My intellectual
limitations do not permit me to define happiness. However I would like to
differentiate happiness from pleasure. Pleasure is enjoyment of external
stimuli. Pleasure can be found by having good food, buying Armani fashion
stuffs or going on exotic vacations. One may be doing pleasurable things but
still remain unhappy. Happiness comes from internal workings of our own minds.
For the benefit of
readers who want to understand the real meaning of happiness, I quote Mahatma
Gandhi: “Happiness is essentially a state of going somewhere, wholeheartedly,
one-directionally, without regret or reservation”. Another perspective comes
from Ayn Rand who considers happiness as a state of non-contradictory joy
without penalty or guilt which comes only to a rational man desiring rational
goals through rational values and rational acts.
Leaving aside the above
finer distinction for the time being, let us dwell on as to whether we are
happy today under capitalist system. Adam Smith placed total reliance on “invisible
hands” of market to achieve both individual and collective prosperity. Would
market mechanism provide remedy for the suffering of relatively in-efficient
people or ensure fair reward in un-distorted fashion (beyond the narrow
confinement of legalities)? Capitalism creates social inequality in wealth
which trickles down, because children of unsuccessful parents will become
disadvantaged to start with. This contradicts with capitalism slogan of “Equal
opportunity”. High inequality can generate further higher inequality and
eventually poor economic growth, social imbalance and formation of oligopolies
which will take away the spirit of free competition so ardently advocated by
capitalists. The business personnel whose profitable ventures result into emergence
of inequality and oligopolies should be responsible to rectify the imbalance.
This is not happening as the recent financial crisis has demonstrated.
Happiest countries tend
to be Scandinavian socialist democracies. High per-capita GDP certainly plays a
role, but even social democratic New Zealand, with per-capita GDP significantly
lower, ranks well above US in the happiness index. Let us dig beyond the
surface. What factors lead to diminished happiness under capitalism? Some loud
thinking throws the following:
1.
Higher
incentive to steal:
Capitalism as contrasted
with socialism, gives full right to private property. The act of stealing (in
its widest sense) is punishable under capitalism and socialism alike but
undetected theft under socialism is likely to be limited as acquisition arising
out of theft cannot be stored and passed over to future generations. Under
socialism, theft will only give rise to undeserved current dubious consumption.
As opposed to this, under capitalism the bounty acquired through stealing can
not only be used for current consumption but also passed over to successive
generations through money laundering techniques of layering and changing the
color and label of the acquisition through theft. This distorts the social
balance leading to diminished happiness.
2.
Crony
capitalism:
If the capitalism system is purged
from the menace of stealing, the crony capitalism does pretty much the same
albeit at a higher scale. Under this, people with good connections to the
center of power - the "cronies" of the government - manage to place
themselves in positions of undue influence over economic policy, thus deriving
great personal gains. Examples are dime a dozen. Just take issues arising out
Nira Radia’s phone tape or 2G cellular spectrum auction. One industrialist is reported
to have bragged that Government of India was “apni dukan”. The capitalism gets
robbed of its true beauty under this kind of systematic misuse –
often garbed as legal acts. This dampens the spirit of entrepreneurship and
fair reward.
3.
Unfair
distribution of rewards and widening rich-poor gap:
The
current “OCCUPY MOVEMENT” explains this so well. This is directed against
economic and social equality. Professor Ravi Batra links rise in "the
share of wealth held by the richest 1 percent" to speculative
manias and depressions which are close cousins of capitalism. The top
1% of Americans control 38% of the wealth. Joseph Stiglitz, Nobel laureate in
his article "Of the 1%, by the 1%, for the 1%" expressed great
concern on this. The increased public focus on the growing income brought by
“OCCUPY MOVEMENT” will impact the political process. The role of corporate cash
in election process is being debated. U.S. Congressman Ted Deutch, introduced
the "Outlawing Corporate Cash Undermining the Public Interest in our
Elections and Democracy (OCCUPIED) Constitutional Amendment," which seeks
to ban corporate money from the electoral process. The systemic amoral
opportunistic decision in favor of capitalists at the cost of labor seems to be
inherent in the capitalist system as currently practiced.
