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Is (Radical) Libertarianism a Utopia?

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Title: Is (Radical) Libertarianism a Utopia?


1
Is (Radical) Libertarianism a Utopia?
  • Carlo Lottieri
  • Leuven, IES
  • July 16th, 2007

2
1. Radical LibertarianismA Consistent
Version of Classical Liberalism
  • A radical version of libertarianism.
  • But many classical liberals argue that this
    version of libertarianism (often called
    anarcho-capitalism) has to be rejected.

3
2. What Is Anarcho-capitalism?
  • Anarcho-capitalism is the theory of a society
    where all the functions and the services
    (defence, protection and law included) are
    provided by private enterprises.
  • 1849 the starting point (G. de Molinari).
  • Contemporary versions Rothbard, D. Friedman and
    others.

4
3. Anarcho-capitalism different leanings and
essential ideas
  • Natural law individual rights.
  • Utilitarianism freedom to choose and economic
    growth.

5
4. Abolishing eminent domain and political
obligation
  • Eminent domain the power of taxing, taking and
    regulating.
  • Political obligation the power to force people
    to accept duties .

6
5.Three Classical Liberal Attacks to
Anarcho-capitalism
  • Radical libertarianism as a Utopian Vision A New
    Mankind
  • Radical Libertarianism as an Impossible
    (Unrealistic)Blueprint
  • Radical Libertarianism as a Dangerous Project

7
6. Anarcho-capitalism is an Ethical Criterion
  • Anarcho-capitalism is a criterion we have
    always to choose liberty and refuse coercion
  • Is it an abstract criterion? But all criteria are
    abstract!

8
7. Can a radical libertarian society exist?
  • Yes and no. Society is a pure product of human
    wills, but at the same time many men have
    anti-libertarian attitudes.
  • National societies and (parallel) libertarian
    institutions.

9
8. Libertarianism doesnt need a New Man
  • 19th century socialist anarchism implied a New
    Mankind a sort of rebirth
  • On the contrary, libertarianism is a realistic
    theory and it moves from an analysis of the
    nature of actual men.

10
9. Libertarianism doesnt imply the reject of any
authority
  • 19th century socialist anarchism was against God,
    the family, and all authorities.
  • On the contrary, for classical liberals and
    libertarians a society with legitimate
    autorithies is in a better situation vis-à-vis
    the power.

11
10. Libertarianism isnt an alternative to Law
  • State and Law are not synonymous.
  • On the contrary, under a State there is a legal
    war of all against all.

12
11. Is reasonable the libertarian claim to
eliminate any aggression?
  • From a realistic point of view, all future
    societies will be forced to fight criminality and
    other troubles.
  • But a theory of justice must prospect a model and
    for this reason a libertarian perspective has to
    suggest the end of any sort of aggression.

13
12. Can competitive governments protect us
better than the State?
  • It is Molinaris argument no need to reject
    classical liberal principles in some special
    sectors.
  • Lockean theory natural rights.
  • Classical economics competition.
  • Private companies (arbitration courts and private
    armies) can substitute bureaucratic State.

14
13. Stateless Society isnt a synonymousof
Free-Market Society
  • A Free-Market Society is a just society.
  • A Stateless Society is only a Society without
    State, with many institutions and agencies of
    different nature (peaceful or aggressive).

15
14. Does a stateless society become fatally a
State?
  • Following Nozick (Anarchy, State, and Utopia),
    state of nature cannot last. All stateless
    societies are doomed to leave room to a legal and
    coercive monopoly.
  • 3 possibilities
  • One agency (the strongest)
  • Many local agencies (division of the
    territory)
  • A cartel (a way to unify independent
    institutions)
  • But there is no reason to reject the possibility
    of a market of peaceful private governments.

16
15. A Cartel Is Always a Danger?
  • It depends.
  • POLITICS
  • United Nations this is a cartel of states, with
    the purpose to build a World Government. The
    outcome is negative.
  • ECONOMICS
  • A cartel of companies can be the effect of the
    efforts to cooperate in order to satisfy the
    needs of the consumers. The outcome is positive.
  • But some aspects of present legal institutions
    are  economic  (for instance the problem of
    extradition).

17
16. Pure economic theory is enough?
  • No.
  • Market competition is different from
    military/political competition.
  • In fact, economic competition requires law. But
    how can be protect the competitive order of a
    stateless society?
  • Anarcho-capitalists must convince that the
    absence of a coercive monopoly is the best
    pre-condition of a market society.

