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Capitalists Who Fear Change

Digital technology is reinventing our whole world, in service of you and me. It’s free enterprise on steroids. It’s bypassing the gatekeepers and empowering each of us to invent our own civilization for ourselves, according to our own specifications.

The promise of the future is nothing short of spectacular — provided that those who lack the imagination to see the potential here don’t get their way. Sadly but predictably, some of the biggest barriers to a bright future are capitalists themselves who fear the future.

A good example is the current hysteria over 3-dimensional printing. This technology has moved with incredible speed from the realm of science fiction to the real world, seemingly in a matter of months. You can get such printers today for as low as $400. These printers allow objects to be transported digitally, and literally printed into existence right before your very eyes.

It’s like a miracle! It could change everything we think we know about the transport of physical objects. Rather than sending crates and boats around the world, in the future we will only send lightweight digits. The potential for bypassing monopolies and entrenched interests is spectacular

But here is what Andrew Myers reported in Wired Magazine last week:

Last winter, Thomas Valenty bought a MakerBot — an inexpensive 3-D printer that lets you quickly create plastic objects. His brother had some Imperial Guards from the tabletop game Warhammer, so Valenty decided to design a couple of his own Warhammer-style figurines: a two-legged war mecha and a tank.

He tweaked the designs for a week until he was happy. “I put a lot of work into them,” he says. Then he posted the files for free downloading on Thingiverse, a site that lets you share instructions for printing 3-D objects. Soon other fans were outputting their own copies.

Until the lawyers showed up.

Games Workshop, the UK-based firm that makes Warhammer, noticed Valenty’s work and sent Thingiverse a takedown notice, citing the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Thingiverse removed the files, and Valenty suddenly became an unwilling combatant in the next digital war: the fight over copying physical objects.

There we have it. The American Chamber of Commerce — the supposed defender of free enterprise — is in a meltdown panic, determined to either crush 3-D printing in its crib or, at least, to make sure it doesn’t grow past its toddler period.

In the 1940s, Joseph Schumpeter said that the capitalists would ultimately destroy capitalism by insisting that their existing profitability models perpetuate themselves in the face of change. He said that the capitalist class would eventually lose its taste for innovation and insist on government rules that brought it to an end, in the interest of protecting business elites.

An example: when music and books starting going digital, there was a outcry. How will authors and musicians survive this onslaught?

The truth is that there was no onslaught. It was a windfall for consumers that turned into the greatest boon for music and literature ever. Today we see how this is working, and not only working but there are more authors and musicians making money today than ever before. My best example: the Laissez Faire Club.

The methods could never have been anticipated in advance. Some give away their content and sell their performances. Some have found interesting new methods of distributing content behind pay walls that are affordable and convenient. Authors are starting to self publish through fantastic numbers of venues.

I’ve been touring museums lately, and I’ve begun to realize something important about the long process of technological improvement. Through our long history of improvement, every upgrade and every shift from old to new inspired panic. The biggest panic typically comes from the producers themselves who resent the way the market process destabilizes their business model.

It was said that the radio would end live performance. No one would learn music anymore. Everything would be performed one time, and recorded for all time, and that would be the end.

Of course that didn’t happen. Then there was another panic when records came out, on the belief that this would destroy radio. Then tapes were next and everyone predicted doom for recorded music since music could be so easily duplicated (“Home Taping is Killing Music”). It was the same with digital music: surely this would be the death of all music!

And think back to the mass ownership of books in the 19th century. Many people predicted that these would destroy new authors because people would just buy books by old authors that were cheap and affordable. New authors would starve and no one would write anymore.

There is a pattern here. Every new technology that becomes profitable causes people to scream about the plight of existing producers. Then it turns out over time that the sector itself thrives as never before but in ways that no one really expected.

The great secret of the market economy is that it embodies a long-run tendency to dissipate profits under existing production and distribution methods. This is how competition works. This is how competition not only inspires improvement but makes it unavoidable. And this is one reason that so many capitalists hate capitalism.

