by kabu » Mon 17 Apr 2006, 23:10:17
Fever’s over! Ruined ¾ of my holiday!
Eric, spare us. This is but a thread on a message board. It’s not like we hijacked a compilation of essays that were on the verge of being published. You’re being too sentimental.
Speaking of being sentimental, Jaws, my thanks to you for catalyzing the bettering of my understanding of socialism and capitalism, forcing me to flesh out what once contently remained superficial, at best. When you asked ID what real socialism is, I admit, I felt the need to google it- now I feel like studying economics. Formally, even… sort of… well, not really ($$$).
Anyhow, because socialism and capitalism are intertwined in virtually every society, it’s negligent to causally blame any form of depravation on one system or another, which is why I protested to your causally blaming Africa’s problems all on socialism (food drops, although, seem socialist, and they’re ruinous because they promote mere-dependency rather than self-sufficiency or even interdependency). That’s all I meant to say, but now we’re debating the merits of pure socialisms vs. pure capitalism, Eric’s lost his cool, Bill’s loosing hope, and now the moderates are intervening (and I agree with them too, but still wish to continue this debate; a good debate is one of the few things that hold my attention- it’s really the only way I can effectively learn about something).
I’m going to create subtitles for each subtopic, I think, just so that the readers who’ve so far managed to stand reading this thread can easily follow what we’re bickering about. I’ll also reorder everything so that premises within one subtopic that rest one another are underneath it that subtopic. Let me know if this makes things worse.
Whether or not basic needs are objective:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', '
')It is impossible to know what people's needs are. They are, have always been and will always be individually subjective.
You can't even claim that "food" is an objective need, since some people will find some foods to be incomestible while others will find them to be delicacies.
If you want to "scientifically" determine people's needs, then you need to give someone the power to determine everyone else's needs. But since ethics requires that the rules apply for everyone, it must mean that everyone must have the power to determine everyone else's needs. That will be chaos. We can only ethically let people determine their own needs subjectively.
This may very well be the crux of our difference in opinion.
Our need to eat to live- to eat the right food (one may be lactose intolerant or something)- is objective. Our need to drink water to live is objective. Our need to have a cure- or at least treatment- for our diseases, in order for us to be healthy, is objective. Are need to be protected from stabbings, so that we can all be safe, is objective. These are basic needs. These are the needs that a state that’s adopted a socialist economy must insure all people have.
Because taste is currently still a subjective experience, what people want to eat is subjective. This is where political power, not economical power, comes in. With a democratic, socialist state, people can vote for a system that addresses this. In other words, the food provided to the people can be decided upon using
true democracy (not like how an American-styled democracy would run things, where if 51% of people wanted just meat made available, 100% would have to live with it). Other wants can be meet, but they’d have to think of how produce it or trade for it themselves. Since it is of no benefit to the state to interfere outside of meeting its people’s basics needs, then this is possible; and since everyone’s only expected to contribute to everyone else’s
basic needs, there is free time to be had by all.
Is it the case that a society collecting and redistributing scarce goods for the purpose of supporting everyone’s basic needs is not compatible with everyone pursuing their wants outside of this socialist market, in what you’d call a... grey market *checks dictionary*? I do not see why not, however, but I am starting to understand where you’re coming from in saying that an economy can not be purely socialist, because what I am suggesting in response to addressing these “wants” seems to be definable as departure from socialism- maybe I wont have to read that German essay, after all- I hope I dodged that bullet!
Either way, regardless of what I’m arguing, I am with the moderates and am content with a mixture. I only believe that a socialist side of an economy ought to take precedence over the capitalist side, where as you’re arguing for an economy that’s purely capitalistic.
The Causes of Poverty:$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', ' ')But once again, this is not a problem of scarcity, it is a problem of poverty. Someone owning a farm does not exclude anyone from owning property. It only excludes them from owning that particular farm unless they want to make a fair exchange for it. It is only government socialist interference that excludes people from owning property, and this problem will never be solved by more socialism.
Property can be anything. A business can do anything. It doesn't have to be a land-based business, and in fact land-based businesses are so unprofitable in the west that they are supported by huge subsidies. It makes no sense to give land to the poor to make them less poor, they will never be able to compete anyway. What they need is an export business that trades with the wealthy world in a way that maximizes comparative advantage. That will allow them to produce and accumulate capital and make them wealthier.
I propose that poverty is indirectly related to scarcity, because the level of scarcity is related to the value of scare goods, and it is a deficiency in necessary scarce goods which defines poverty. If one can not produce enough to obtain these scarce goods, then one becomes impoverished. If acquiring the means to being more productive (not just land, I know) requires extra capital, then how can one escape such poverty?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')apital can be imported with free trade in capital, then comparative advantage will be maximized. This is what the "miracle" economies did. All it takes is freedom. The longer you deny it, the longer people will suffer needlessly.