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Before I had ever heard of Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich A. Hayek,
Murray Rothbard, and, thus, the Austrian School of economics, I
had enthusiastically followed the economics research undertaken
by the Santa Fe Institute (SFI). My interest in the institute
emerged after reading Dr. Stuart Kauffman’s fabulous book At
Home in the Universe: The Search for the Laws of
Self-Organization and Complexity (published in 1995).
Dr.
Kauffman is a member of the Santa Fe Institute, which is the
world’s leading research institute pertaining to the science
of complexity. A particular line, in Dr. Kauffman’s
aforementioned book, struck me as important: “It is our quest
to understand emergence of this ordered complexity all around
us, in the living forms we see, the ecosystems they construct,
the social systems that abound from insects to primates, the
wonder of economic systems that actually deliver us our daily
bread and astonished Adam Smith into the conceptualization of
his invisible hand.”
It
was this line, combined with the concept of self-organization,
which gave me hope that brilliant scientists would produce
research supporting the wonders of capitalism while
demonstrating the reasons as to why socialism/central planning
has utterly failed and has only lead to wide-scale poverty.
After all, socialism/central planning is a concept antithetical
to spontaneous self-organization. Unfortunately, the Santa Fe
Institute’s economics research program—particularly in the
area of poverty—has shown me that the socialistic paradigm,
that is so common in academia, is literally blinding their
research efforts.
Instead
of promoting capitalism, which is inherently an unplanned,
self-organized, and a successful economic system, SFI’s
research regarding poverty has a Marxist class-struggle flavor
to it while promoting wealth redistribution—i.e. taxation and
redistribution, by a central governmental authority, with the
goal of alleviating poverty.
In
my opinion, logic has been completely suspended here.
Thankfully, a few years ago, a friend introduced me to Austrian
economics. It is here that I have found my intellectual home. I
learned that economic calculation is impossible in a socialist
commonwealth and that capitalism provides the best chance for
all individuals to prosper. If the researchers at the Santa Fe
Institute want to learn how to alleviate poverty, then their
most fruitful research will come from using an Austrian
perspective. This will require a radical paradigm shift.
Ironically, it will be a shift back to accepting the truth that
a robust economy is self-organized and, thus, an unplanned
phenomenon.
For
those who are not familiar with the science of complexity, it is
a relatively new science that is somewhat difficult to define.
At the heart of this science is the belief that spontaneous
order—or self-organization—emerges as a result of physical
laws, which clearly remain undiscovered. A broad definition of
self-organization is as follows (taken from the book Swarm Intelligence: From Natural to Artificial Systems):
Self-organization
is a set of dynamical mechanisms whereby structures appear at
the global level of a system from interactions among its
lower-level components. The rules specifying the interactions
among the system’s constituent units are executed on the basis
of purely local information, without reference to the global
pattern, which is an emergent property of the system rather than
a property imposed upon the system by an external ordering
influence.
Using
this definition, I would strongly assert that central banks such
as the Federal Reserve are formed under the pretense of
providing an ordering influence to the market place, and yet,
are completely unnecessary for a free-market order to emerge.
The same can be said of a central taxing authority bent on
creating a more perfect society via wealth redistribution. As I
will discuss later, central banks and central taxing authorities
end up as destabilizing influences and, therefore, cause
disorder and poverty.
If
one was to reword the above-mentioned description of a
self-organized phenomenon into economic terms, then it
couldn’t be done any better than the following quote from Dr.
Murray Rothbard’s magnum opus Man, Economy, and State:
Directly,
voluntary action—free exchange—leads to the mutual benefit
of both parties to the exchange. Indirectly, as our
investigations have shown, the network of these free exchanges
in society—known as the ‘free market’—creates a delicate
and even awe-inspiring mechanism of harmony, adjustment, and
precision in allocating productive resources, deciding upon
prices, and gently but swiftly guiding the economic system
toward the greatest possible satisfaction of the desires of all
the consumers. In short, not only does the free market directly
benefit all parties and leave them free and uncoerced; it also
creates a mighty and efficient instrument of social order.
Proudhon, indeed, wrote better than he knew when he called
‘Liberty, the mother, not the daughter, of order’.
It
is quite possible that there are no physical laws of
self-organization responsible for the emergence of a free-market
social order. Certainly, Dr. Rothbard did not advocate such a
concept (i.e. that there are physical laws responsible for
self-organization). Nevertheless, the great Austrian economist
and Nobel laureate Friedrich A. Hayek did feel that research
regarding spontaneous, self-organizing processes was a worthy
endeavor. For example, Dr. Hayek stated the following in his
book The Fatal Conceit:
The Errors of Socialism: “Adam Smith nevertheless remains
the butt of jokes even among economists, many of whom have not
yet discovered that the analysis of self-ordering processes must
be the chief task of any science of the market order.”
If
I have done anything here, I hope that I have demonstrated an
intellectual connection between Austrian economics and the
science of complexity. Therefore, it would seem that the Santa
Fe Institute’s economics researchers would be most interested
in studying the free-market order as advocated by Dr. Kauffman
(unless he really didn’t mean what he stated in his book At Home in the Universe). As I will demonstrate below, SFI’s
scientists are defying logic and are advocating socialistic
prescriptions for alleviating poverty.
