Business and Unemployment |
[Reprinted from Land and Freedom, September-October 1939]
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Is business to blame for unemployment? The radicals
say it is. The Karl Marx or Socialist argument is that
the capitalist unbalances distribution by taking a profit
or "surplus value" from the workers. The latter cannot
buy back all they produce; a surplus of goods accumulates;
production slows down; men are idle; and there is a
depression. The way to cure the disease is to remove
the cause, i.e., the private ownership of capital. The
State must own and run business, they assert. The
fact that communism (which is socialism put into practice)
has resulted in the total loss of individual liberty in Russia,
in the suppression of freedom of publication, of speech,
of religion, in universal poverty and squalor, and finally
even the loss of the right to life itself, seems not to affect
our radicals. "Business is to blame for unemployment"
is their constant theme, day in and day out. The Karl
Marx professors, the power behind the throne in Washington, turning out thousands of students from our colleges yearly, re-echo this communistic cry against business.
What is business doing about it? Business is taking
a beating, lying down, by not denying it. There is a
character in Greek mythology who was unconquered
until it was found out that whenever his feet touched
the earth his strength returned. The business haters and
baiters cannot be overcome so long as they can say, unchallenged, that business is to blame for unemployment.
Productive capital, or real business, is to use the vernacular, "taking the rap." How can running a factory
or a wheat farm, or a department store cause unemployment? When productive capital is unemployed, or
idle, it earns no wages for itself interest. In fact, it
tends to decay and dissipate. Leave any capital unused,
such as machinery, for a number of years and it becomes
junk worthless. Real business, which is the making
and distributing of goods, is eager to employ men. The
childish Karl Marx dogma that business cannot function
because of surplus value need not be considered here.
No mature adult mind can believe that the wage earners
who do part of the producing should receive all of the
product and the wage savers (capital suppliers) nothing.
Or, that the part of the product that goes to management
and capital is surplus value, causing unemployment.
It makes no sense which is nonsense.
Business must stand up and fight the radical slogan
that it is to blame for unemployment. This is as absurd
as to say that labor is to blame for unemployment because
it doesn't buy the entire products of business and thereby
stops business running full time. Certainly both want to
work to earn interest and wages, and neither is blamable
for the depression.
What then is responsible for unemployment, if it is not
business, labor, or Karl Marx's surplus value? The
writer believes that Henry George's conclusion deserves
careful investigation. He points out that a group owns
and controls the land. Labor and business must use
land. For permission to do so, this land monopoly group
can take and it does take from them all they produce,
except a bare living. At times of "land speculation,"
it tries to take more, not leaving them a bare living.
Then labor and business become idle and unemployed --
depression follows. George concludes that land monopoly
is to blame for unemployment.
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