Hans-Hermann
Hoppe
The Political Economy Of Monarchy And
Democracy,
And The Idea Of A Natural Order
1.
THEORY: THE COMPARATIVE ECONOMICS
OF PRIVATE AND PUBLIC GOVERNMENT OWNERSHIP
A government is a territorial
monopolist of compulsion—an agency which may engage in continual,
institutionalized property rights violations and the exploitation—in the form
of expropriation, taxation and regulation—of private property owners. Assuming
no more than self-interest on the part of government agents, all governments
must be expected to make use of this monopoly and thus exhibiting a tendency
toward increased exploitation.(1) However, not every form of government can be
expected to be equally successful in this endeavor or to go about it in the
same way. Rather, in light of elementary economic theory, the conduct of
government and the effects of government policy on civil society can be
expected to be systematically different, depending on whether the government
apparatus is owned privately or publicly.(2)
The
defining characteristic of private government ownership is that the
expropriated resources and the monopoly privilege of future expropriation are
individually owned. The appropriated resources are added to the ruler's
private estate and treated as if they were a part of it, and the monopoly
privilege of future expropriation is attached as a title to this estate and
leads to an instant increase in its present value ('capitalization' of monopoly
profit). Most importantly, as private owner of the government estate, the ruler
is entitled to pass his possessions onto his personal heir; he may sell rent,
or give away part or all of his privileged estate and privately pocket the
receipts from the sale or rental; and he may personally employ or dismiss every
administrator and employee of his estate.
In
contrast, with a publicly owned government the control over the government
apparatus lies in the hands of a trustee, or caretaker. The caretaker may use
the apparatus to his personal advantage, but he does not own it. He cannot sell
government resources and privately pocket the receipts, nor can he pass
government possessions onto his personal heir. He owns the current use of
government resources, but not their capital value. Moreover, while entrance
into the position of a private owner of government is restricted by the owner's
personal discretion, entrance into the position of a caretaker-ruler is open.
Anyone, in principle, can become the government's caretaker.
From
these assumptions two central, interrelated predictions can be deduced: (l) A
private government owner will tend to have a systematically longer planning
horizon, i.e., his degree of time preference will be lower, and accordingly,
his degree of economic exploitation will tend to be less than that of a
government caretaker; and (2), subject to a higher degree of exploitation, the
nongovernmental public will also be comparatively more present-oriented under a
system of publicly-owned government than under a regime of private government
ownership.
(
1 ) A private government owner will predictably try to maximize his total
wealth; i.e., the present value of his estate and his current income. He
will not want to increase his current income at the expense of a more
than proportional drop in the present value of his assets, and because acts of
current income acquisition invariably have repercussions on present asset
values (reflecting the value of all future—expected—asset earnings discounted
by the rate of time preference), private ownership in and of itself leads to
economic calculation and thus promotes farsightedness. In the case of the
private ownership of government, this implies a distinct moderation with
respect to the ruler's incentive to exploit his monopoly privilege of
expropriation, for acts of expropriation are by their nature parasitic upon
prior acts of production on the part of the nongovernmental public. Where
nothing has first been produced, nothing can be expropriated; and where
everything is expropriated, all future production will come to a shrieking
halt. Accordingly, a private government owner will want to avoid exploiting his
subjects so heavily, for instance, as to reduce his future earnings potential
to such an extent that the present value of his estate actually falls. Instead,
in order to preserve or possibly even enhance the value of his personal
property, he will systematically restrain himself in his exploitation policies.
For the lower the degree of exploitation, the more productive the subject
population will be, and the more productive the population, the higher will be
the value of the ruler's parasitic monopoly of expropriation. He will use his
monopolistic privilege, of course. He will exploit. But as the government's
private owner, it is in his interest to draw parasitically on a growing,
increasingly productive and prosperous non-government economy as this would
effortlessly also increase his own wealth and prosperity—and the degree of
exploitation thus would tend to be low .
Moreover,
private ownership of government implies moderation and farsightedness for yet
another reason. All private property is by definition exclusive property. He
who owns property is entitled to exclude everyone else from its use and
enjoyment; and he is at liberty to choose with whom, if anyone, he is willing
to share in its usage. Typically, he will include his family and exclude all
others, except as invited guests or as paid employees or contractors. Only the
ruling family—and to a minor extent its friends, employees and business
partners—share in the enjoyment of the expropriated resources and can thus lead
a parasitic life. Because of these restrictions regarding entrance into
government and the exclusive status of the individual ruler and his family,
private government ownership stimulates the development of a clear "class
consciousness" on the part of the non-governmental public and promotes the
opposition and resistance to any expansion of the government's exploitative
power. A clear-cut distinction between the—few—rulers on the one hand and the—many—ruled
on the other exists, and there is little risk or hope of anyone of either class
ever falling or rising from one class to the other. Confronted with an almost
insurmountable barrier in the way of upward mobility, the solidarity among the
ruled—their mutual identification as actual or potential victims of
governmental property rights violations—is strengthened, and the risk to the
ruling class of losing its legitimacy as the result of increased exploitation
is heightened.(3)
In
distinct contrast, the caretaker of a publicly owned government will try to
maximize not total government wealth (capital values and current income), but
current income (regardless, and at the expense, of capital values). Indeed,
even if the caretaker wishes to act differently, he cannot. Because as
public property government resources are not for sale, and without market
prices economic calculation is impossible. Accordingly, it has to be
regarded as unavoidable that public government ownership will result in
continual capital consumption. Instead of maintaining or even enhancing the
value of the government estate, as a private owner would tend to do, a
government's temporary caretaker will quickly use up as much of the government
resources as possible, for what he does not consume now, he may never
be able to consume. In particular, a caretaker—as distinct from a
government's private owner—has no interest in not ruining his country. For why
should he not want to increase his exploitation, if the advantage of a
policy of moderation—the resulting higher capital value of the government
estate —cannot be reaped privately, while the advantage of the opposite policy
of increased exploitation—a higher current income —can be so reaped? To a
caretaker, unlike to a private owner, moderation has only disadvantages and no
advantages.(4)
In
addition, with a publicly owned government anyone in principle can become a
member of the ruling class or even the supreme power. The distinction between
the rulers and the ruled as well as the class consciousness of the ruled become
blurred. The illusion even arises that the distinction no longer exists: that
with a public government no one is ruled by anyone, but everyone instead rules
himself. Accordingly, public resistance against government power is
systematically weakened. While exploitation and expropriation before might have
appeared plainly oppressive and evil to the public, they seem much less so,
mankind being what it is, once anyone may freely enter the ranks of those who
are at the receiving end. Consequently, not only will exploitation increase,
whether openly in the form of higher taxes or discretely as increased
governmental money 'creation' (inflation) or legislative regulation. Likewise,
the number of government employees ('public servants') will rise absolutely as
well as relatively to private employment, in particular attracting and
promoting individuals with high degrees of time preference, and low and limited
farsightedness.
