Tuesday 15 April 2008

Perfect capitalism and perfect communism

Theory

There's a theory that says the following: extreme left on the political scale eventually meets up with extreme right. That is, communism in its most perfect and pure form is identical with capitalism in its most perfect and pure form. This comes close to being the truth, except for one quite major detail, as I show below.

The most queer thing about pure unadulterated capitalism, for me, is that it does not assume the need or existence of nation-states. The nation-state system is merely a byproduct of politics. "Imagine no countries", if you will.

Another concept that is an integral part of our world, but not of classical and neoclassical economic theory, is distance. In the twenty-first century, in an age of intense globalisation, we are moving towards reduced transport and communication costs. But the "death of distance" is not merely far away; it is impossible.

The practical existence of these two concepts, the nation-state system and distance, is not presupposed by economic theory. This goes a long way in explaining the following three things.

Firstly, and most obviously, that factor prices are not equal all around the world. Barriers to free trade exist due to the existence of different countries, and in any case distance makes it impossible to outsource things like manual labour.

Secondly, that we are not all a light-brown colour. Again, the existence of nations and distance makes it impossible for the gene pool to be all mixed up.

Thirdly, and finally, that some areas of the world are poorer than others. Convergence theory, despite its utter lack empirical evidence to support it in the real world, would work in a classical or neoclassical world (if there were any divergence in the first place).

In a perfectly capitalist world, therefore, all prices would be equal all over the world, factor prices would converge, and all people would be equal by their colour of skin.

Notice that in this perfectly capitalist world, if every single person faced exactly the same prices for goods and services, the same factor prices, and if everybody had the same colour of skin, he would be equal to everybody else. (I have not yet figured if this equivalence is merely by definition, but I suspect not.) If the total amount of utility in such a society were denoted by E, and there were n people in this society, each person would have E/n.

Perfect communism, by definition, has everybody equal. If the total amount of utility in a perfectly communist society were denoted by e, and there were n people in this society (same as the perfectly capitalist society above), each person would have e/n.

How do we compare these? It is clear that a comparison would involve analysing E and e to see which is bigger. Now how do we calculate relative values of E and e?

Imagine the state of the world as it is today, and imagine converting it into a perfectly capitalist system. By removing all barriers to trade, one can conservatively estimate that world GDP would double. By removing all barriers to international migration, world GDP would double again. Kill distance: its death would (I'm guessing here) increase world GDP tenfold. Remove away politics and nation-states: GDP would increase another tenfold (I'm again guessing). If denoted present-day utility, it is abundantly clear from the above that E >>> .

Now imagine the process of converting today's world into a perfectly communist system. Everybody's utility will decrease until the level hits the utility level of the person with lowest utility. In other words, everybody receives the lowest common denominator of utility. Given that the world today is unequal, at least one person's utility level decreases when making the transition to a perfectly communist world. The proof is sufficient to show that e <<< .

Now, e <<< <<< E. Assuming transitivity, e <<< E.

Thus both perfect capitalism and perfect communism have everybody equal, but the average utility of people living under perfect capitalism is much higher than the average utility living under perfect communism. This better expressed by the following statement: capitalism makes the economic pie bigger for everyone, eventually having everybody receive an equal slice; communism merely cuts up the pie into equal slices, not caring about each slice's value.

Personal reaction

I am currently a conservative because I believe that we can make the economic pie bigger. Much bigger. But equality is an anathema to me. So if we start liberalising the world economy to such an extent that perfect capitalism looks on the horizon (unlikely, but still), I will certainly turn to the left.

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