By
Sheldon Richman
ERNEST HEMINGWAY: I am getting to know the rich.
MARY COLUM: I think you’ll find the only difference between the rich and other people is that the rich have more money.
Irish literary critic Mary Colum was mistaken. Greater net worth is
not the only way the rich differ from the rest of us—at least not in a
corporatist economy. More important is influence and access to power,
the ability to subordinate regular people to larger-than-human-scale
organizations, political and corporate, beyond their control.
To be sure, money can buy that access, but only in certain
institutional settings. In a society where state and economy were
separate (assuming that’s even conceptually possible), or better yet in a
stateless society, wealth would not pose the sort of threat it poses in
our corporatist (as opposed to a decentralized free-market) system.
Adam Smith famously wrote in
The Wealth of Nations that
“[p]eople
of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and
diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the
public, or in some contrivance to raise prices.” Much less famously, he
continued: “It is impossible indeed to prevent such meetings, by any law
which either could be executed, or would be consistent with liberty or
justice. But though the law cannot hinder people of the same trade from
sometimes assembling together, it ought to do nothing to facilitate
such assemblies; much less to render them necessary.”
The fact is, in the corporate state government indeed facilitates
“conspiracies” against the public that could not otherwise take place.
What’s more, because of this facilitation, it is reasonable to think the
disparity in incomes that naturally arises by virtue of differences
among human beings is dramatically exaggerated. We can identify several
sources of this unnatural wealth accumulation.
A primary source is America’s financial system, which since 1914 has
revolved around the government-sponsored central banking cartel, the
Federal Reserve. To understand this, it must first be noted that in an
advanced market economy with a well-developed division of labor, the
capital market becomes the “locus for entrepreneurial decision-making,”
as Walter E. Grinder and John Hagel III, writing within the perspective
of the Austrian school of economics, put it in their 1977 paper, “Toward
a Theory of State Capitalism: Ultimate Decision-Making and Class
Structure.”