(2)
In contrast to the right to self-defense in the event of a criminal attack, the
victim of government violations of private property rights may not legitimately
defend himself against such violations.(5)
The
imposition of a government tax on property or income violates a property
owner's and income producer's rights as much as theft does. In both cases the
owner-producer's supply of goods is diminished against his will and without his
consent. Government money or 'liquidity' creation involves no less a fraudulent
expropriation of private property owners than the operations of a criminal
counterfeiting gang. As well, any government regulation as to what an owner may
or may not do with his property—beyond the rule that no one may physically
damage the property of others and that all exchange and trade be voluntary and
contractual— implies a "taking" of somebody's property, on a par with
acts of extortion, robbery, or destruction. But taxation, the government's
provision for liquidity, and government regulations, unlike their criminal
equivalents, are considered legitimate, and the victim of government
interference, unlike the victim of a crime, is not entitled to
physically defend and protect his property.
Owing
to their legitimacy, then, government violations of property rights affect
individual time preferences in a systematically different and much more
profound way than crime. Like crime, all government interference with private
property rights reduces someone's supply of present goods and thus raises his
effective time preference rate. However, government offenses—unlike crime—
simultaneously raise the time preference degree of actual and potential
victims because they also imply a reduction in the supply of future goods
(a reduced rate of return on investment). Crime, because it is illegitimate,
occurs only intermittently—the robber disappears from the scene with his loot
and leaves his victim alone. Thus, crime can be dealt with by increasing one's
demand for protective goods and services (relative to that for non-protection
goods) so as to restore or even increase one's future rate of investment return
and make it less likely that the same or a different robber will succeed a
second time. In contrast, because they are legitimate, governmental property
rights violations are continual. The offender does not disappear into hiding
but stays around, and the victim does not 'arm' himself but must (at least he
is generally expected to) remain defenseless. The actual and potential victims
of government property rights violations—as demonstrated by their continued
defenselessness vis-à-vis their offenders—respond by associating a permanently
higher risk with all future production and systematically adjusting their
expectations concerning the rate of return on all future investment
downward. By simultaneously reducing the supply of present and expected
future goods, then, governmental property rights violations not only raise time
preference rates (with given schedules) but also time preference schedules.
Because owner-producers are—and see themselves as —defenseless against future
victimization by government agents, their expected rate of return on
productive, future-oriented actions is reduced all-around, and accordingly, all
actual and potential victims become more present-oriented.(6)
Moreover,
because the degree of exploitation is comparatively higher under a publicly
owned government, this tendency toward present-orientation will be
significantly more pronounced if the government is publicly owned than if it is
owned privately.(7)
II. APPLICATION: THE TRANSITION FROM MONARCHY TO DEMOCRACY
(1789-1918)
Hereditary monarchies represent
the historical example of privately owned governments, and democratic republics
that of publicly owned governments.
For
most of its history, mankind, insofar as it was subject to any government
control at all, was under monarchical rule. There were exceptions: Athenian
democracy, Rome during its republican era until 31 B.C., the republics of
Venice, Florence and Genoa during the renaissance period, the Swiss cantons
since 1291, the United Provinces from 1648 until 1673, and England under
Cromwell from 1649 until 1660. Yet these were rare occurrences in a world
dominated by monarchies. With the exception of Switzerland, they were
short-lived phenomena. Constrained by monarchical surroundings, all older
republics satisfied the open-entry condition of public property only
imperfectly, for while a republican form of government implies by definition
that the government is not privately but publicly owned, and a republic can
thus be expected to possess an inherent tendency toward the adoption of
universal suffrage, in all of the earlier republics, entry into government was
limited to relatively small groups of "noblemen".
With
the end of World War I, mankind truly left the monarchical age.(8) In the
course of one and a half centuries since the French Revolution, Europe, and in
its wake the entire world, have undergone a fundamental transformation.
Everywhere, monarchical rule and sovereign kings were replaced by
democratic-republican rule and sovereign "peoples".
The
first assault of republicanism and the idea of popular sovereignty on the
dominating monarchical principle was repelled with the military defeat of
Napoleon and the restoration of Bourbon rule in France; as a result of the
revolutionary terror and the Napoleonic wars, republicanism was widely
discredited for much of the 19th century. However, the democratic-republican
spirit of the French revolution left a permanent imprint. From the restoration
of the monarchical order in 1815 until the outbreak of WW I in 1914, all
across Europe popular political participation and representation was
systematically expanded. The franchise was successively widened and the powers
of popularly elected parliaments increased everywhere.(9)
From
1815 to 1830, the right to vote in France was still severely restricted under
the restored Bourbons. Out of a population of some 30 million, the electorate
included only France's very largest property owners—about 100,000 people (or
less than one half of one percent of the population above the age of 20). As a
result of the July Revolution of 1830, the abdication of Charles X and the
ascension to the throne of the Duke of Orleans, Louis Philippe, the number of
voters increased to about 200,000. As a result of the revolutionary upheavals
of 1848, France again turned republican, and a universal and unrestricted
suffrage for all male citizens above the age of 21 was introduced. Napoleon III
was elected by nearly 5.5 million votes out of an electorate of more than 8
million.
In
the United Kingdom, after 1815 the electorate consisted of some 500,000
well-to-do property owners (about 4 percent of the population above age 20).
The Reform Bill of 1832 lowered the property owner requirements and extended
the franchise to about 800,000. The next extension, from about 1 million to 2
million, came with the Second Reform Bill of 1867. In 1884 property
restrictions were relaxed even further, and the electorate increased to about 6
million (almost a third of the population above age 20 and more than
three-fourths of all male adults).
In
Prussia, as the most important of the 39 independent German states recognized
after the Vienna Congress, democratization set in with the revolution of 1848
and the constitution of 1850. The lower chamber of the Prussian parliament was
hence elected by universal male suffrage. However, until 1918 the electorate
remained stratified into three estates with different voting powers. For
example, the wealthiest people—those who contributed a third of all taxes—
elected a third of the members of the lower house. In 1867 the North German
Confederation including Prussia and 21 other German states was founded. Its
constitution provided for universal unrestricted suffrage for all males above
the age of 25. In 1871, after the victory over Napoleon III, the constitution
of the North German Confederation was essentially assumed by the newly founded
German Empire. Out of a total population of around 35 million, nearly 8 million
people (or about a third of the population above 20) elected the first German
Reichstag.
After
Italy's political unification under the leadership of the Kingdom of Sardinia
and Piedmont in 1861, initially the vote was only given to about 500,000 people
out of a population of some 25 million (about 3.5 percent of the population
above age 20). In 1882, the property requirements were relaxed, and the minimum
age was lowered from 25 to 21 years. As a result, the Italian electorate
increased to more than 2 million. In 1913, an almost universal and unrestricted
suffrage for all males above 30 and minimally restricted suffrage for males
above 21 was introduced, raising the number of Italian voters to more than 8
million (more than 40 percent of the population above 20).
In
Austria, restricted and unequal male suffrage was introduced in 1873. The
electorate, composed of four classes or curia of unequal voting powers,
totaled 1.2 million voters out of a population of about 20 million (10 percent
of the population above 20). In 1867 a fifth curia was added. And forty
years later the curia system was abolished, and universal and equal
suffrage for males above age 24 was adopted, bringing the number of voters
close to 6 million (almost 40 percent of the population above 20).
