Between the hundred-headed hydra, division of labor, and the unconquered
dragon, machinery, what will become of humanity? A prophet has said it more than two
thousand years ago: Satan looks on his victim, and the fires of war are kindled, Aspexit
gentes, et dissolvit. To save us from two scourges, famine and pestilence, Providence
sends us discord.
Competition represents that philosophical era in which, a semi-
understanding of the antinomies of reason having given birth to the art of sophistry, the
characteristics of the false and the true were confounded, and in which, instead of
doctrines, they had nothing but deceptive mental tilts. Thus the industrial movement
faithfully reproduces the metaphysical movement; the history of social economy is to be
found entire in the writings of the philosophers. Let us study this interesting phase,
whose most striking characteristic is to take away the judgment of those who believe as
well as those who protest.
1.--Necessity of competition.
M. Louis Reybaud, novelist by profession, economist on occasion,
breveted by the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences for his anti-reformatory
caricatures, and become, with the lapse of time, one of the writers most hostile to social
ideas,--M. Louis Reybaud, whatever he may do, is none the less profoundly imbued with
these same ideas: the opposition which he thus exhibits is neither in his heart nor in his
mind; it is in the facts.
In the first edition of his "Studies of Contemporary
Reformers," M. Reybaud, moved by the sight of social sufferings as well as the
courage of these founders of schools, who believed that they could reform the world by an
explosion of sentimentalism, had formally expressed the opinion that the surviving feature
of all their systems was ASSOCIATION. M. Dunoyer, one of M. Reybaud's judges, bore this
testimony, the more flattering to M. Reybaud from being slightly ironical in form:
M. Reybaud, who has exposed with so much accuracy and talent, in a book
which the French Academy has crowned, the vices of the three principal reformatory
systems, holds fast to the principle common to them, which serves as their
base,--association. Association in his eyes, he declares, is THE GREATEST PROBLEM OF
MODERN TIMES. It is called, he says, to solve that of the distribution of the fruits of
labor. Though authority can do nothing towards the solution of this problem, association
COULD DO EVERYTHING. M. Reybaud speaks here like a writer of the phalansterian school. . .
.
M. Reybaud had advanced a little, as one may see. Endowed with too much
good sense and good faith not to perceive the precipice, he soon felt that he was
straying, and began a retrograde movement. I do not call this about-face a crime on his
part: M. Reybaud is one of those men who cannot justly be held responsible for their
metaphors. He had spoken before reflecting, he retracted: what more natural! If the
socialists must blame any one, let it be M. Dunoyer, who had prompted M. Reybaud's
recantation by this singular compliment.
M. Dunoyer was not slow in perceiving that his words had not fallen on
closed ears. He relates, for the glory of sound principles, that, "in a second
edition of the `Studies of Reformers,' M. Reybaud has himself tempered the absolute tone
of his expressions. He has said, instead of could do EVERYTHING, could do MUCH."
It was an important modification, as M. Dunoyer brought clearly to his
notice, but it still permitted M. Reybaud to write at the same time:
These symptoms are grave; they may be considered as prophecies of a
confused organization, in which labor would seek an equilibrium and a regularity which it
now lacks. . . . At the bottom of all these efforts is hidden a principle, association,
which it would be wrong to condemn on the strength of irregular manifestations.
Finally M. Reybaud has loudly declared himself a partisan of
competition, which means that he has decidedly abandoned the principle of association. For
if by association we are to understand only the forms of partnership fixed by the
commercial code, the philosophy of which has been summarized for us by MM. Troplong and
Delangle, it is no longer worth while to distinguish between socialists and economists,
between one party which seeks association and another which maintains that association
exists.
Let no one imagine, because M. Reybaud has happened to say heedlessly
yes and no to a question of which he does not seem to have yet formed a clear idea, that I
class him among those speculators of socialism, who, after having launched a hoax into the
world, begin immediately to make their retreat, under the pretext that, the idea now
belonging to the public domain, there is nothing more for them to do but to leave it to
make its way. M. Reybaud, in my opinion, belongs rather to the category of dupes, which
includes in its bosom so many honest people and people of so much brains. M. Reybaud will
remain, then, in my eyes, the vir probus dicendi peritus, the conscientious and skilful
writer, who may easily be caught napping, but who never expresses anything that he does
not see or feel. Moreover, M. Reybaud, once placed on the ground of economic ideas, would
find the more difficulty in being consistent with himself because of the clearness of his
mind and the accuracy of his reasoning. I am going to make this curious experiment under
the reader's eyes.