So
let’s get to the Santa Fe Institute’s suspension of logic.
As I mentioned earlier, SFI is involved in researching the
socio-economic issue of poverty. It appears to me that SFI’s
researchers believe the solution to the problem of poverty lies
with socialism instead of capitalism – which, once again, is
an unplanned, self-organized economic system. As an example,
here’s what was stated in the Santa Fe Institute’s 2000
Annual Research Report:
SFI
is in the midst of hosting four interdisciplinary workshops
seeking to better understand the persistence of economic and
social inequality in both groups and individuals, its impact on
the ability of groups to cooperate in the pursuit of
environmental sustainability and other common objectives, and
the capacity of governments and other collective actors to
alleviate poverty and economic insecurity given the constraints
of global economic integration. The workshops address the
following topics (I’ve
shortened the workshop-topic descriptions without preventing you
from getting the gist of each topic):
-
Poverty
traps. For economic,
cultural, technological and institutional reasons, otherwise
identical individuals often suffer or enjoy divergent
fortunes as a result of differing initial conditions; as a
result individuals, ethnic groups, nations and other
entities can remain locked in poverty.
-
The
intergenerational transmission of economic inequality.
The impact of parental wealth and income on offsprings’
economic success is substantial…
-
Inequality
and environmental sustainability.
-
Globalization
and egalitarian redistribution.
The freer movement of capital, goods, people and information
is thought to raise the costs and compromise the
effectiveness of some national policies designed to raise
incomes and economic opportunity for the least well off.
Plain
and simple, these workshops will provide no contributions to
gaining a better understanding of poverty. The Santa Fe
Institute is merely seeking ways to help government redistribute
wealth, via taxation, in order to alleviate poverty. This is not
science, it is scientism. Nowhere have I found any research from
SFI pointing to governmental central planning as a key cause of
poverty. To me, this makes no sense considering SFI performs
research regarding self-ordering phenomena. Wouldn’t it make
sense to explore the idea of making a free-market economy even
more robust so that poverty could be alleviated (i.e. looking at
deregulation, abolishing the Federal Reserve, eliminating taxes,
etc.)? A left-wing paradigm clearly can lead to a suspension of
logic, especially considering that Ludwig von Mises has shown
that economic calculation is impossible in a socialist
commonwealth—refer to Dr. Mises’ excellent book Economic
Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth.
For
me to make the claim that the Santa Fe Institute is seeking ways
to help government redistribute wealth via taxation is a strong
statement, although it is self-evident from looking at the
above-mentioned socialist-flavored workshop topics. All doubt
will be removed once you read the following quote from an
interview with Sir Robert May, who sits on the Santa Fe
Institute’s Science Board. I found this information on page
six of the Summer 2001 edition of the SFI
Bulletin. This section of the article was ironically
subtitled “Making Coherent Contributions”:
He
also has ideas about applying complexity theory in the social
sciences, particularly…economics, a field he sees as
desperately in need of “transforming insights that respect
data.” And the advent of e-commerce provides a fruitful new
area to explore. One possible topic is taxation. “As money
becomes more and more virtual it is going to become harder and
harder to levy taxes,” he argues, “other than from
individuals that are located in particular places in ways that
much of commerce is not.” He suggests an SFI program to
explore the implementation of new tax regimes to offset the
inaccessibility of commerce, and the social consequences that
might follow from a shift of the tax burden from corporations
hiding out in cyberspace to individuals who the government can
still find.
In
other words, the Santa Fe Institute wants to help government
hunt you down and tax you wherever you may be in the world. Of
course, Sir Robert May is making the mistaken assumption that
government creates wealth when the opposite is true. Government
destroys wealth and perpetuates poverty.
As
any adherent of Austrian economics knows, inflation is a hidden
and redistributive tax. Moreover, it is a central bank that
causes inflation. When a central bank can create money out of
thin air, the power to depreciate the value of money is
frightening, and eventually socially devastating. Let’s look
at the United States’ Federal Reserve and its long-term
destruction of the dollar’s purchasing power. Since the
Federal Reserve’s founding in 1913, the dollar’s purchasing
power has depreciated by over 95% (go to the Bureau of Labor
Statistics’ Inflation
Calculator, at www.bls.gov,
and you can confirm this horrific destruction of the dollar’s
purchasing power).
If
having the government create money out of thin air leads to
prosperity, then Argentina and Brazil should have become the
world’s wealthiest countries by the end of the 1980s. Instead,
the ravages of inflation lead to greater poverty and massive
social unrest in both of these countries. It is simply amazing
that the Santa Fe Institute’s research scientists haven’t
figured this out yet. Families in America are having more
difficulty making ends meet because the prices of goods and
services are rising over time, directly due to the dollar’s
depreciation brought on by the Federal Reserve itself. Using a
little bit of logic here, doesn’t it stand to reason that it
will be more difficult to climb out of poverty if the prices of
goods and services are rising continuously? The very government
the Santa Fe Institute wants to serve, is the same entity that
helps perpetuate poverty through the pernicious tax of
inflation.