Russia
had elected provincial and district councils—zemstva —since 1864; and in
1905, as a fallout of its lost war against Japan, it created a parliament—the Duma—which
was elected by a near universal, although indirect and unequal, male suffrage.
As for Europe's minor powers, universal or almost universal and equal male
suffrage has existed in Switzerland since 1848, and was adopted between 1890
and 1910 in Belgium, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Spain, Greece, Bulgaria,
Serbia, and Turkey.
Although
increasingly emasculated, the monarchical principle remained dominant until the
cataclysmic events of WW I. Before 1914, only two republics existed in Europe —
France and Switzerland. And of all major European monarchies, only the United
Kingdom could be classified as a parliamentary system; that is, one where the
supreme power was vested in an elected parliament. Only four years later, after
the United States—where the democratic principle implied in the idea of a
republic had only recently been carried to victory as a result of the
destruction of the secessionist Confederacy by the centralist Union government (10) — had entered the European war and decisively
determined its outcome, monarchies had all but disappeared, and Europe turned
to democratic republicanism.(11)
In
Europe, the defeated Romanovs, Hohenzollerns, and Habsburgs had to abdicate or
resign, and Russia, Germany, and Austria became democratic republics with
universal—male and female—suffrage and parliamentary governments. Likewise, all
of the newly created successor states—Poland, Finland, Estonia, Latvia,
Lithuania, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia (with the sole exception of Yugoslavia)
— adopted democratic republican constitutions. In Turkey and Greece, the
monarchies were overthrown. Even where monarchies remained nominally in
existence, as in Great Britain, Italy, Spain, Belgium, the Netherlands, and the
Scandinavian countries, monarchs no longer exercised any governing power.
Universal adult suffrage was introduced, and all government power was invested
in parliaments and 'public' officials.(12) A new world order—the democratic republican
age under the aegis of a dominating U.S. government— had begun.
III. EVIDENCE AND ILLUSTRATIONS: EXPLOITATION AND PRESENT-
ORIENTEDNESS UNDER MONARCHY AND DEMOCRATIC REPUBLICANISM
From the viewpoint of economic
theory, the end of WW I can be identified as the point in time at which private
government ownership was completely replaced by public government ownership,
and whence a systematic tendency toward increased exploitation—government
growth—and rising degrees of social time preference—present-orientedness—can be
expected to take off. Indeed, such has been the grand, underlying theme of
post-WWI Western history: With some forebodings in the last third of the l9th
century in conjunction with an increased emasculation of the 'ancien regimes',
from 1918 onward practically all indicators (1) of governmental exploitation
and (2) of rising time preferences have exhibited a systematic upward tendency.
III.
I. Indicators of Exploitation
There
is no doubt that the amount of taxes imposed on civil society increased
during the monarchical age.(13) However, throughout the entire period, the share
of government revenue remained remarkably stable and low. Economic
historian Carlo M. Cipolla concludes, "All in all, one must admit that the
portion of income drawn by the public sector most certainly increased from the
eleventh century onward all over Europe, but it is difficult to imagine that,
apart from particular times and places, the public power ever managed to draw
more than 5 to 8 percent of national income." And he then goes on to note
that this portion was not systematically exceeded until the second half of the
19th century.(14) Until then, of all Western
European countries only the United Kingdom, for instance, had an income tax
(from 1843 on). France first introduced some form of income tax in 1873, Italy
in 1877, Norway in 1892, the Netherlands in 1894, Austria in 1898, Sweden in
1903, the U.S. in 1913, Switzerland in 1916, Denmark and Finland in 1917,
Ireland and Belgium in 1922, and Germany in 1924.(15)
Yet even at the time of the outbreak of WW I, total government expenditure as a
percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) typically had not risen above 10
percent and only rarely, as in the case of Germany, exceeded 15 percent. In
striking contrast, with the onset of the democratic republican age, total
government expenditure as a percentage of GDP typically increased to 20 to 30
percent in the course of the 1920s and 1930s, and by the mid- 1970s had
generally reached 50 percent.(16)
There
is also no doubt that total government employment increased during the
monarchical age. But until the very end of the l9th century, government
employment rarely exceeded 3 percent of the total labor force. In contrast, by
the mid-1970s government employment as a percentage of the total labor force
had typically grown to above 15 percent.(17)
The
same pattern emerges from an inspection of inflation and data on the money
supply. The monarchical world was generally characterized by the existence
of a commodity money—typically silver or gold. A commodity money
standard makes it difficult, if not impossible, for a government to inflate the
money supply. There had been attempts to introduce an irredeemable fiat currency.
But these fiat money experiments, associated in particular with the Bank of
Amsterdam, the Bank of England, and John Law and the Banque Royale of France,
had been regional curiosities which ended quickly in financial disasters, such
as the collapse of the Dutch "Tulip Mania" in 1637 and the
"Mississippi Bubble" and the "South Sea Bubble" in 1720. As
hard as they tried, monarchical rulers did not succeed in establishing
monopolies of pure fiat currencies, i.e., of irredeemable government paper monies,
which can be created virtually out of thin air, at practically no cost.
It
was only under conditions of all-around democratic republicanism, after 1918,
that this feat was accomplished. During WW I, as during earlier wars,
belligerent governments went off the gold standard. Unlike earlier wars,
however, WW I did not conclude with a return to the gold standard. Instead,
from the mid1920s until 1971, and interrupted by a series of international
monetary crises, a pseudo-gold standard —the gold exchange standard— was
implemented. In 1971, the last remnant of the international gold standard was
abolished. Since then, and for the first time in history, the entire world has
adopted a pure fiat money system of freely fluctuating government paper
currencies.(18)
As
a result, a seemingly permanent secular tendency toward inflation and currency
depreciation has come into existence.
During
the monarchical age, with a commodity money largely outside of government
control the "level" of prices had generally fallen and the purchasing
power of money increased, except during times of war or new gold discoveries.
Various price indices for Britain, for instance, indicate that prices were
substantially lower in 1760 than they had been hundred years earlier; and in
1860 they were lower than they had been in 1760.(19)
Connected by an international gold standard, the development in other countries
was similar.(20) In sharp contrast, during the
democratic republican age with the world financial center shifted from Britain
to the U.S., a very different pattern emerged. For instance, shortly after WW
I, in 1921, the U.S. wholesale commodity price index stood at 113.(21) After WW II, in 1948, it had risen to 185. In
1971 it was 255, by 1981 it reached 658, and in 1991 it was near 1,000. During
only two decades of irredeemable fiat money, the consumer price index in the
U.S. rose from 40 in 1971 to 136 in 1991, in the United Kingdom it climbed from
24 to 157, in France from 30 to 137, and in Germany from 56 to 116.(22)
Similarly,
during more than 70 years, from 1845 until the end of WW I in 1918, the British
money supply had increased about six-fold.(23) In distinct contrast, during the 73 years
from 1918 until 1991, the U.S. money supply increased more than
sixty-four-fold.(24)
In
addition to taxation and inflation, a government can resort to debt in
order to finance its current expenditures. As with taxation and inflation,
there is no doubt that government debt increased in the course of the
monarchical age. However, as predicted theoretically, in this field monarchs
also showed considerably more moderation and farsightedness than democratic
republican caretakers.