4. Free
ride to pleasure for “HAVES” and uncompensated infliction of pain on “HAVENOTS”
For
the sake of argument, let us assume that those who are poor are not so because
of the wicked acts of others but simply because of their inferior abilities.
Their state of inferiority in materialistic terms becomes a source of joy
(though none of the “HAVEs” will admit this) for others as happiness is a
relative consent. Various standards of comparison may be possible. Comparison
with others is the most talked about. People compare themselves to others in
terms of material possessions and social standing. The differences vis-à-vis
others make people happy or sad depending upon difference being positive or
negative. Happiness of one is at the cost of other as positive difference
for one implies negative difference for the other person. The free ride to
pleasure by “HAVES” by simply viewing the plights of “LESSER HAVES” or
“HAVENOTS” needs to be priced and organized. The collective happiness of the
society can be optimized by distribution of social rewards in such a way that
comparison is favorable for most people.
5. Ignoring
the negative externalities in allocations of investment:
Under
capitalism, the defining theme of production process is maximization of the
profits of the capital providers. Profit is ordinarily taken as revenue
minus cost. The perspective of capital providers is given in interpreting the
term “cost”. Apart from the cost born by capital providers, there are some additional
elements of cost born by externals (society) which is ignored. One such obvious
cost is pollution and its effect on society. There are many other negative
externalities like impact on pricing of other assets in the area before and
after a factory having been set up. The list goes on. There are positive
externalities also but these externalities are not random in the sense that
positive and negative externalities balance out. This is so because of inherent
bias on the part of capital providers to ignore negative externalities unless
forced by regulations. There is a need to price-in the net negative
externalities into the cost born by the capital providers. In the absence of
price being linked to true total cost of production, efficient allocation of
capital goes for a toss.
6. Ignoring
the well-being of future generations:
Investors prefer quick
returns. Beneficial projects for future generations likely to be taking multi-decades
are ignored. Lack of concern for future generations is also well reflected in
ruthless exploitation of oil as energy source despite full knowledge about its
scarcity and capitalists remaining clueless about how the future generation
would face the prospect of depletion of oil as source of energy. The alternative
sources of oil may cost a lot in future but its impact on well-being on the society
is not at all considered by present day capitalists.
How can the above
problems be addressed? Back to socialism is not an answer. As the citizens of
the twenty-first century are well-informed about the life-style offered by
socialism; it seems more plausible for capitalism to survive the test of
economic turbulence with some modifications.
I advocate the concept
of “Inclusive capitalism” under which the inherent deficiencies of
capitalism as discussed above are addressed to the extent found feasible.
Thinking of utopia is wasteful. We need to respect and reward the individual
superiority of human beings so long as it did not diminish the welfare of others
and ensured minimum standards of welfare for entire humanity. I am therefore
tempted to advocate curb on the absolute right to Passover the deceased
property to his/ her progenies. An individual should enjoy and amass whatever
he is capable of. Passing this over to successive generations creates economic
imbalance, hardening and exacerbating the layered structure of already
stratified society, diminishing the enthusiasm of children of HAVENOTS,
creation of oligarchies and many other associated evils. An absolute ban on
inheriting the property will serve as serious dis-incentive and frontal assault
on the concept of libertarianism. A controlled inheritance prescribing cap
on amount which can be inherited and heavy estate duty would temper the
ill-effects of absolute right to private property. Any income arising out of
estate duty should not be vested with government as increasing the domain of
government in economic affairs reduces the efficiency drastically. The money
thus available may be redistributed equally to all citizens of the country
preferably in the form of financial instruments. Additionally negative
externalities in the business process should be priced and factored into
the cost of production. This is easier said than done because pricing of many
externalities is difficult but trend towards pricing of environmental
externalities in power sector, carbon emission trading, carbon allowance for
consumers, marketable pollution permit etc. are welcome efforts in this
direction. Pricing of externalities will however always remain works-in-progress.
Thoughts worth pondering over. I agree in parts and also disagree a little. How to test the robustness of the suggested solution?
ReplyDeleteMost of the thoughts are articulating the need for creating social awarness. Inclusive capitalism has to address "equal opportunity" at micro levels. Eg. how the children of a incompetent parent will be provided equal opportunity with children of a far superior parent?
ReplyDelete