Naturally,
Austrians advocate a 100% gold standard. Through a
socio-economic selection process, gold and silver emerged as
money. When gold and silver are used as media of exchange, the
tendency is for the prices of goods and services to decline over
time. With this being the case, logic would also dictate that
declining prices, for goods and services, should alleviate
poverty over time as well. Once again, I have not seen any
research from the Santa Fe Institute regarding the positive role
that a gold standard would play in the battle against poverty.
Keep in mind that governments hate gold because it restricts a
government’s ability to spend money on every pet project that
comes down the pike. A gold standard forces government to live
within its means just as American families must do.
A
favorite tax amongst those who view the world with a
class-struggle (i.e. Marxist) paradigm, is the estate tax. By
taxing an estate, government believes it is taking from the rich
and giving to the poor. Moreover, it is attempting to prevent
“the intergenerational transmission of economic inequality”
(to use SFI’s words). In reality, the death tax has produced
results that are exactly the opposite of its essential
goal—i.e. to redistribute wealth in order to help the less
fortunate climb the socio-economic ladder. Republican
Congresswoman Jennifer Dunn’s April 5, 2001 press release
titled “House Buries Death Tax” provides excellent insight
as to how the death tax tends to perpetuate poverty instead of
alleviating it. She stated the following:
This
onerous tax has a crippling grip on economic expansion and
doesn’t discriminate when it comes to victimizing Americans.
Victims of this tax can be found in minority communities, where
it takes an average of three generations to build an economic
foothold in the community – but this tax puts a stranglehold
on growth – causing minority-owned small businesses to close
shop after only a couple of generations. Because of the death
tax, women in particular are struggling to pass their businesses
on to their children. This was confirmed by a recent survey of
women business owners where 60% of the respondents indicated the
death tax will hurt expansion plans. Sadly, that’s after women
were given equal access to business loans just 25 years ago.
It
is interesting to note who was in favor of scrapping the death
tax. Congresswoman Dunn received the support of over 100
organizations including the following four:
-
The
Black Chamber of Commerce
-
The
Hispanic Chamber of Commerce
-
The
National Indian Business Association
-
The
Nature Conservancy
These
people understand that wealth redistribution is tantamount to
wealth destruction. If this was not the case, then LBJ’s
“Great Society” program would have been a smashing success.
The best way to allow people to climb the socio-economic ladder
is to let them keep their own hard-earned money. Confiscatory
taxes only serve to make it more difficult for all families to
grow wealthier over time. Members of the above-mentioned
organizations know this. It is time for the central
planners—and their enablers such as the Santa Fe
Institute—to understand that the outcomes of their plans tend
to be the exact opposite of what they had hoped. The death tax
provides a perfect example.
For
the Santa Fe Institute’s economics research program to regain
sound footing, it must shed its Marxist-colored glasses and get
back to its fundamental research of spontaneous order. In their
research, I am sure that they will find that liberty, a rule of
law securing private property rights, and sound money (i.e.
gold) will provide the conditions for a robust economy to emerge
without the need for central planning. In turn, poverty will be
alleviated over time. Of course, Austrian economists already
know this.
In
closing, I want to pass on a powerful quote from Friedrich A.
Hayek. This quote came from his marvelous book The
Fatal Conceit: The Errors of Socialism. For clarification
purposes, when Dr. Hayek uses the term “extended order” he
is referring to a complex adaptive system (a free-market
economy):
I
have been attempting to explain how the extended order of human
cooperation has evolved despite opposition from our instincts,
despite fear of all the uncertainties inherent in spontaneous
processes, despite widespread economic ignorance, and despite
the distillation of all these in movements that seek to use
allegedly rational means to achieve genuinely atavistic ends. I
have also maintained that the extended order would collapse, and
that much of our population would suffer and die, if such
movements ever did truly succeed in displacing the market. Like
it or not, the current world population already exists.
Destroying its material foundation in order to attain
‘ethical’ or instinctually gratifying improvements advocated
by socialists would be tantamount to condoning the death of
billions and the impoverishment of the rest.
If
the Santa Fe Institute continues on its path of serving
government through promoting taxation and redistribution, then
its goal of helping reduce poverty will be met with the exact
opposite result. Just look at the results of the death tax and
at the results of the “inflation-fighting” Federal Reserve.
Conscious central planning/socialism has increased poverty all
over the world.
Should the
Santa Fe Institute become serious about understanding
spontaneous processes, in the field of economics, it will
discard any pretense that somehow conscious central planning has
anything to do with spontaneous economic processes. Such an
intellectual error is breathtaking yet can be rectified by
shifting to an Austrian paradigm. At this point, they will come
to understand that abolishing the inflation-happy Federal
Reserve and abolishing confiscatory taxes will be the best
economic policy prescriptions it could ever make to help
alleviate poverty.

© 2005 Eric Englund
Editorial Archives
Eric
Englund has
an MBA from Boise State University and lives in the state of
Oregon. He is the publisher of The
Hyperinflation Survival Guide by Dr. Gerald Swanson. You
are invited to visit his website.
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