Throughout
the monarchical age, government debts were essentially war debts. While the
total debt thereby tended to increase over time, during peace time at least
monarchs characteristically reduced their debts. The British example is
fairly representative. In the course of the 18th and l9th centuries, government
debt increased. It was 76 million pounds after the Spanish War in 1748, 127
million after the Seven Years' War in 1763, 232 million after the American War
of Independence in 1783, and 900 million after the Napoleonic Wars in 1815 .
Yet during each peacetime period— from 1727-1739, from 1748-1756, and from
1762-1775, total debt actually decreased. From 1815 until 1914, the British
national debt fell from a total of 900 to below 700 million pounds.
In
striking contrast, since the onset of the democratic republican age, British
debt only increased, in war and in peace. In 1920 it was 7.9 billion
pounds, in 1938 8.3 billion, in 1945 22.4 billion, in 1970 34 billion, and
since then it has skyrocketed to more than 190 billion pounds in 1987.(25) Likewise, U.S government debt has increased
through war and peace. Federal government debt after WW I, in 1919, was about
25 billion dollars. In 1940 it was 43 billion, and after WW II, in 1946, it
stood at about 270 billion. By 1970 it had risen to 370 billion, and since
1971, under a pure fiat money regime, it has literally exploded. In 1979 it was
about 840 billion, and in 1985 more than 1.8 trillion. In 1988 it reached
almost 2.5 trillion, and by 1992 it exceeded 3 trillion dollars.(26)
Finally,
the same tendency toward increased exploitation and present-orientation emerges
upon examination of government legislation and regulation. During the
monarchical age, with a clear-cut distinction between the ruler and the ruled,
the king and his parliament were held to be under the law. They applied
pre-existing law as judge or jury. They did not make law. Writes Bertrand de
Jouvenel: "The monarch was looked on only as judge and not as legislator.
He made subjective rights respected and respected them himself; he found these
rights in being and did not dispute that they were anterior to his
authority.... Subjective rights were not held on the precarious tenure of grant
but were freehold possessions. The sovereign's right also was a freehold. It
was a subjective right as much as the other rights, though of a more elevated
dignity, but it could not take the other rights away."(27) To be sure, the monopolization of law
administration led to higher prices and/or lower product quality than those
that would have prevailed under competitive conditions, and in the course of
time kings employed their monopoly increasingly to their own advantage. But as
late as the beginning of the 20th century, A.V. Dicey could still maintain that
as for Great Britain, for instance, legislative law—public law — as distinct
from pre-existing law — private law — did not exist.(28)
In
striking contrast, under democracy, with the exercise of power shrouded in
anonymity, presidents and parliaments quickly came to rise above the
law. They became not only judge but legislator, the creator of "new"
law.(29) Today, notes Jouvenel, "we are used to having our rights
modified by the sovereign decisions of legislators. A landlord no longer feels
surprised at being compelled to keep a tenant; an employer is no less used to
having to raise the wages of his employees in virtue of the decrees of Power.
Nowadays it is understood that our subjective rights are precarious and at the
good pleasure of authority."(30) In a
development similar to the democratization of money—the substitution of
government paper money for private commodity money and the resulting inflation
and increased financial uncertainty—the democratization of law and law
administration has led to a steadily growing flood of legislation. Presently,
the number of legislative acts and regulations passed by parliaments in the course
of a single year is in the tens of thousands, filling hundreds of thousands of
pages, affecting all aspects of civil and commercial life, and resulting in a
steady depreciation of all law and heightened legal uncertainty. As a typical
example, the 1994 edition of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), the
annual compendium of all U.S. Federal Government regulations currently in
effect, consists of a total of 201 books occupying about 26 feet of library
shelf space. The Code's index alone is 754 pages. The Code contains regulations
concerning the production and distribution of almost everything imaginable:
from celery, mushrooms, watermelons, watchbands, the labeling of incandescent
light bulbs, hosiery, parachute jumping, iron and steel manufacturing, sexual
offenses on college campuses to the cooking of onion rings made out of diced
onions, revealing the almost totalitarian power of a democratic government.(31)
III.2.
Indicators of Present-Orientedness
The
phenomenon of social time preference is somewhat more elusive than that of
expropriation and exploitation, and it is more complicated to identify suitable
indicators of present-orientation. Moreover, some indicators are less
direct—'softer'—than those of exploitation. But all of them point in the same
direction and together provide as clear an illustration of the second
theoretical prediction: that democratic rule also promotes short-sightedness
(present-orientation) within civil society.(32)
The
most direct indicator of social time preference is the rate of interest. The
interest rate is the ratio of the valuation of present goods as compared to
future goods. More specifically, it indicates the premium at which present
money is traded against future money. A high interest rate implies more
"present-orientedness" and a low rate of interest implies more
"future-orientation." Under normal conditions—that is under the
assumption of increasing standards of living and real money incomes—the
interest rate can be expected to fall and ultimately approach, yet never quite
reach, zero, for with rising real incomes, the marginal utility of present
money falls relative to that of future money, and hence under the ceteris
paribus assumption of a given time preference schedule the
interest rate must fall. Consequently savings and investment will
increase, future real incomes will be still higher, and so on.
In
fact, a tendency toward falling interest rates characterizes mankind's
supra-secular trend of development. Minimum interest rates on 'normal safe
loans' were around 16 percent at the beginning of Greek financial history in
the sixth century B.C., and fell to 6 percent during the Hellenistic period. In
Rome, minimum interest rates fell from more than 8 percent during the earliest
period of the Republic to 4 percent during the first century of the Empire. In
13th century Europe, the lowest interest rates on "safe" loans were 8
percent. In the 14th century they came down to about 5 percent. In the 15th
century they fell to 4 percent. In the 17th century they went down to 3
percent. And at the end of the l9th century minimum interest rates had further
declined to less than 2.5 percent.(33)
This
trend was by no means smooth. It was frequently interrupted by periods,
sometimes as long as centuries, of rising interest rates. However, such periods
were associated with major wars and revolutions such as the Hundred Years' War
during the 14th century, the Wars of Religion from the late 16th to the early
17th century, the American and French Revolutions and the Napoleonic Wars from
the late 18th to the early l9th century, and the two World Wars in the 20th
century. Furthermore, whereas high or rising minimum interest rates indicate
periods of generally low or declining living standards, the overriding opposite
tendency toward low and falling interest rates reflects mankind's over-all
progress— its advance from barbarism to civilization. Specifically, the trend
toward lower interest rates reflects the rise of the Western World, its
peoples' increasing prosperity, farsightedness, intelligence, and moral
strength, and the unparalleled height of 19th-century European civilization.