18
17. Economic behaviour in a stateless society
  • Critics of radical libertarianism say that a
    stateless society can be conquered by a State. It
    is true.
  • But at the same time we can foresee that many
    people (utilitarian and rational) will be
    oriented to avoid growing and aggressive
    institutions. Opportunistic behaviours will
    contrast the tendencies towards a massive
    unification

19
18. Is There a Greshams Law for the Governments?
  • Greshams Law Where there is a legal tender
    currency, bad money drives good money out of
    circulation.
  • But it is true if there is a LEGAL TENDER. In a
    competition among governments there is no reason
    for the customers to opt for aggressive and
    expensive governments.

20
19. Cooperation Is it Possible?
  • Aristotle man is a social and rational animal.
  • Robert Axelrod game theory and prisoners
    dilemma.

21
20. Good Guys and Bad Guys A Simple Argument
  • Three possibilities
  • All the men are criminals.
  • Only a minority are criminals.
  • The majority are criminal.
  • For the good guys a stateless society is better
    than a State society, where the aggressive groups
    can use the coercive monopoly to dominate honest
    people.

22
21. Is Radical Libertarianism against
anyTerritorial Monopoly of Force?
  • NO. There are two different forms of legitimate
    monopolies
  • All the land is owned by only one agency and the
    government doesnt force people to remain in the
    country. Ex gated communities, or even Vatican
    City.
  • Government receives a free support by all the
    people and it leaves them the (potential)
    opportunity to organize privately their own
    defence or switch to other providers. This is the
    standard anarcho-capitalist model (see for
    instance Morris and Linda Tannehill).

23
22. How some local, monopolistic governments can
create a market
  • A country is controlled by many local territorial
    governments.
  • But these cities or counties accept that their
    citizens, or customers, can change their provider
    (Bruno Freys model). Thanks to this
    institutional competition, we have a
    marketization of the security.

24
23. First Problem None Should Be a Judge in
Ones Own Case
  • John Locke and the birth of the government.
  • In a radical liberarian society a man could
    decide by himself (without courts) the punishment
    of the criminal, but this behaviour would be very
    dangerous for the criminal and for the victim.
    The latter could be punished if the penalty is
    excessive.
  • So, even in an anarcho-capitalist society we
    would this specialization (judges job).

25
24. Second ProblemWithout a State, No Court of
Last Resort
  • In an open and competitive legal system, we have
    to face many problems.
  • If people can choose different providers for law
    and security, what about the possible chaotic
    consequences?
  • Many criminals could switch from an organization
    to a different one each time they risk to be
    condamned.

26
25. Second Problemfollows
  • These objections are serious, but we should
    compare pros and cons of the possible solutions.
  • In a closed system, if you control the top of
    the pyramid you can obtain a complete impunity.
  • Without a free market of courts, there is no
    competition among the judges (quality of the
    sentences, costs, etc.).
  • A free-market legal order would be the result of
    two opposite forces the will to choose freely
    protection and law the will to receive services
    of a good degree of integration.

27
26. Third ProblemThe Need of an Integration
  • A radical libertarian society would be a
    free-market society, where all companies would be
    called to satisfy the needs of the other people.
  • But a chaotic legal order is not what people
    desire. For this reason, we can foresee that in a
    radical libertarian society we would have a mixed
    situation nor atomistic nor monopolistic.
  • What about the degree of this partial
    integration? We cannot decide and it must be the
    outcome of the preferences and the choices of
    customers and providers.

28
27. Are We Sure that West Never Knew a
Competition of Governments?
  • In the past, we did some experiences of societies
    without State, and also of quasi-libertarian
    legal orders.
  • Ancient Ireland and Iceland, American West,
    Native Indian Americans, etc.
  • But in my opinion a much more intersting
    historical epoch is European Middle Ages.
    Capitalism is the best product of the medieval
    anarchy (Jean Baechler) and of the legal
    complexity of a society based on overlapping
    institutions (Harold Berman).

29
28. Conclusion
  • Anarcho-capitalism as normative idea
  • Stateless society is not a libertarian society
  • But a stateless society is the path towards a
    libertarian order

30
29. Short Bibliography
  • Ayn Rand, The Nature of Government, in
    Capitalism The Ideal Unknown (New York New
    American Library, 1967).
  • Robert Nozick, Anarchy, State, and Utopia (New
    York Basic Books, 1974).
  • Murray N. Rothbard, The Ethics of Liberty
    (Atlantic Highlands Humanities Press, 1982).
  • Bruce Benson, The Enterprise of Law (San
    Francisco Pacific Research Institute for Public
    Policy, 1990).
  • Tibor R. Machan, Anarchism and Minarchism A
    Rapprochement, Journal des économistes et des
    études humaines, vol.12, n.4, December 2002.
  • Vari Auctores, Symposium Market Anarchism, Pro
    and Con, The Journal of Libertarian Studies,
    vol.21, n.1, Spring 2007.
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