If I could be understood by M. Reybaud, I would say to him: Take your
stand in favor of competition, you will be wrong; take your stand against competition,
still you will be wrong: which signifies that you will always be right. After that, if,
convinced that you have not erred either in the first edition of your book or in the
fourth, you should succeed in formulating your sentiment in an intelligible manner, I will
look upon you as an economist of as great genius as Turgot and A. Smith; but I warn you
that then you will resemble the latter, of whom you doubtless know little; you will be a
believer in equality. Do you accept the wager?
To better prepare M. Reybaud for this sort of reconciliation with
himself, let us show him first that this versatility of judgment, for which anybody else
in my place would reproach him with insulting bitterness, is a treason, not on the part of
the writer, but on the part of the facts of which he has made himself the interpreter.
In March, 1844, M. Reybaud published on oleaginous seeds--a subject
which interested the city of Marseilles, his birthplace--an article in which he took
vigorous ground in favor of free competition and the oil of sesame. According to the facts
gathered by the author, which seem authentic, sesame would yield from forty-five to
forty-six per cent. of oil, while the poppy and the colza yield only twenty-five to thirty
per cent., and the olive simply twenty to twenty-two. Sesame, for this reason, is disliked
by the northern manufacturers, who have asked and obtained its prohibition. Nevertheless
the English are on the watch, ready to take possession of this valuable branch of
commerce. Let them prohibit the seed, says M. Reybaud, the oil will reach us mixed, in
soap, or in some other way: we shall have lost the profit of manufacture. Moreover, the
interest of our marine service requires the protection of this trade; it is a matter of no
less than forty thousand casks of seed, which implies a maritime outfit of three hundred
vessels and three thousand sailors.
These facts are conclusive: forty-five per cent. of oil instead of
twenty-five; in quality superior to all the oils of France; reduction in the price of an
article of prime necessity; a saving to consumers; three hundred ships, three thousand
sailors,--such would be the value to us of liberty of commerce. Therefore, long live
competition and sesame!
Then, in order to better assure these brilliant results, M. Reybaud,
impelled by his patriotism and going straight in pursuit of his idea, observes--very
judiciously in our opinion--that the government should abstain henceforth from all
treaties of reciprocity in the matter of transportation: he asks that French vessels may
carry the imports as well as the exports of French commerce.
"What we call reciprocity," he says, "is a pure fiction,
the advantage of which is reaped by whichever of the parties can furnish navigation at the
smallest expense. Now, as in France the elements of navigation, such as the purchase of
the ships, the wages of the crews, and the costs of outfit, rise to an excessive figure,
higher than in any of the other maritime nations, it follows that every reciprocity treaty
is equivalent on our part to a treaty of abdication, and that, instead of agreeing to an
act of mutual convenience, we resign ourselves, knowingly or involuntarily, to a
sacrifice."
And M. Reybaud then points out the disastrous consequences of
reciprocity:
France consumes five hundred thousand bales of cotton, and the Americans
land them on our wharves; she uses enormous quantities of coal, and the English do the
carrying thereof; the Swedes and Norwegians deliver to us themselves their iron and wood;
the Dutch, their cheeses; the Russians, their hemp and wheat; the Genoese, their rice; the
Spaniards, their oils; the Sicilians, their sulphur; the Greeks and Armenians, all the
commodities of the Mediterranean and Black seas."
Evidently such a state of things is intolerable, for it ends in
rendering our merchant marine useless. Let us hasten back, then, into our ship yards, from
which the cheapness of foreign navigation tends to exclude us. Let us close our doors to
foreign vessels, or at least let us burden them with a heavy tax.
Therefore, down with competition and rival marines!
Does M. Reybaud begin to understand that his economico-socialistic
oscillations are much more innocent than he would have believed? What gratitude he owes me
for having quieted his conscience, which perhaps was becoming alarmed!
The reciprocity of which M. Reybaud so bitterly complains is only a form
of commercial liberty. Grant full and entire liberty of trade, and our flag is driven from
the surface of the seas, as our oils would be from the continent. Therefore we shall pay
dearer for our oil, if we insist on making it ourselves; dearer for our colonial products,
if we wish to carry them ourselves. To secure cheapness it would be necessary, after
having abandoned our oils, to abandon our marine: as well abandon straightway our cloths,
our linens, our calicoes, our iron products, and then, as an isolated industry necessarily
costs too much, our wines, our grains, our forage! Whichever course you may choose,
privilege or liberty, you arrive at the impossible, at the absurd.