Before
this historical backdrop and in accordance with economic theory, then, it
should be expected that 20th century interest rates would have to be still lower
than l9th century rates. Indeed, only two possible explanations exist why
this is not so. The first possibility is that 20th century real incomes
did not exceed, or even fell below, l9th century incomes. However, this
explanation can be ruled out on empirical grounds, for it seems fairly
uncontroversial that 20th century incomes are in fact higher. Then only the
second explanation remains, however. If real incomes are higher but interest
rates are not lower, then the ceteris paribus clause can no longer be assumed
true. Rather, the social time preference schedule must have shifted
upward. That is, the character of the population must have changed. People on
the average must have lost in moral and intellectual strength and have become
more present-oriented. Indeed, this appears to be the case.
From
1815 onward, throughout Europe and the Western World minimum interest rates
steadily declined to an historic low of, on the average, well below 3 percent
at the turn of the century. With the onset of the democratic-republican age
this earlier tendency came to a halt and seems to have changed direction,
revealing 20th century Europe and the U.S. as declining civilizations. An
inspection of the lowest decennial average interest rates for Britain, France,
the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Sweden, Switzerland, and the U.S., for
instance, shows that during the entire post-WW I era interest rates in Europe
were never as low or lower than they had been during the second half of the 1
9th century. Only in the U.S ., in the 1950's, did interest rates ever fall
below late l9th-century rates. This was only a short-lived phenomenon, and U.S.
interest rates even then were not lower than they had been in Britain during
the second half of the l9th century. Instead, 20th-century rates were
universally higher than l9th century rates, and if anything they have
exhibited a rising tendency.(34) This conclusion does not substantially
change, even when it is taken into account that modern interest rates, in
particular since the 1970's, include a systematic inflation premium. After
adjusting recent nominal interest rates for inflation in order to yield an
estimate of real interest rates, contemporary interest rates still
appear to be significantly higher than they were 100 years ago. On the average,
minimum long-term interest rates in Europe and the U.S. nowadays seem to be
well above 4 percent and possibly as high as 5 percent—that is above the interest
rates of 17th century Europe and as high or higher than 15th century rates.
Likewise, current U.S. savings rates of around 5 percent of disposable income
are no higher than they were more than 300 years ago in a much poorer 17th
century England.(35)
Parallel
to this development and reflecting a more specific aspect of the same
underlying phenomenon of high or rising social time preferences, indicators of
family disintegration— 'dysfunctional families'—have exhibited a systematic
increase.
Until
the end of the 19th century, the bulk of government spending—typically more
than 50 percent—went to financing the military. Assuming government
expenditures to be then about 5 percent of the national product, this amounted
to military expenditures of 2.5 percent of the national product. The remainder
went to government administration. Welfare spending or "public
charity" played almost no role. Insurance was considered to be in the
province of individual responsibility, and poverty relief seen as the task of
voluntary charity. In contrast, as a reflection of the egalitarianism inherent
in democracy, from the beginning of the democratization in the late 19th
century onward came the collectivization of individual responsibility. Military
expenditures have typically risen to 5-10 percent of the national product in
the course of the 20th century. But with public expenditures currently making
up 50 percent of the national product, military expenditures now only represent
10-20 percent of total government spending. The bulk of public
spending—typically more than 50 percent of total expenditures (or 25 percent of
the national product)—is now eaten up by public welfare spending: by compulsory
government "insurance" against illness, occupational injuries, old
age, unemployment, and an ever expanding list of other disabilities.(36)
Consequently,
by increasingly relieving individuals of the responsibility of having to
provide for their own health, safety, and old age, the range and temporal
horizon of private provisionary action have been systematically reduced. In
particular, the value of marriage, family, and children have fallen, because
they are needed less as soon as one can fall back on "public"
assistance. Thus, since the onset of the democratic-republican age the number
of children has declined, and the size of the endogenous population has
stagnated or even fallen. For centuries, until the end of the l9th century, the
birth rate had been almost constant: somewhere between 30 to 40 per 1,000
population (usually somewhat higher in predominantly Catholic and lower in
Protestant countries). In sharp contrast, in the course of the 20th century all
over Europe and the U.S. birthrates have experienced a dramatic decline—down to
about 15 to 20 per 1,000.(37) At the same time,
the rates of divorce, illegitimacy, single parenting, singledom, and abortion
have steadily increased, while personal savings rates have begun to stagnate or
even fall rather than rise proportionally or even over-proportionally with
rising incomes.(38)
Moreover,
as a consequence of the depreciation of law resulting from legislation and the
collectivization of responsibility effected in particular by social security
legislation, the rate of crimes of a serious nature, such as murder,
assault, robbery, and theft, has also shown a systematic upward tendency.
In
the 'normal' course of events—that is with rising standards of living—it can be
expected that the protection against social disasters such as crime will
undergo continual improvement, just as one would expect the protection against
natural disasters such as floods, earthquakes and hurricanes to become
progressively better. Indeed, throughout the Western world this appears to have
been the case by and large—until recently, during second half of the 20th century,
when crime rates began to climb steadily upward.(39)
To
be sure, there are a number of factors other than increased irresponsibility
and shortsightedness brought on by legislation and welfare that may contribute
to crime. Men commit more crimes than women, the young more than the old,
blacks more than whites, and city dwellers more than villagers. Accordingly,
changes in the composition of the sexes, age groups, races, and the degree of
urbanization can be expected to have a systematic effect on crime. However, all
of these factors are relatively stable and thus cannot account for any
systematic change in the long-term downward trend of crime rates. As for
European countries, their populations were and are comparatively homogeneous;
and in the U.S., the proportion of blacks has remained roughly stable. The sex
composition is largely a biological constant; and as a result of wars, only the
proportion of males has periodically fallen, thus actually reinforcing the
'normal' trend toward falling crime rates. Similarly, the composition of age
groups has changed only slowly; and due to declining birth rates and higher
life expectancies the average age of the population has actually increased,
thus helping to depress crime rates still further. Finally, the degree of
urbanization began to increase dramatically from about 1800 onward. A period of
rising crime rates during the early l9th century can be attributed to this
initial spurt of urbanization.(40) Yet after a
period of adjustment to the new phenomenon of urbanization, from the mid-19th
century onward, the countervailing tendency toward falling crime rates took
hold again, despite the fact that the process of rapid urbanization continued
for about another hundred years. And when crime rates began to move systematically
upward, from the mid-20th century onward, the process of increasing
urbanization had actually come to a halt.
It
thus appears that the phenomenon of rising crime rates cannot be explained
other than with reference to the process of democratization: by a rising degree
of social time preference, an increasing loss of individual responsibility,
intellectually and morally, and a diminished respect for all law—moral
relativism— stimulated by an unabated flood of legislation. Of course, 'high
time preference' is by no means equivalent with 'crime'. A high time preference
can also find expression in such perfectly lawful activities as recklessness,
unreliability, poor manners, laziness, stupidity or hedonism. Nonetheless, a
systematic relationship between high time preference and crime exists, for in
order to earn a market income a certain minimum of planning, patience and
sacrifice is required. One must first work for a while before one gets paid. In
contrast, most serious criminal activities such as murder, assault, rape,
robbery, theft, and burglary require no such discipline. The reward for the
aggressor is immediate and tangible, whereas the sacrifice — possible
punishment — lies in the future and is uncertain. Consequently, if the social
degree of time preference were increased, it would be expected that the
frequency in particular of these forms of aggressive behavior would rise—as
they in fact did.(41)
IV. CONCLUSION: MONARCHY, DEMOCRACY, AND THE IDEA OF A
NATURAL ORDER
From the vantage point of elementary
economic theory and in light of historical evidence, then, a revisionist view
of modern history results. The Whig theory of history, according to which
mankind marches continually forward toward ever higher levels of progress, is
incorrect. From the viewpoint of those who prefer less exploitation over more
and who value farsightedness and individual responsibility above
shortsightedness and irresponsibility, the historic transition from monarchy to
democracy represents not progress but civilizational decline. Nor does this
verdict change if more or other indicators are included. Quite to the contrary.
