Class Warfare
I
spoke recently at a conference where I was followed to the podium by
Fox's Tucker Carlson, who, among other things, railed against the
instigation by the left of “class warfare”, pointing out that
doing so is little more than singling out an unpopular minority
group, (i.e., the rich), for higher taxation. (Though the minority
group that happens to have the largest share of the item that is the
war's objective). Tucker said we are seeing an ever shrinking number
of people paying an ever greater portion of the taxes. (Though they also are the ever shrinking number of people
acquiring an ever greater portion of the wealth).
There
is little that matches the artfulness in waving off criticism of the widening income gap as “class
warfare”. And there is little that matches the gullibility of those who follow along. There seems to be agreement all around that
action to change the situation, for the poor to improve their lot at
the expense of the rich, is an affront to civil society. I
am not picking sides in this, but I believe such a "war" can be justified, and indeed ultimately is inevitable.
It is hard to discuss class warfare without referring back to the industrial revolution. Then class warfare centered on the length of the
working day. A tightly defined working day only appeared with the
advent of the industrial revolution. Before then laborers worked when
they needed money, and then quit for a time once they fulfilled their
needs. But regimentation and a dependable workforce became necessary
once there was machinery to run and capital invested, and so with
industrialization came an enforced workday. So it is not
surprising that Marx stated the central battle of class warfare at
the time in terms of the working day:
The
capitalist maintains his rights as a purchaser when he tries to make
the working-day as long as possible, and to make, whenever possible,
two working-days out of one. On the other hand...the laborer maintains his right as seller when he
wishes to reduce the working-day to one of definite normal duration.
There is here, therefore, an antinomy, right against right, both
equally bearing the seal of the law of exchanges. Between equal
rights force decides. Hence is it that in the history of capitalist
production, the determination of what is a working-day, presents
itself as the result of a struggle, a struggle between collective
capital, i.e., the class of capitalists, and collective labour, i.e.,
the working-class. – Marx, Das Kapital
Marx
begins with an acknowledgement of the perception of rights on the
part of both the capitalist and the laborer, but then argues that the
question of the length of the working day cannot be solved by an
appeal to rights, but only through class struggle, wherein “force”
decides between “equal rights”. (Force can mean physical force,
but can also mean the force of the political process).
The central point is that there
is no way that this question of the working day or any number of
other social questions, though posed as rights by the groups in
conflict, can be resolved without being reformulated in terms of
class struggle or class warfare. Unlike civil rights – the rights
which our society regards as inalienable – it is difficult to do
much more than simply take sides when it comes to economic rights,
because what we call economic rights are really nothing more than the
bargaining in an exchange between those providing labor and those
providing capital, those creating jobs and those taking the jobs, or
whatever. There is class warfare because the social and economic pie
has to be split, and there is no objective way to do so. The war can
be active or passive, the sides can have a truce, one side can
temporarily be resigned to its lot or be held in check through force,
but the conflict never ends. A change in generations or in social
consciousness, and things will flare up again. There are some areas
of fairness in the civil sphere – freedom from slavery, torture and
piracy – but what are the rights inherent for a particular term of
exchange between the parties in a trade?
Given
this, we are left in a quandary because we don't know what to make of
class warfare. And we don't know because we are not trained to make
anything of it. It is not part of any self-respecting course of
economic study. The introduction of class warfare marks a radical
departure from the tenets of contemporary economics because as far as
economics goes, the terms “class”, “warfare”, and “struggle”
are, well, radicalized. Yet there has been an epic, historical
struggle over the length of the working day writ large, extending to
issues like retirement, the definition of the time worked, and the
share of economic rents, and this is the struggle that is still with
us. Clearly fundamental to our economic history and our capitalist
system, this is ignored in our economic studies.
The
time spent working and the share of that labor that accrued to the
capitalists during the emergence of the industrial revolution is akin
to the taxes and redistributions from the entitlement programs and
government subsidies that are in the cross hairs today. Indeed, the
timeline extends back even further. The benefits that we call
entitlements are similar in our more advanced society to the rights
of subsistence for the serfs during Feudal times – rights which
were implicit in the social contract between lord and serf, and which
were broken at the peril of revolt. The social contract between the
lord and serf, as with any contract, had obligations on both sides.
The serfs paid a portion of their production and provided service to
the lords. The lords organized the serfs to defend against invasion,
enforced a rule of law, and assured the serfs, as much as possible in
that age, of subsistence. Is this so different from social
contracts of today?
Even
admitting to the term “class warfare” concedes a lot. To warn against class warfare only makes sense if there
are classes, and more than that, if there might
be a reason to be answered for one of the classes to do battle. (For
otherwise there is the simpler course of pointing out that no
differences exist). There is only so much to go around, and the efforts of one group or the other to assert a claim to a larger share can be
called class warfare. It can be a war waged through changes in the
taxes, in a restructuring of incentives and pay scales, an increase
in the benefits given to the poor, or revolt. The first three are
legitimate battlegrounds in a democratic society such as ours, and it is really taking a good joke
to far to suggest it is damaging to the body politic for members of society to look at the differences in income and take action to
redistribute in their direction.
The views expressed in this post are strictly my personal views.
The views expressed in this post are strictly my personal views.