Undoubtedly there exists a principle of reconciliation; but, unless it
be utterly despotic, it must be derived from a law superior to liberty itself: now, it is
this law which no one has yet defined, and which I ask of the economists, if they really
are masters of their science. For I cannot consider him a savant who, with the greatest
sincerity and all the wit in the world, preaches by turns, fifteen lines apart, liberty
and monopoly.
Is it not immediately and intuitively evident that COMPETITION DESTROYS
COMPETITION? Is there a theorem in geometry more certain, more peremptory, than that? How
then, upon what conditions, in what sense, can a principle which is its own denial enter
into science? How can it become an organic law of society? If competition is necessary;
if, as the school says, it is a postulate of production,--how does it become so
devastating in its effects? And if its most certain effect is to ruin those whom it
incites, how does it become useful? For the INCONVENIENCES which follow in its train, like
the good which it procures, are not accidents arising from the work of man: both follow
logically from the principle, and subsist by the same title and face to face.
And, in the first place, competition is as essential to labor as
division, since it is division itself returning in another form, or rather, raised to its
second power; division, I say, no longer, as in the first period of economic evolution,
adequate to collective force, and consequently absorbing the personality of the laborer in
the workshop, but giving birth to liberty by making each subdivision of labor a sort of
sovereignty in which man stands in all his power and independence. Competition, in a word,
is liberty in division and in all the divided parts: beginning with the most comprehensive
functions, it tends toward its realization even in the inferior operations of parcellaire
labor.
Here the communists raise an objection. It is necessary, they say, in
all things, to distinguish between use and abuse. There is a useful, praiseworthy, moral
competition, a competition which enlarges the heart and the mind, a noble and generous
competition,--it is emulation; and why should not this emulation have for its object the
advantage of all? There is another competition, pernicious, immoral, unsocial, a jealous
competition which hates and which kills,--it is egoism.
So says communism; so expressed itself, nearly a year ago, in its social
profession of faith, the journal, "La Reforme."
Whatever reluctance I may feel to oppose men whose ideas are at bottom
my own, I cannot accept such dialectics. "La Reforme," in believing that it
could reconcile everything by a distinction more grammatical than real, has made use,
without suspecting it, of the golden mean,-- that is, of the worst sort of diplomacy. Its
argument is exactly the same as that of M. Rossi in regard to the division of labor: it
consists in setting competition and morality against each other, in order to limit them by
each other, as M. Rossi pretended to arrest and restrict economic inductions by morality,
cutting here, lopping there, to suit the need and the occasion. I have refuted M. Rossi by
asking him this simple question: How can science be in disagreement with itself, the
science of wealth with the science of duty? Likewise I ask the communists: How can a
principle whose development is clearly useful be at the same time pernicious?
They say: emulation is not competition. I note, in the first place, that
this pretended distinction bears only on the divergent effects of the principle, which
leads one to suppose that there were two principles which had been confounded. Emulation
is nothing but competition itself; and, since they have thrown themselves into
abstractions, I willingly plunge in also. There is no emulation without an object, just as
there is no passional initiative without an object; and as the object of every passion is
necessarily analogous to the passion itself,--woman to the lover, power to the ambitious,
gold to the miser, a crown to the poet,--so the object of industrial emulation is
necessarily profit.
No, rejoins the communist, the laborer's object of emulation should be
general utility, fraternity, love.
But society itself, since, instead of stopping at the individual man,
who is in question at this moment, they wish to attend only to the collective
man,--society, I say, labors only with a view to wealth; comfort, happiness, is its only
object. Why, then, should that which is true of society not be true of the individual
also, since, after all, society is man and entire humanity lives in each man? Why
substitute for the immediate object of emulation, which in industry is personal welfare,
that far-away and almost metaphysical motive called general welfare, especially when the
latter is nothing without the former and can result only from the former?
Communists, in general, build up a strange illusion: fanatics on the
subject of power, they expect to secure through a central force, and in the special case
in question, through collective wealth, by a sort of reversion, the welfare of the laborer
who has created this wealth: as if the individual came into existence after society,
instead of society after the individual. For that matter, this is not the only case in
which we shall see the socialists unconsciously dominated by the traditions of the regime
against which they protest.