Without question the most important indicator of exploitation and
present-orientedness not discussed above is war. Yet if this indicator
were included the relative performance of democratic republican government
appears to be even worse, not better. In addition to increased exploitation and
social decay, the transition from monarchy to democracy has brought a change
from limited warfare to total war, and the 20th century, the age of democracy,
must be ranked also among the most murderous periods in all of history. (42)
Thus,
inevitably two final questions arise. The current state of affairs can hardly
be "the end of history". What can we expect? And what can we do? As
for the first question, the answer is brief. At the end of the 20th century,
democratic republicanism in the U.S. and all across the Western world has
apparently exhausted the reserve fund that was inherited from the past. For
decades, real incomes have stagnated or even fallen.(43)
The public debt and the cost of
social security systems have brought on the prospect of an imminent economic
meltdown. At the same time, societal breakdown and social conflict have risen
to dangerous heights. If the tendency toward increased exploitation and
present-orientedness continues on its current path, the Western democratic
welfare states will collapse as the East European socialist peoples' republics
did in the late 1980s. Hence one is left with only the second question: What
should be done then; or what can we do now in order to prevent
the process of civilizational decline from running its full course to an
economic and social catastrophe?
First,
the idea of democracy and majority rule must be delegitimized. Ultimately, the
course of history is determined by ideas, be they true or false. Just as
kings could not exercise their rule unless a majority of public opinion
accepted such rule as legitimate, so will democratic rulers not last without
ideological support in public opinion.(44)
Likewise,
the transition from monarchical to democratic rule must be explained as
fundamentally nothing but a change in public opinion. In fact, until the
end of WWI, the overwhelming majority of the public in Europe accepted monarchical
rule as legitimate.(45) Today, hardly anyone
would do so. On the contrary, the idea of monarchical government is considered
laughable. Consequently, a return to the 'ancien régime' must be regarded as
impossible. The legitimacy of monarchical rule appears to have been
irretrievably lost. Nor would such a return be a genuine solution. For
monarchies, whatever their relative merits, do exploit and do contribute
to present-orientedness as well. Rather, the idea of democratic republican rule
must be rendered equally if not more laughable, not in the least by identifying
it as the source of the ongoing process of de-civilization.
But
secondly, and still more importantly, at the same time a positive alternative
to monarchy and democracy—the idea of a natural order—must be
spelled out and understood. On the one hand, and simply enough, this involves
the recognition that it is not exploitation, either monarchical or democratic,
but private property, production, and voluntary exchange that are the ultimate source
of human civilization. On the other hand, psychologically more difficult to
accept, it involves the recognition of a fundamental sociological insight
(which incidentally also helps identify precisely where the historic opposition
to monarchy went wrong): that the maintenance and preservation of a private
property based exchange economy requires as its sociological presupposition the
existence of a voluntarily acknowledged 'natural' elite—a nobilitas
naturalis.(46)
The
natural outcome of the voluntary transactions between various private property
owners is decidedly non-egalitarian, hierarchical and elitist. As the result of
widely diverse human talents, in every society of any degree of complexity a
few individuals quickly acquire the status of an elite. Owing to superior
achievements of wealth, wisdom, bravery or a combination thereof, some
individuals come to possess 'natural authority', and their opinions and
judgments enjoy wide-spread respect. Moreover, because of selective mating and
marriage and the laws of civil and genetic inheritance, positions of natural
authority are more likely than not passed on within a few—noble—families. It is
to the heads of these families with long-established records of superior achievement,
farsightedness, and exemplary personal conduct, that men turn with their
conflicts and complaints against each other, and it is these very leaders of
the natural elite who typically act as judges and peacemakers, often free of
charge, out of a sense of obligation required and expected of a person of
authority or even out of a principled concern for civil justice, as a privately
produced "public good".(47)
In
fact, the endogenous origin of a monarchy (as opposed to its exogenous origin
via conquest)(48) cannot be understood except
before the background of a prior order of natural elites. The small but
decisive step in the transition to monarchical rule—original sin —consisted
precisely in the monopolization of the function of judge and peacemaker.
The step was taken, once a single member of the voluntarily acknowledged
natural elite—the king—could insist, against the opposition of other members of
the social elite, that all conflicts within a specified territory be brought
before him and conflicting parties no longer choose any other judge or
peacekeeper but him. From this moment on, law and law enforcement became more
expensive: instead of being offered free of charge or for a voluntary payment,
they were financed with the help of a compulsory tax. At the same time, the
quality of law deteriorated: instead of upholding the pre-existing law and
applying universal and immutable principles of justice, a monopolistic judge,
who did not have to fear losing clients as a result of being less than
impartial in his judgments, could successively alter and pervert the existing
law to his own advantage.
It
was to a large extent the inflated price of justice and the perversions of
ancient law by the kings which motivated the historical opposition against
monarchy. However, confusion as to the causes of this phenomenon prevailed.
There were those who recognized correctly that the problem lay with monopoly,
not with elites or nobility.(49) But they
were far outnumbered by those who erroneously blamed it on the elitist
character of the ruler instead, and who accordingly advocated to maintain the
monopoly of law and law enforcement and merely replace the king and the visible
royal pomp by the "people" and the presumed modesty and decency of
the "common man". Hence the historic success of democracy.
Ironically,
the monarchy was then destroyed by the same social forces that kings had first
stimulated when they began to exclude competing natural authorities from acting
as judges. In order to overcome their resistance, kings typically aligned
themselves with the people, the common man.(50) Appealing to the always popular sentiment of
envy, kings promised the people cheaper and better justice in exchange and at
the expense of taxing—cutting down to size—their own betters (that is, the
kings' competitors). When the kings' promises turned out to be empty, as was to
be predicted, the same egalitarian sentiments which they had previously courted
now focused and turned against them. After all, the king himself was a member
of the nobility, and as a result of the exclusion of all other judges, his
position had become only more elevated and elitist and his conduct only more
arrogant. Accordingly, it appeared only logical then that kings, too, should be
brought down and that the egalitarian policies, which monarchs had initiated,
be carried through to their ultimate conclusion: the monopolistic control of
the judiciary by the common man.