The process goes like this. The new thing comes along and it earns high profits. Then the copycats come along and do the same thing cheaper and better, robbing the first producer of the monopoly status. Profits eventually fall to zero and then something even better has to come along to attract new business, earn new profits, elicit new copycats, and the whole thing starts all over again.

I’ve never understood why leftists complain about profits going to capitalists. In a vibrant market economy, profits are the temporary exception to the rule. They accrue only to the most innovative and efficient firms, the ones that serve the consumer best, and the gains are never permanent. As soon as the company loses its edge, entrepreneurial profit vanishes.

Under free market competition, writes Ludwig von Mises, the trajectory of existing production and distribution models is always to reduce profits to zero. For those who want to hang on to profits, there can be no rest. New and improved must be an everyday experience. There must be a ceaseless striving to serve consumers in ways that are ever more excellent.

This is why business is always running to government for protection. Kill this crazy new technology! Stop these imports! Raise the costs on the competition! Give us a patent so that we can clobber the other guys! Impose antitrust law! Protect me with a copyright! Regulate the newcomers out of existence! Give us a bailout!

Aside from this, there is a public fear of the new. Otherwise, people would not find the self-interested protests of the existing establishment to be persuasive.

Here is a striking fact about the human mind: we have great difficulty imagining solutions that have yet to present themselves. It doesn’t matter how often the market resolves seemingly intractable problems, we still can’t become accustomed to this reality. Our minds think in terms of existing conditions, and then we predict all kinds of doom. We too often fail to consistently expect the unexpected.

This poses a serious problem for the market economy, which is all about the ability of the system to inspire discovery of new ideas and new solutions to prevailing the problems. The problems posed by change are obvious enough; but the solutions are “crowd sourced” and emerge from places, people, and institutions that cannot be seen in advance.

Capitalism is not for wimps who don’t want to improve. If you want guaranteed profits for the few rather than prosperity and abundance for the many, socialism and fascism really are better systems.

The push to stop market progress won’t work in the end, of course. Technology eventually mows down its forces of resistance. The mercantilists can only delay but never finally suppress the human longing for a better life.

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  • Raw Bytes

    Isn’t this just another utopia where those in power would never abuse it (monopolies) and be responsible/sensitive to the rest of us (market forces) and if not, would be thrown out (outcompeted).

  • Steven Christenson

    Excellent article, but I’m not going to recommend it to my friends because of one word:

    “If you want guaranteed profits for the few rather than prosperity and abundance for the many, SOCIALISM and fascism really are better systems.”

    It annoys me when people equate socialism and communism. I don’t want to live under a totalitarian communist regime any more than I want to live under a fascist regime. But I do want to live in a society that has a safety net and an agreed standard of community services. In his “Today’s ISM’s” Ebenstein summarizes socialism as capitalism with a Christian conscience. Not Lenin. Not Mao.

  • richie

    There are many claims made in this article but it is very
    one sided non-scientific view of capitalism. If you model it as a physical
    model using self-organized criticality / complexity theory, etc…
    Competition is only a single force in the system. As we know then there
    must also me an opposite force — Co-operation. cooperation does exist in
    the capitalist system and as you point made that’s when the “capitalists
    run to government”. It’s not government that is the problem per-say it’s
    the force of cooperation that occurs in the capitalists system that then
    creates classes, etc… Government is just one entity that becomes
    transformed under that force. Government under a democracy is suppose
    to provide a morality to the living creature of society that is
    evolving. The capitalists co-operative force then corrupts that
    morality. Much like energy you can not destroy that force.
    You can convert it into different forms yes but it will always be a
    co-operative force that will force capitalists to bound together to
    survive the avalanche — the swipe of the invisible hand.

    The current capitalists state which is rapidly evolving into a police
    state is indeed part of the evolutionary path that is produced as part of
    the underlying forces. Commodity relations are the simple (Newtonian
    rules if you will) rules of the system. Through the interactions of these
    simple rules these forces allow for evolution. The fascist police state
    will emerge EACH AND EVERY TIME when commodity relations are the
    underlying rules of the system. THIS IS WHAT CAPITALISM IS. It is not a
    system of free exchange it is not an economic system. It is a system in
    which the underlying rules cause evolutionary creatures of classes to
    evolve.