But what need of insisting? From the moment that the communist changes
the name of things, vera rerum vocabala, he tacitly admits his powerlessness, and puts
himself out of the question. That is why my sole reply to him shall be: In denying
competition, you abandon the thesis; henceforth you have no place in the discussion. Some
other time we will inquire how far man should sacrifice himself in the interest of all:
for the moment the question is the solution of the problem of competition,--that is, the
reconciliation of the highest satisfaction of egoism with social necessities; spare us
your moralities.
Competition is necessary to the constitution of value,--that is, to the
very principle of distribution, and consequently to the advent of equality. As long as a
product is supplied only by a single manufacturer, its real value remains a mystery,
either through the producer's misrepresentation or through his neglect or inability to
reduce the cost of production to its extreme limit. Thus the privilege of production is a
real loss to society, and publicity of industry, like competition between laborers, a
necessity. All the utopias ever imagined or imaginable cannot escape this law.
Certainly I do not care to deny that labor and wages can and should be
guaranteed; I even entertain the hope that the time of such guarantee is not far off: but
I maintain that a guarantee of wages is impossible without an exact knowledge of value,
and that this value can be discovered only by competition, not at all by communistic
institutions or by popular decree. For in this there is something more powerful than the
will of the legislator and of citizens,--namely, the absolute impossibility that man
should do his duty after finding himself relieved of all responsibility to himself: now,
responsibility to self, in the matter of labor, necessarily implies competition with
others. Ordain that, beginning January 1, 1847, labor and wages are guaranteed to all:
immediately an immense relaxation will succeed the extreme tension to which industry is
now subjected; real value will fall rapidly below nominal value; metallic money, in spite
of its effigy and stamp, will experience the fate of the assignats; the merchant will ask
more and give less; and we shall find ourselves in a still lower circle in the hell of
misery in which competition is only the third turn.
Even were I to admit, with some socialists, that the attractiveness of
labor may some day serve as food for emulation without any hidden thought of profit, of
what utility could this utopia be in the phase which we are studying? We are yet only in
the third period of economic evolution, in the third age of the constitution of
labor,--that is, in a period when it is impossible for labor to be attractive. For the
attractiveness of labor can result only from a high degree of physical, moral, and
intellectual development of the laborer. Now, this development itself, this education of
humanity by industry, is precisely the object of which we are in pursuit through the
contradictions of social economy. How, then, could the attractiveness of labor serve us as
a principle and lever, when it is still our object and our end?
But, if it is unquestionable that labor, as the highest manifestation of
life, intelligence, and liberty, carries with it its own attractiveness, I deny that this
attractiveness can ever be wholly separated from the motive of utility, and consequently
from a return of egoism; I deny, I say, labor for labor, just as I deny style for style,
love for love, art for art. Style for style has produced in these days hasty literature
and thoughtless improvisation; love for love leads to unnatural vice, onanism, and
prostitution; art for art ends in Chinese knick-knacks, caricature, the worship of the
ugly. When man no longer looks to labor for anything but the pleasure of exercise, he soon
ceases to labor, he plays. History is full of facts which attest this degradation. The
games of Greece, Isthmian, Olympic, Pythian, Nemean, exercises of a society which produced
everything by its slaves; the life of the Spartans and the ancient Cretans, their models;
the gymnasiums, playgrounds, horse-races, and disorders of the market-place among the
Athenians; the occupations which Plato assigns to the warriors in his Republic, and which
but represent the tastes of his century; finally, in our feudal society, the tilts and
tourneys,--all these inventions, as well as many others which I pass in silence, from the
game of chess, invented, it is said, at the siege of Troy by Palamedes, to the cards
illustrated for Charles VI. by Gringonneur, are examples of what labor becomes as soon as
the serious motive of utility is separated from it. Labor, real labor, that which produces
wealth and gives knowledge, has too much need of regularity and perseverance and sacrifice
to be long the friend of passion, fugitive in its nature, inconstant, and disorderly; it
is something too elevated, too ideal, too philosophical, to become exclusively pleasure
and enjoyment,--that is, mysticism and sentiment. The faculty of laboring, which
distinguishes man from the brutes, has its source in the profoundest depths of the reason:
how could it become in us a simple manifestation of life, a voluptuous act of our feeling?
But if now they fall back upon the hypothesis of a transformation of our
nature, unprecedented in history, and of which there has been nothing so far that could
have expressed the idea, it is nothing more than a dream, unintelligible even to those who
defend it, an inversion of progress, a contradiction given to the most certain laws of
economic science; and my only reply is to exclude it from the discussion.
