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International Politics: An
Introduction to the Western State System, a Review |
[An article titled "Political
Escape From Economics," reprinted from The Freeman,
September, 1939]
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Dr. Frederick L. Schuman is the "Woodrow Wilson Professor of
Government" in Williams College. He is the author of a book, issued
in 1933 and reissued, in 1937, entitled International Politics: An
Introduction to the Western State System. Almost pan-historic in its
approach to the subject, the treatise goes back to the pre-stone age,
and then forward through ancient and medieval times, coming to a center
in the Modern State and its problems as developed in Western Europe and
America.
Beginning with a chapter on "State Systems of the Past," the
author cites Davie on "Evolution of War" in support of the
commonly accepted view among sociologists that the State owes its origin
to war. Weaker tribes are overpowered by the stronger, which fuse with
the vanquished and give rise to a "land-holding elite descended
from the original conquering nomads" (p. 4).
After this introductory emphasis upon "the land-holding elite,"
a brief sketch of world history is presented, in which the
above-mentioned elite (the ground landlords, or titled aristocracy) hold
the spotlight of attention for sixty-three pages. On arriving at the
next page, the treatment suddenly reaches what the author calls, in the
Index, "Democracy, rise of," described thus: "The
bourgeoisie, masters and beneficiaries of the new technology and the new
economy, became the ruling class in almost all the States of the Western
World" (p. 64). The "land-holding elite" mysteriously
vanish; and the "bourgeoisie" suddenly pop up on us without
warning, like a Jack-in-the-box.
Social Evolution Telescoped
The author here telescopes into a sentence an evolution of which the
innocent student obtains no inkling. Dr. Schuman elsewhere speaks of "middleclass
parliamentary democracy" (p. 455); but none of his references to
the subject convey any indication that it is associated in his mind with
any clear-cut conception of the process by which the "Modern State"
came into being.
Parliamentary government is commonly spoken of in a loose way as if
England were the originator of assemblies called by that name; "England,
the Mother of Parliaments," etc. But at the time when the English
parliament was taking form, similar institutions existed in other
European countries, notably Spain. Sicily, Germany, France. Moreover, it
is of the greatest importance to observe that all such bodies (the
English included) were owned by "the land-holding elite," and
were in fact, the ground landlords represented in convention.
Long before the close of the middle ages, these groups were broadened
out so as to include representatives from the commercial centers -- the
towns, or "burgs." This change took place in Spain in the
twelfth century, and in Sicily, Germany, France and England in the
thirteenth. The townsmen were called in, however, not as democratic
representatives of "the people," but for the purpose of
telling the King and the ground landlords how much property the
commercial centers possessed. The burden of taxation was then laid
increasingly upon the burgher class; while the landed property of the
aristocrats was more and more relieved from taxes.
As time passed on, the continental European parliaments were
overshadowed and blotted out by the growth of despotic, absolute
monarchies; while simultaneously, on the other hand, the development of
English industry and commerce gave the economic basis for still further
enlargement of "bourgeois" representation in the Parliament of
England.
Democracy a Compromise
The modern British Parliament has grown up at the point of a
long-drawn-out compromise between ground-landlord interests represented
since the seventeenth century by the Tory party, and
commercial-manufacturing interests represented by the Whig-Liberal
party. This compromise found no explicit recognition In substantive law.
It was a tacit agreement by which the powerful "elite" owners
of the Island gave increasing parliamentary representation and power to
the "middle" class, and finally to the laboring class, on the
understanding that fiscal burdens were to be laid more and more upon
industry, while at the same time, taxes were to bear more lightly in
proportion upon the ground rents of leased land as well as upon the
value of land held out of use on speculation and in private parks and
hunting preserves. This compromise came silently to a climax under the
present Prime Minister, Chamberlain, who "de-rated." or
untaxed, all vacant land In Great Britain.
Taxation Aristocratic, Lop-Sided
Through the tremendous influence of ground landlords, therefore, the
Fiscal Power was distorted so as to penalize industry, promote land
speculation, and protect the special privilege of collecting ground rent
for private account. In other words, the British "bourgeoisie,"
in order to obtain a voice in government, had to assume the double
burden of ground rent and taxes. In still other words, British Capital
had to take Land on its back as a permanent parasitic interest. Or
again, in different phraseology, the entire structure of British
industry was put "on the spot" between the pressure of ground
rent to the Landed Aristocracy and taxes to the State before any wages
could be paid to the working class.
Essence of Constitutional Democracy
This is the essential fact at the heart of "constitutional
democracy." England, instead of being "the Mother of
Parliaments," is the country where extra-legal compromise between
Productive Capital and Land Monopoly was first carried to its logical
conclusion. And after the British Constitutional Model had been set up,
it was copied by several nations in Continental Europe where
parliamentary evolution had been checked by the growth of monarchial
power.
Schuman Ignores Compromise
That the State originally grew out of war which enthroned a "landed
elite" on the backs of the masses, is demonstrated clearly enough
by Professor Schuman. But in approaching the problems of today, he
passes completely over the underlying process which gave rise to "the
Western State System." With apparent plausibility, but with factual
inaccuracy, he says, in the sentence already quoted, "The
bourgeoisie, masters and beneficiaries of the new technology and the new
economy, became the ruling class in almost all the States of the Western
World."
Author in Good Company
Dr. Schuman is not only "Woodrow Wilson Professor"; but in
his youth, he looked up to Wilson as a great political scientist, and
studied Wilson's ample treatise. "The State," which reveals
absolutely no conception of the under-handed bargaining process whereon
the Modern State System has evolved. Another professor of political
science active during the time of Dr. Schuman's intellectual development
was Lawrence Lowell of Harvard, whose widely circulated works on
government are in the same negative class with Wilson's treatises.