Predictably,
as explained and illustrated in detail above, the democratization of law and
law enforcement—the substitution of the people for the king—made matters only
worse, however. The price of justice and peace has risen astronomically, and
all the while the quality of law has steadily deteriorated to the point where
the idea of law as a body of universal and immutable principles of justice has
almost disappeared from public opinion and has been replaced by the idea of law
as legislation (government-made law). At the same time, democracy has succeeded
where monarchy only made a modest beginning: in the ultimate destruction of the
natural elites. The fortunes of great families have dissipated, and their
tradition of a culture of economic independence, intellectual farsightedness,
and moral and spiritual leadership has been lost and forgotten. Rich men still
exist today, but more frequently than not they owe their fortune now directly
or indirectly to the state. Hence, they are often more dependent on the state's
continued favors than people of far lesser wealth. They are typically no longer
the heads of long established leading families but "nouveaux riches".
Their conduct is not marked by special virtue, dignity, or taste but is a
reflection of the same proletarian mass-culture of present-orientedness,
opportunism, and hedonism that the rich now share with everyone else; and
consequently, their opinions carry no more weight in public opinion than anyone
else's.
Hence,
when democratic rule has finally exhausted its legitimacy the problem faced
will be significantly more difficult than when kings lost their legitimacy.
Then, it would have been sufficient by and large to abolish the king ' s
monopoly of law and law enforcement and replace it with a natural order of competing
jurisdictions, because remnants of natural elites who could have taken on this
task still existed. Now, this will no longer be sufficient. If the monopoly of
law and law enforcement of democratic governments is dissolved, there appears
to be no other authority to whom one can turn for justice, and chaos would seem
to be inevitable. Thus, in addition to advocating the abdication of democracy,
it is now of central strategic importance that at the same time ideological
support be given to all decentralizing or even secessionist social forces; that
is, the tendency toward political centralization that has characterized the
Western world for many centuries, first under monarchical rule and then under
democratic auspices, must be systematically reversed.(51) Even if as a result of a secessionist
tendency a new government, whether democratic or not, should spring up,
territorially smaller governments and increased political competition will tend
encourage moderation as regards exploitation. And in any case, only in small
regions, communities or districts will it be possible again for a few
individuals, based on the popular recognition of their economic independence,
outstanding professional achievement, morally impeccable personal life, and
superior judgment and taste, to rise to the rank of natural, voluntarily
acknowledged authorities and lend legitimacy to the idea of a natural order of
competing judges and overlapping jurisdictions—an 'anarchic' private law
society—as the answer to monarchy and democracy.
Traduction
de François Guillaumat
NOTES
1. On the theory of the state
see M.N. Rothbard, For A New Liberty (New York: Macmillan, 1978); idem, The
Ethics of Liberty (Atlantic Highlands: Humanities Press, 1982); idem, Power
and Market (Kansas City: Sheed, Andrews & McMeel, 1977); H.H. Hoppe, Eigentum,
Anarchie und Staat (Opladen: Westdeutscher Verlag, 1987); idem, A Theory
of Socialism and Capitalism (Boston: Kluwer, 1989); idem, The Economics
and Ethics of Private Property (Boston: Kluwer, 1993); also A.J. Nock, Our
Enemy, the State (Delevan: Hallberg Publishing Co., 1983); F. Oppenheimer, The
State (New York: Vanguard Press, 1914); idem, System der Soziologie.
Vol.2: Der Staat (Stuttgart: G. Fischer, 1964).
2. See on the following also
H.H. Hoppe, "Time Preference, Government, and the Process of
De-Civilization—From Monarchy to Democracy", Journal des Economistes et
des Etudes Humaines, Vol.V, No.4, 1994.
3. See also B. de Jouvenel, On Power (New York: Viking, 1949),
esp. pp.9-10.
4. See M.N. Rothbard, Power
and Market, pp.188-189; also G. Hardin & J. Baden, eds., Managing
the Commons (San Francisco: W.H. Freeman, 1977; and M. Olson,
"Dictatorship, Democracy, and Development", American Political
Science Review 87, 3, 1993.
5. In addition to the works
quoted in Fn.l above, see L. Spooner, No Treason: The Constitution of No
Authority (Larkspur: Pine Tree Press, 1966), p.17.
6.
On the phenomenon and theory of
time preference see in particular L.v. Mises: Human Action. A Treatise on
Economics (Chicago: H. Regnery, 1966), chs. XVIII, XIX; also W.St. Jevons, Theory
of Political Economy (New York: A. Kelley, 1965); E.v. Böhm-Bawerk, Capital
and Interest, 3 vols. (South Holland: Libertarian Press, 1959); F. Fetter, Capital,
Interest, and Rent (Kansas City: Sheed, Andrews & McMeel, 1977); M.N.
Rothbard, Man, Economy, and State (Los Angeles: Nash, 1970).
7. See also H.H. Hoppe, "Time
Preference, Government, and the Process of DeCivilization—From Monarchy to
Democracy".
8. See on this G. Ferrero, Peace
and War (Freeport: Books for Libraries Press 1969), esp. ch.3; idem, Macht
(Bern: A. Francke, 1944); E.v. Kuehnelt-Leddihn Leftism Revisited (Washington
D.C.: H. Regnery, 1990); R. Bendix, Kings or People (Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1978).
9. For a detailed
documentation see P. Flora, State, Economy, and Society in Western Europe
1815-1975, Vol. l (Frankfurt/M.: Campus, 1983), ch.3; also R.R. Palmer
& J. Colton, A History of the Modern World (New York: A. Knopf,
1992), esp. chs. XIV, XVIII.
10. On the aristocratic
(un-democratic) character of the early U.S., see Lord Acton, "Political
Causes of the American Revolution" in: idem, The Liberal Interpretation
of History (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1967); also, Ch.
Woltermann, "Federalism, Democracy and the People", Telos, Vol.26,1,
1993.
11. On the U.S. war involvement
see J.F.C. Fuller, The Conduct of War (New York: Da Capo, 1992), ch.lX;
on the role of Woodrow Wilson, and his policy of wanting to 'make the world
safe for democracy', see M.N. Rothbard, "World War I as Fulfillment; Power
and the Intellectuals", Journal of Libertarian Studies, 9, no.l,
1989; P. Gottfried, "Wilsonianism: The Legacy that Won't Die", Journal
of Libertarian Studies, 9, no.2, 1990; E.v. Kuehnelt-Leddihn, Leftism
Revisited, ch. 15.
12. Interestingly, the Swiss
Republic, which had been the first country to establish universal male suffrage
(in 1848), was the last to expand the suffrage also to women (in 1971).
Similarly, the French Republic, where universal male suffrage had existed since
1848, extended the franchise to women only in 1945.
13. See H.J. Schoeps, Preussen.
Ceschichte eines Staates (Frankfurt/M.: Ullstein, 1981), p.405 on data for
England, Prussia, and Austria.
14. C.M. Cipolla, Before the
Industrial Revolution. European Society and Economy, 1000-1700 (New York:
W.W. Norton, 1980), p.48.
15. See P. Flora, State,
Economy and Society in Western Europe, Vol.l, pp. 258-259.
16. Ibid, ch.8.
17 Ibid, ch.S.
17.