Let us stay in the realm of facts, since facts alone have a meaning and
can aid us. The French Revolution was effected for industrial liberty as well as for
political liberty: and although France in 1789 had not seen all the consequences of the
principle for the realization of which she asked,--let us say it boldly,--she was mistaken
neither in her wishes nor in her expectation. Whoever would try to deny it would lose in
my eyes the right to criticism: I will never dispute with an adversary who would posit as
a principle the spontaneous error of twenty-five millions of men.
At the end of the eighteenth century France, wearied with privileges,
desired at any price to shake off the torpor of her corporations, and restore the dignity
of the laborer by conferring liberty upon him. Everywhere it was necessary to emancipate
labor, stimulate genius, and render the manufacturer responsible by arousing a thousand
competitors and loading upon him alone the consequences of his indolence, ignorance, and
insincerity. Before '89 France was ripe for the transition; it was Turgot who had the
glory of effecting the first passage.
Why then, if competition had not been a principle of social economy, a
decree of destiny, a necessity of the human soul, why, instead of ABOLISHING corporations,
masterships, and wardenships, did they not think rather of REPAIRING them all? Why,
instead of a revolution, did they not content themselves with a reform? Why this negation,
if a modification was sufficient? Especially as this middle party was entirely in the line
of conservative ideas, which the bourgeoisie shared. Let communism, let quasi-socialistic
democracy, which, in regard to the principle of competition, represent--though they do not
suspect it--the system of the golden mean, the counter-revolutionary idea, explain to me
this unanimity of the nation, if they can!
Moreover the event confirmed the theory. Beginning with the Turgot
ministry, an increase of activity and well-being manifested itself in the nation. The test
seemed so decisive that it obtained the approval of all legislatures. Liberty of industry
and commerce figure in our constitutions on a level with political liberty. To this
liberty, in short, France owes the growth of her wealth during the last sixty years.
After this capital fact, which establishes so triumphantly the necessity
of competition, I ask permission to cite three or four others, which, being less general
in their nature, will throw into bolder relief the influence of the principle which I
defend.
Why is our agriculture so prodigiously backward? How is it that routine
and barbarism still hover, in so many localities, over the most important branch of
national labor? Among the numerous causes that could be cited, I see, in the front rank,
the absence of competition. The peasants fight over strips of ground; they compete with
each other before the notary; in the fields, no. And speak to them of emulation, of the
public good, and with what amazement you fill them! Let the king, they say (to them the
king is synonymous with the State, with the public good, with society), let the king
attend to his business, and we will attend to ours! Such is their philosophy and their
patriotism. Ah! if the king could excite competition with them! Unfortunately it is
impossible. While in manufactures competition follows from liberty and property, in
agriculture liberty and property are a direct obstacle to competition. The peasant,
rewarded, not according to his labor and intelligence, but according to the quality of the
land and the caprice of God, aims, in cultivating, to pay the lowest possible wages and to
make the least possible advance outlays. Sure of always finding a market for his goods, he
is much more solicitous about reducing his expenses than about improving the soil and the
quality of its products. He sows, and Providence does the rest. The only sort of
competition known to the agricultural class is that of rents; and it cannot be denied that
in France, and for instance in Beauce, it has led to useful results. But as the principle
of this competition takes effect only at second hand, so to speak, as it does not emanate
directly from the liberty and property of the cultivators, it disappears with the cause
that produces it, so that, to insure the decline of agricultural industry in many
localities, or at least to arrest its progress, perhaps it would suffice to make the
farmers proprietors.
Another branch of collective labor, which of late years has given rise
to sharp debates, is that of public works. "To manage the building of a road, M.
Dunoyer very well says, "perhaps a pioneer and a postilion would be better than an
engineer fresh from the School of Roads and Bridges." There is no one who has not had
occasion to verify the correctness of this remark.
On one of our finest rivers, celebrated by the importance of its
navigation, a bridge was being built. From the beginning of the work the rivermen had seen
that the arches would be much too low to allow the circulation of boats at times when the
river was high: they pointed this out to the engineer in charge of the work. Bridges,
answered the latter with superb dignity, are made for those who pass over, not for those
who pass under. The remark has become a proverb in that vicinity. But, as it is impossible
for stupidity to prevail forever, the government has felt the necessity of revising the
work of its agent, and as I write the arches of the bridge are being raised. Does any one
believe that, if the merchants interested in the course of the navigable way had been
charged with the enterprise at their own risk and peril, they would have had to do their
work twice? One could fill a book with masterpieces of the same sort achieved by young men
learned in roads and bridges, who, scarcely out of school and given life positions, are no
longer stimulated by competition.
