by MrBill » Mon 06 Feb 2006, 12:22:29
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Doly', 'T')o return to the main topic, one of the guiding principles of communism was to eliminate profit. Karl Marx wrote extensively about profit and capital, and he saw profit as the root of a lot of problems.
Of course, communism is only one way of running things eliminating profit. There are others. There may be small countries that have implemented other alternatives, but I don't know of any. Anybody is better informed?
Eliminating profits? Not that hard to do under other systems. Just run a business poorly and you will eliminate profits, which is why investors look at rates of return on capital when deciding in which companies to invest.
Free entry and exit into markets by many players (think gas stations or convenience stores) tends to drive excess economic returns down to the point of the risk free return on treasury bills. This net of costs should pay the owners the same for their entrepreneurialship as if they had just invested their money in bonds.
Under private ownership, hanging onto a business model when it is no longer suitable is also a good way to destroy capital and ultimately value. You can farm by hand using the same techniques as your grandfather, while your neighbors expand their farms, employ capital instead of labor and increase their productivity as well as their land under management. It is almost certain they will create more value while you will have lost money as real prices for your output fall while costs for your inputs rise. And you will lose the opportunity cost of employing your labor somewhere else for a salary.
Ditto for a firm that employs expensive, but inefficient labor, while they lose market share to competitors who earn more per unit of output per unit of input. Eventually, the high overhead will destroy value and may bankrupt the firm. Then neither the owners nor the workers will profit from the private ownership of assets.
I can go on, but I will probably just get attacked ; - )
RE altruism. Yes, it is likely a part of what makes us who we are. I think group social behavior and social cohesion has been extensively studied and catalogued in the animal kingdom, where they may have other economic/political models than we do not employing capital in the traditional sense of the word. However, animal kingdom analogies do not carry over well to explaining the benefits and disadvantages of the above mentioned socio-political economic models discussed such as socialism, communism, fascism, dictatorship, capitalism, etc. Although clearly there is a social cost of exclusion from the group and that can be measured. Altruism may be part of our collective consciousness, and need to be part of a community, both our human community and the natural world in which we live in, but it is not an explanation of what drives economic behavior.
For my two cents worth, profit is not the only driving motivation nor is the biological need to reproduce. Neither are bad, but neither tells the whole story. Simply, if I take my savings, add them to debt, make a risky investment by starting my own business, I want to be compensated for taking that risk and forgoing the safety of a salary. I may do that for a myriad of reasons, as simple as self-satisfaction of being self-employed or driven by greed. The act of being self-employed and starting a company is proof of either self-satisfaction or greed. It could be for lack of any alternative and an economic necessity.
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.