The recent spate of accounting fraud scandals signals the end of an era.
Disillusionment and disenchantment with American capitalism may yet
lead to a tectonic ideological shift from laissez faire and self
regulation to state intervention and regulation. This would be the
reversal of a trend dating back to Thatcher in Britain and Reagan in
the USA. It would also cast some fundamental - and way more ancient -
tenets of free-marketry in grave doubt.
Markets are perceived as self-organizing, self-assembling, exchanges of
information, goods, and services. Adam Smith's "invisible hand" is the
sum of all the mechanisms whose interaction gives rise to the optimal
allocation of economic resources. The market's great advantages over
central planning are precisely its randomness and its lack of
self-awareness.
Market participants go about their egoistic business, trying to
maximize their utility, oblivious of the interests and action of all,
bar those they interact with directly. Somehow, out of the chaos and
clamor, a structure emerges of order and efficiency unmatched. Man is
incapable of intentionally producing better outcomes. Thus, any
intervention and interference are deemed to be detrimental to the
proper functioning of the economy.
It is a minor step from this idealized worldview back to the
Physiocrats, who preceded Adam Smith, and who propounded the doctrine
of "laissez faire, laissez passer" - the hands-off battle cry. Theirs
was a natural religion. The market, as an agglomeration of individuals,
they thundered, was surely entitled to enjoy the rights and freedoms
accorded to each and every person. John Stuart Mill weighed against the
state's involvement in the economy in his influential and
exquisitely-timed "Principles of Political Economy", published in 1848.
Undaunted by mounting evidence of market failures - for instance to
provide affordable and plentiful public goods - this flawed theory
returned with a vengeance in the last two decades of the past century.
Privatization, deregulation, and self-regulation became faddish
buzzwords and part of a global consensus propagated by both commercial
banks and multilateral lenders.
As applied to the professions - to accountants, stock brokers, lawyers,
bankers, insurers, and so on - self-regulation was premised on the
belief in long-term self-preservation. Rational economic players and
moral agents are supposed to maximize their utility in the long-run by
observing the rules and regulations of a level playing field.
This noble propensity seemed, alas, to have been tampered by avarice
and narcissism and by the immature inability to postpone gratification.
Self-regulation failed so spectacularly to conquer human nature that
its demise gave rise to the most intrusive statal stratagems ever
devised. In both the UK and the USA, the government is much more
heavily and pervasively involved in the minutia of accountancy, stock
dealing, and banking than it was only two years ago.
But the ethos and myth of "order out of chaos" - with its proponents in
the exact sciences as well - ran deeper than that. The very culture of
commerce was thoroughly permeated and transformed. It is not surprising
that the Internet - a chaotic network with an anarchic modus operandi -
flourished at these times.
The dotcom revolution was less about technology than about new ways of
doing business - mixing umpteen irreconcilable ingredients, stirring
well, and hoping for the best. No one, for instance, offered a linear
revenue model of how to translate "eyeballs" - i.e., the number of
visitors to a Web site - to money ("monetizing"). It was dogmatically
held to be true that, miraculously, traffic - a chaotic phenomenon -
will translate to profit - hitherto the outcome of painstaking labour.
Privatization itself was such a leap of faith. State owned assets -
including utilities and suppliers of public goods such as health and
education - were transferred wholesale to the hands of profit
maximizers. The implicit belief was that the price mechanism will
provide the missing planning and regulation. In other words, higher
prices were supposed to guarantee an uninterrupted service.
Predictably, failure ensued - from electricity utilities in California
to railway operators in Britain.
The simultaneous crumbling of these urban legends - the liberating
power of the Net, the self-regulating markets, the unbridled merits of
privatization - inevitably gave rise to a backlash.
The state has acquired monstrous proportions in the decades since the
Second world War. It is about to grow further and to digest the few
sectors hitherto left untouched. To say the least, these are not good
news. But we libertarians - proponents of both individual freedom and
individual responsibility - have brought it on ourselves by thwarting
the work of that invisible regulator - the market.
Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After
the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He served as a columnist for
Global Politician, Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and
eBookWeb, a United Press International (UPI) Senior Business
Correspondent, and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe
categories in The Open Directory and Suite101.
Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government of
Macedonia.
Visit Sam's Web site at samvak.tripod.com