In fact, the share of government employment in present times must be
considered systematically underestimated, for apart from excluding
all military personnel it also excludes the personnel in hospitals, welfare
institutions, social insurance agencies, and nationalized industries.
18. See also M.N. Rothbard, What
Has Government Done to Our Money? (Auburn, Al.: Ludwig von Mises Institute,
1990); H.H. Hoppe, "How is Fiat Money Possible? or, The Devolution of
Money and Credit", Review of Austrian Economics, Vol.7, no.2, 1994.
19. See B.R. Mitchell, Abstract
of British Historical Statistics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1962), pp.468ff.
20. Idem, European
Historical Statistics 1750-1970 (New York: Columbia University Press,
1078), pp.388ff.
21. 1930 = 100; see R.Paul and
L.Lehrmann, The Case for Gold. A Minority Report to the U.S. Gold Commission
(Washington D.C.: Cato Institute, 1982), p. 165f.
22. 1983 = 100; see Economic
Report of the President (Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office,
1992).
23. See Mitchell, Abstract
of British Historical Statistics, p.444f.
24. See M. Friedman & A.
Schwartz, A Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1960 (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1963), pp.704-722; and Economic Report of the
President, 1992.
25. See S. Homer & R.
Sylla, A History of Interest Rates (New Brunswick: Rutgers University
Press, 1991), pp.188/437.
26. See J. Hughes, American
Economic History ((lenview: Scott, Foresman, 1990), pp.432, 498, 589.
27. B. de Jouvenel, Sovereignty,
pp.172-173; p.189; see also F. Kern, Kingship and Law in the Middle Ages
(London, 1939), esp. p.151; B. Rehfeld, Die Wurzeln des Rechts (Berlin,
1951), esp. p.67.
28. See A.V. Dicey, Lectures
on the Relation between Law and Public Opinion in England during the Nineteenth
Century (London: Macmillan, 1903); also F.A. Hayek, Law, Legislation,
and Liberty, Vol. I (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1973), chs. 4
and 6.
29. See R. Nisbet, Community
and Power (New York: Oxford University Press, 1962), pp. 110-111 .
30. B. de Jouvenel, Sovereignty,
p.189; see also R. Nisbet, Community and Power, ch.5.
31. See D. Boudreaux. "The
World's Biggest Government", Free Market November 1994.
32. See also T.A. Smith, Time
and Public Policy (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1988).
33. See Homer/Sylla, A Hisfory
of Interest Rates, pp.557-558.
34. See Homer/Sylla, A History
of Interest Rates, pp.554-555.
35. See Cipolla, Before the
Industrial Revolution, p.39.
36. See Cipolla, Before the
Industrial Revolution, pp.54-55; Flora, State, Economy and Society
in Western Europe, ch.8; and p.454.
37. See Mitchell, European
Historical Statistics 1750-1970, pp.16ff.
38. See A.C. Carlson, Family
Questions. Reflections on the American Social Crises (New Brunswick: Transaction
Publishers, 1992); idem, The Swedish Experiment in Family Politics (New
Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 1993); idem, "What Has Government Done
to Our Families?", Essays in Political Economy, no.13 (Auburn, Al.:
Ludwig von Mises Institute, 1991); Ch. Murray, Losing Ground (New York:
Basic Books, 1984); for an early diagnosis see J.A. Schumpeter, Capitalism,
Socialism, and Democracy (New York: Harper, 1942), ch. 14.
39. See J.Q. Wilson & R.J.
Herrnstein, Crime and Human Nature (New York: Simon & Schuster,
1985), pp.408-409; on the magnitude of the increase in criminal activity
brought about by democratic republicanism and welfarism in the course of the
last hundred years see also R.D. McGrath, Gunfighters, Highwaymen, and
Vigilantes (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984), esp. ch.13;
idem, "Treat them to a Good Dose of Lead", Chronicles, January
1994.
40. See Wilson &
Herrnstein, Crime and Human Nature, p.411.
41. On the relationship between
high time preference and crime see also E.C. Banfield, The Unheavenly City
Revisited (Boston: Little, Brown & Company, 1974), esp. chs. 3 and 8;
idem, "Present-Orientedness and Crime", in: R.E. Barnett/J. Hagel,
eds., Assessing the Criminal (Cambridge: Ballinger, 1977); Wilson &
Herrnstein, Crime and Human Nature, pp.414-424.
42. On the contrast between
monarchical and democratic warfare see J.F.C. Fuller, The Conduct of War, esp.
chs. 1 and 2; idem, War and Western Civilization (Freeport: Books for
Libraries, 1969); M. Howard, War in European History (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1976), esp ch.6; idem, War and the Liberal Conscience (New
Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1978); B. de Jouvenel, On Power, ch.8;
W.A. Orton, The Liberal Tradition (Port Washington: Kennikat Press,
1969), pp.25 Iff; G. Ferrero, Peace and War, ch.l.
43. For a revealing analysis of
U.S. data see R. Batemarco, "GNP, PPR, and the Standard of Living", Review
of Austrian Economics, vol.l, 1987.
44. On the relation between
government and public opinion see the classic expositions by E. de la Boetie, The
Politics of Obedience: The Discourse of Voluntary Servitude (New York: Free
Life Editions, 1975); D. Hume, Essays. Moral, Political, and Literary (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1963), esp. Essay IV: Of the First Principles of
Government.
45. As late as 1871, for
instance, with universal male suffrage, the National Assembly of the French
Republic contained only about 200 republicans out of more than 600 deputies.
And the restoration of a monarchy was only prevented because the supporters of
the Bourbons and the Orleans checkmated each other.
46. See also W. Röpke, Jenseits
von Angebot und Nachfrage (Bern: P.Haupt, 1979), pp.l91-199; B. de
Jouvenel, On Power, ch.17.
47. See also M. Harris, Cannibals
and Kings. The Origins of Culture (New York: Vintage Books, 1977), pp.104ff
on the private provision of public goods by "big men".
48. As a comparative evaluation
of theories of the endogenous versus the exogenous origin of government and a
historical critique of the latter as incorrect or incomplete see W. Mühlmann, Rassen,
Ethnien, Kulturen (Neuwied: Luchterhand, 1964), pp.248-319, esp. pp.291-296.
For
proponents of theories of the exogenous origin of government see F. Ratzel, Politische
Geographie (München, 1923); F. Oppenheimer, System der Soziologie. Vol.
2: Der Staat; A. Rüstow, Freedom and Domination (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1980).
49. See, for instance, G. de
Molinari, The Production of Security (New York: Center for Libertarian
Studies, 1977), published originally in 1849, in French.
50. See on this also H.
Pirenne, Medieval Cities (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1974),
esp. pp.179-180, and pp. 227f; B. de Jouvenel, On Power, ch. 17.
51. On the political economy of
political centralization, and the rationale of decentralization and secession,
see H.H.Hoppe, "Against Centralization", Salisbury Review, June
1993; idem, "Migrazione, centralismo e secessione nell'Europa
contemporanea", biblioteca della liberta, no.l 18,1992; J.Baechler,
The Origins of Capitalism (New York: St.Martin's Press, 1976), esp.
ch.7.