The immobility of this older pedagogical generation is revealed in a
very interesting way by the reaction of Wilson to the great political
struggle which took place in Britain just prior to the World War. The
ultimate seat of the sovereign Fiscal Power in Britain, up to 1909, had
been the House of Lords, the citadel of ground monopoly in that nation.
The "Lords" had enjoyed for centuries the power of absolute
veto on any tax bill passed by the House of Commons. In other words, the
"Lords" were the guardians of the great politico-economic
compromise on which modern democracy took form.
But in 1909, the Whig-Liberal clement combined with the Labor clement
in a fierce attack on the ground-monopoly interest; and out of that
struggle came a dramatic amendment to the British Constitution,
abolishing the fiscal power of the Lords, while concentrating ail
authority over tax bills in the hands of the House of Commons. To bar
the practical operation of this amendment, and prevent the transfer of
taxes from productive industry to land values, has been the chief aim of
Tory politics in England for the last quarter-century; and by keeping a
"rentier" majority in the Commons during most of this period,
the "landed elite" has managed to maintain its favored
position in Britain -- of which the most recent sign is the "de-rating"
of all vacant ground by Chamberlain and his Tory colleagues, who, for
the time, control the Commons and manage the fiscal policy of Britain.
The amendment of the Lords' veto is described in a. new, revised
edition of Professor Wilson's book. "The State," issued after
his election to the Presidency. Having in his earlier edition failed to
explain the real forces operating in the development of modern
democracy, Wilson treats the constitutional struggle as an item standing
by itself, and shows no grasp of its larger significance.
Laski on Parliament
A volume has been issued recently by Professor H. Laski, of London
University, entitled "Parliamentary Government in England: A
Commentary" (1938). This book, however, is as bare of explanation
as Wilson's. The author speaks of the Parliamentary Amendment act, but
only to point out regretfully that although the House of Lords is
deprived of its fiscal, or tax, veto, it still has enough power to "wreck
the program of any socialist government" (pp. 74. 101, 105, 365).
The real animus of Laski's treatise comes fully into view in his
reference to "Marx's massive indictment of capitalist civilization"
(p. 125, emphasis mine); and in his declaration that political democracy
cannot evolve into social and economic democracy "while it is
enfolded within the framework of capitalism" (p. 181, emphasis
mine).
Schuman-Laski Political Science
These younger professors of Political Science, like older scholars of
the Wilson-Lowell type, reveal no comprehension of the actual
development through which modern legislative democracy arose. Their
procedure is merely to take over the abstract categories used by Marx,
and say, with him, that the modern State arises out of the "victory"
of the bourgeoisie over the feudal nobility, or landed elite. Professor
Schuman's declaration to this effect, which is quoted above, occurs in
fact on the same page (64) with a lengthy quotation from the first
volume of Marx's "Capital." His references to Marx, to
Communism, to Socialism, to Bolshevism and to cognate themes are so
numerous that an attempt to schedule them here would be wearisome to the
reader. Schuman's treatise, indeed, is to a large extent an application
of Marxism to the international problems now confronting the world.
Marx Underwrote Labor Controversy
What Marx does in volume I of his
Capital (quoted by Schuman) is to underwrite the illogical war
between "Labor and Capital" growing out of conditions which
make ground rent, along with taxes, a preferred creditor of industry
prior to wages.
But in the second and third volumes of Capital, resting upon
later investigations and published after his death, Marx points out that
prior to the capitalistic-machine age, the laboring masses were largely
flung off the soil by "enclosures" of unused land, being thus
forced into the towns where they overcrowded the labor market, lowering
the rate of wages; and that in overseas colonies the mere ownership of
machinery conferred no power over labor unless the land were monopolized
and fenced away from the people.
Marx Ignores Parliamentary Evolution
But while skillfully bringing out these fundamental economic facts in
his posthumous work, Marx, equally with Wilson, Lowell, Schuman, Laski
and others, never understood, or even took note of, that lop-sided,
aristocratic manipulation of the Fiscal Power which is bound up with the
entire evolution of the "Western State System."
Marxism, as a "going movement," has been identified with the
first volume of
Capital, which Professor Schuman quotes. But the facts
emphasized in the second and third volumes have never overtaken the
misconceptions of the first volume, because they were presented merely
as unorganized matter, and not as features of a definite social and
political evolution.
Schuman's Analysis Inadequate
With Dr. Schuman's verdict on contemporary history, which comes to the
front as he moves toward the conclusion of his treatise, this reviewer
agrees heartily: "The concern of the dominant Powers of the Western
State System with 'peace' has been motivated at bottom only by a desire
to retain and perpetuate the relatively advantageous position they have
attained for themselves in the apportionment of armaments, population,
colonies, markets, and raw materials. After 1919, peace and security
meant simply the buttressing of the status quo created at Versailles"
(p. 637).
A great deal of information useful to the student is industriously and
accurately brought together by Dr. Schuman, in a form not found
elsewhere. But the shortcomings of original Marxism, attaching to the
Communist Manifesto (1848) and the first volume of Capital
(1867), reappear in the general drift of this treatise.
The book tends to implement the Marxist view that a simple, definite,
clear-cut issue exists between "Labor," on the one hand, and
something which Marx calls "Capital," on the other. Its
tendency is to inflame college students uncritically against the entire
prevailing economic set-up without adequate preliminary analysis of the
status quo itself. In other words, in spite of its merits, the book is
kid-glove, academic rabble-rousing which leads implicitly to the
assumption that the only way out of our present political and economic
impasse is the "taking over" of productive machinery by, or in
the name of, the general public.
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