled and compartmentalized, thinking stops and name-calling
begins. There has been far too much bad blood spilt over the
years between camps that spend more time shouting epithets
than engaging in legitimate dialogue.
This criticism applies equally to the worn out adjectives
"liberal" and "conservative." If John Kenneth Galbraith
is a "liberal," why should conservatives listen to him'?
If Milton Friedman is a "conservative," why should liberals
read his books? I try not to prejudice myself. To me, both
are economists who have ideas worth examining.
The media will continue to use the hackneyed political lexicon
of yesteryear and engage in character assassination. But I
will resist the outdated and misleading left-wing/right-wing/liberal-conservative
battlelines, and treat every scholar, candidate, and philosopher
on his own merits, and not according to some arbitrary label.
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