    We must view it as a scientific system, a physical system and apply
    the rules of evolution to it. If you change the underlying physical laws
    you will have different life forms emerge. This is what socialists and
    communists movements attempt to do. There are still commodity relations
    under socialism. Socialism (in terms of a path toward communism) is used
    to try to balance out the interacting forces to stabilize the system and
    then change the underlying physical laws to remove commodity relations from
    those laws so then a communist direct democratic state can emerge in
    which the morality is based on humanitarian needs and not the needs of the
    capitalists as it is today (eg, when government has been corrupted by the
    capitalists).

  • /. vil3nrob

    HaHaHa! Way to make me think differently. I will seriously stop hating on legitimately earned profits in a free market system. You have stopped this childish bad behaviour from me. I instead will begrudge those who try to turn this market into government assisted bullying/profit protection scheme for current producers. Great read.

  • Carl Sawtell

    Get Your Facts Straight

    Basing an argument on historical precedent works only if you represent history accurately. As soon as I read “Then there was another panic when records came out, on the belief that this would destroy radio.” I rolled on the floor – there was an outcry against phonograph records – by the sheet music publishers, in the 19th century. That outcry had already disappeared when broadcast radio appeared decades later. (But of course copyright holders prohibited radio broadcasters from playing phonograph records on air for decades, under the mistaken belief that it would be tantamount to giving the records away for free. – precisely the opposite of the fact referenced by the author.)

    I think the author’s point may have some validity, but when he gets the facts so blatantly wrong, it’s hard to trust that he is doing anything more than spinning yarns that would bolster his case, if only they were true.

  • J Cortez

    Congratulations, you’ve been slashdotted. :)

    I did a double take when I saw it. To my knowledge, only random bits of Ron Paul and Stephan Kinsella very tech related IP presentation, are the only things Austro-libertarian with influences that have made the cut.

    Slashdot is a surprise since, at least in the comments section, it leans toward social democratic policies and tends to eschew capitalism. Economic ignorance aside, that bunch is pretty savvy in terms of tech. Slashdot’s got a very large audience and it’s great to see the ideas getting out into the wild in place you’d never thought you’d see them.

    Great article. Thanks

  • http://877-Linux25 Jeff Small

    “They accrue only to the most innovative and efficient firms, the ones that serve the consumer best, and the gains are never permanent.” – This is totally naive of the real world. Unless it was meant tongue-in-cheek. Microsoft, anyone?

    • J Cortez

      I’m assuming your comment is facetious, but if not, I’ll play. :)

      Seeing as how pretty much nobody else did it better, yes, what he wrote is correct.

      For the average consumer who wants something that works the majority of the time for a cheap price, Microsoft has been consistently the best.

      Now, if you’re going to only consider the needs of a power user or the premium user, then yes Microsoft is garbage. Server admins and high dollar fashion hipsters are not going to be caught dead with MS product.

      But when you only consider the needs of the average customer, that nexus of different points of brand recognition, usability, reliability, portability, business savvy, and price, Microsoft IS consistently better.

    • William Ahern

      I’m not sure it’s necessarily naive, just underspecified or–if you’re cynical–a malicious misrepresentation.

      I agree that in this context “innovative” is not synonymous with technical excellence, nor is efficient synonymous with ruthless accounting.

      Those terms aren’t meant as categorical assertions of quality. They’re statements of fact, in the sense that under competition, and after the dust settles, once we reach equilibrium the firms remaining are ipso facto the most innovative and efficient.

      Yes, the last firms standing may have been principally selected by path dependent phenomena. But that’s inconsequential to the fact that the firms remaining were, in a sense, “selected” by the market because, on balance, they had the necessary traits for survival, even if those traits appear completely absurd and maladaptive on their face.

      “Innovative” and “efficient”, in essence, are tautological assertions, and therefore almost completely useless in argumentation, IMO. If they are used, it can only be for they’re tendency to induce the listener to equivocate their meaning with whatever social objective they personally desire.

      Not unlike the word “utility” in economics, which is a stand-in for the result of “whatever the model maximizes”, and used to induce to the listener to think that the model is maximizing what he desires.

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