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Thursday, January 31, 2019

A RESPONSE TO MICHAEL KATES


In response to my post about Rawls, Michael Kates writes:  “Isn’t the implication of your critique, then, that Rawls’ theory of justice is far more egalitarian than most people assume it to be? After all, if no one needs a monetary incentive to take such a job since it’s already inherently desirable, then doesn’t that mean that the Difference Principle wouldn’t license such an inequality in the first place?”

The simple answer is:  Yes.  But that is not the end of it.  Indeed, the comment opens up a large and, at least to me, fascinating field of inquiry.  In this post I will try to sketch some of the lineaments of that inquiry.  By the way, Mr. [Prof?] Kates’ observation is not original, I believe, although none the less important.   I am also reminded of the fact that despite Hegel’s reactionary celebration of the Prussian monarchy, there were young students in the 1830’s and 40’s who found revolutionary inspiration in his writings – the Left Hegelians, as they were sometimes called.  I believe there are also Left Rawlsians [among whom one can even find the later Rawls himself in some of his incarnations.]

To begin my response to this pregnant question, let me go back [as I so often do] to the situation confronting Marx when he undertook his anatomy of capitalism.  There had long been a hierarchical social and economic structure in Western Europe, with the landed aristocracy and the rich Catholic Church dominating a terrain on which one found very large numbers of poor peasants, guilds of craftsmen living in the walled cities [or bourgs, hence bourgeois], merchants and traders, lawyers, and of course royal courts presided over by more [or in some cases less] wealthy and powerful kings.  In the early days of the development of what would become capitalism, small-scale enterprises sprang up using legally free laborers to produce goods to be sold in the market for a profit.

By the middle of the nineteenth century, the landed aristocracy was in retreat, and larger and larger profit-making enterprises were beginning to emerge from the welter of small businesses.  On the basis of what he saw happening before his eyes, Marx was convinced that over time, large capitals would gobble up small capitals, and wage labor would displace traditional craft labor.  The world would more and more become a bi-polar confrontation of Capital and Labor with the ever-greater rationalization of the means of production in conflict with, or in contradiction with, the irrationality of private ownership of those means of production, leading eventually to a world-wide economic crises and a seizure by the now-organized workers of the means of production – in short, to socialism.

Marx got some big things right, and he got some big things wrong.  Marx predicted the progressive centralization of capital, leading even to internationalization of capital.  He got that right.  He also anticipated the progressive homogenization of the labor force, facilitating ever more extensive labor mobilization and ever greater solidarity of the working class.  He got that wrong.  A century and a half after the publication of Das Kapital, we see vast, almost unimaginable concentrations of capital, but also a steep hierarchy of jobs and wages that has fatally undermined any possibility of genuine working class solidarity.

Generations of economists, sociologists, political scientists, have devoted their considerable talents to justifying this steep pyramid of jobs and compensations.  It would be tedious yet again to expose the absurdity of the notion of marginal product, or to anatomize Gary Becker’s Nobel Prize winning concept of human capital.  Rawls’ Bargaining Game/Difference Principle rationalization of broad wage disparities, with its concomitant failure to confront the private ownership of the socially produced means of production, is simply the philosophically most sophisticated contribution to a long tradition of intellectual rationalization.  What makes Michael Kates’ comment especially valuable is that it confronts us with the unsustainability of the central thesis of that tradition, even in its most elegant version.

7 comments:

Marinus said...

Talking about Left Rawlsians, you may be interested in a recent book by William Edmundson: John Rawls: Reticent Socialist, which is an example of the form. There is an interview he did with the New Books in Philosophy podcast about the book which is a nice condensed by highly informative overview of the view he defends in there.

https://newbooksnetwork.com/william-a-edmundson-john-rawls-reticent-socialist-cambridge-up-2017/

s. wallerstein said...

I always thought that the purpose of Rawls' work was not to rationalize obscenely broad wage differences, but to limit them to those which work to the benefit of the least advantaged.

Pro-free market people do not rely on Rawls for their ideological support and in fact, consider him to be a bit of a pinko. Pro-free market people generally don't bother to justify wage differences in ethical terms (as Rawls does), but simply affirm that if you can get it in the free market, it's yours, since any limitation on the free market is a sin to them.

Now it may be that in fact Rawls' work does not limit obscenely broad wage differences, and like you (Professor Wolff), I'd prefer a Marxist type economy of some sorts, but lumping Rawls with Gary Becker, a Chicago school neoliberal ultra-free market apostle, beloved of the ideologues of the Pinochet dictatorship is a bit unfair to Rawls.

Michael Kates said...

Thanks, Prof. Wolff, for the response to my comment. (And, yes, I'm a professor too; I teach in the philosophy department at Saint Joseph's University in Philadelphia).

I also confess to being something of a Left Rawlsian. For that reason, I don't see how one can think of the Difference Principle as a "rationalization" of the current massively unequal distribution of income and wealth (the "steep pyramid of jobs and compensations," as you elegantly put it). Rather, the Difference Principle is a normative standard or criterion by which we are to judge alternative sets of distributions. It forces us to ask: which of the alternative sets of feasible distributions makes the worst off as well off as they can possibly be? If the current distribution is the best the worst off can hope for, then it would indeed justify the extremes of wealth and poverty that we presently see. But there's absolutely no reason to think that's the case. And, for what it's worth, Rawls believed so as well.

Now you are quite correct to say that the Difference Principle does not, by itself, "confront the private ownership of the socially produced means of production," but that's because it's, strictly speaking, agnostic between competing economic systems (say, capitalism and socialism). It instead counsels us to select the economic system that maximizes the position of the least well off. What Left Rawlsians believe is that capitalism is fundamentally inferior in that regard and so that's why we must choose socialism.

Danny said...

'It would be tedious yet again to expose the absurdity of the notion of marginal product, or to anatomize Gary Becker’s Nobel Prize winning concept of human capital.'

It would be what, now? Tedious? When I reached this sentence I had been rolling my eyes the whole way at the perfectly vague usage of the term 'capital' -- 'Marx was convinced that over time, large capitals would gobble up small capitals', 'The world would more and more become a bi-polar confrontation of Capital and Labor', 'Marx predicted the progressive centralization of capital, leading even to internationalization of capital', 'we see vast, almost unimaginable concentrations of capital'..

The word 'capital', what happens if we attempt a pithy definition for our broad and diverse purposes, here? I probably need to emphasize that already, other jargon terms like 'internationalization' that I encounter in this post, strike me as being largely blather. Internationalization is a particularly extreme form of centralization. This streches my imagination -- I wonder if I could brew a cup of tea and, as a diviner, now look at the pattern of tea leaves in the cup and see that there is a sort of a greater degree of centralization with increasing internationalization. Perhaps it is my failure to adopt a holistic 'vertical' perspective, but I wonder why there cannot be descreasing centralization with increasing internationalization. I am kidding, but also I incline to mock 'homogenization' and 'rationalization', and 'mobilization', and 'publication', and concentrations, or, that is, I get to 'vast, almost unimaginable 'concentrations' of capital', and I have lost confidence already, in my imagination. It all seems to me like a description of allowing the imagination to play around with the shapes suggested by the pattern of tea leaves in the a cup, and they might look like a letter, a heart shape, or a ring.

Danny said...

--Becker received the Nobel Prize in 1992 "for having extended the domain of microeconomic analysis to a wide range of human behavior and interaction, including nonmarket behavior".

--A marginal product is the incremental change in output (how many additional units) attributed to a change in any single input item (like materials, labor, and overhead).

Juxtapose the notiont that 'productivity' is, at its most basic, the output gained from a unit of input. There is also the notion of the market value of one additional unit of output. Looking up the details, I find that American economist John Bates Clark (1847-1938) and Swedish economist Knut Wicksell (1851-1926) first showed that revenue depends on the marginal productivity of additional factors of production. Business owners frequently use MRP analysis to make critical production decisions. For example, a farmer wants to know whether to purchase another specialized tractor to seed and harvest wheat. If it is relevant, I think we can all agree that estimating costs and revenues is difficult. I would add that marginalism (or marginality) is a very important concept in economics. The main point coming from me, would be that we don't have to pretend to be interested in 'tedious' economics. I have plenty to learn about economics, though I do recall that there are rumored to be several critical economic insights that grew out of marginalism, including marginal productivity, marginal costs, marginal utility, the law of diminishing marginal returns..

Anonymous said...

Okay, let's try an answer to that observation about the impossibly imprecise meaning of the word capital (lower case).

You just type "definition: capital" in the search box of your trusty browser. If you are using Google as your search engine, it shall return something like this:

capital
Dictionary result for capital
noun
wealth in the form of money or other assets owned by a person or organization or available for a purpose such as starting a company or investing.
"rates of return on invested capital were high"
synonyms: money, finance(s), funds, the wherewithal, the means, assets, wealth, resources, reserves, deep pockets, stock, principal; working capital, investment capital;
informaldough, bread, loot, the ready, readies, shekels, moolah, the necessary, wad, boodle, dibs, gelt, ducats, rhino, gravy, scratch, stuff, oof;
informaldosh, brass, lolly, spondulicks, wonga, ackers;
informaldinero, greenbacks, simoleons, bucks, jack, mazuma;
"by 1977 he had amassed enough capital to pull off the property deal of the century"

You are welcome.

s. wallerstein said...

Marinus Ferreira,

The podcast on Rawls as a reluctant socialist, which you link to, was quite clarifying.
Thanks.