In proof of the industrial capacity of the State, and consequently of
the possibility of abolishing competition altogether, they cite the administration of the
tobacco industry.
There, they say, is no adulteration, no litigation, no bankruptcy, no
misery. The condition of the workmen, adequately paid, instructed, sermonized, moralized,
and assured of a retiring pension accumulated by their savings, is incomparably superior
to that of the immense majority of workmen engaged in free industry.
All this may be true: for my part, I am ignorant on the subject. I know
nothing of what goes on in the administration of the tobacco factories; I have procured no
information either from the directors or the workmen, and I have no need of any. How much
does the tobacco sold by the administration cost? How much is it worth? You can answer the
first of these questions: you only need to call at the first tobacco shop you see. But you
can tell me nothing about the second, because you have no standard of comparison and are
forbidden to verify by experiment the items of cost of administration, which it is
consequently impossible to accept. Therefore the tobacco business, made into a monopoly,
necessarily costs society more than it brings in; it is an industry which, instead of
subsisting by its own product, lives by subsidies, and which consequently, far from
furnishing us a model, is one of the first abuses which reform should strike down.
And when I speak of the reform to be introduced in the production of
tobacco, I do not refer simply to the enormous tax which triples or quadruples the value
of this product; neither do I refer to the hierarchical organization of its employees,
some of whom by their salaries are made aristocrats as expensive as they are useless,
while others, hopeless receivers of petty wages, are kept forever in the situation of
subalterns. I do not even speak of the privilege of the tobacco shops and the whole world
of parasites which they support: I have particularly in view the useful labor, the labor
of the workmen. From the very fact that the administration's workman has no competitors
and is interested neither in profit nor loss, from the fact that he is not free, in a
word, his product is necessarily less, and his service too expensive. This being so, let
them say that the government treats its employees well and looks out for their comfort:
what wonder? Why do not people see that liberty bears the burdens of privilege, and that,
if, by some impossibility, all industries were to be treated like the tobacco industry,
the source of subsidies failing, the nation could no longer balance its receipts and its
expenses, and the State would become a bankrupt?
Foreign products: I cite the testimony of an educated man, though not a
political economist,--M. Liebig.
Formerly France imported from Spain every year soda to the value of
twenty or thirty millions of francs; for Spanish soda was the best. All through the war
with England the price of soda, and consequently that of soap and glass, constantly rose.
French manufacturers therefore had to suffer considerably from this state of things. Then
it was that Leblanc discovered the method of extracting soda from common salt. This
process was a source of wealth to France; the manufacture of soda acquired extraordinary
proportions; but neither Leblanc nor Napoleon enjoyed the profit of the invention. The
Restoration, which took advantage of the wrath of the people against the author of the
continental blockade, refused to pay the debt of the emperor, whose promises had led to
Leblanc's discoveries. . . .
A few years ago, the king of Naples having undertaken to convert the
Sicilian sulphur trade into a monopoly, England, which consumes an immense quantity of
this sulphur, warned the king of Naples that, if the monopoly were maintained, it would be
considered a casus belli. While the two governments were exchanging diplomatic notes,
fifteen patents were taken out in England for the extraction of sulphuric acid from the
limestones, iron pyrites, and other mineral substances in which England abounds. But the
affair being arranged with the king of Naples, nothing came of these exploitations: it was
simply established, by the attempts which were made, that the extraction of sulphuric acid
by the new processes could have been carried on successfully, which perhaps would have
annihilated Sicily's sulphur trade.
Had it not been for the war with England, had not the king of Naples had
a fancy for monopoly, it would have been a long time before any one in France would have
thought of extracting soda from sea salt, or any one in England of getting sulphuric acid
from the mountains of lime and pyrites which she contains. Now, that is precisely the
effect of competition upon industry. Man rouses from his idleness only when want fills him
with anxiety; and the surest way to extinguish his genius is to deliver him from all
solicitude and take away from him the hope of profit and of the social distinction which
results from it, by creating around him PEACE EVERYWHERE, PEACE ALWAYS, and transferring
to the State the responsibility of his inertia.
Yes, it must be admitted, in spite of modern quietism,--man's life is a
permanent war, war with want, war with nature, war with his fellows, and consequently war
with himself. The theory of a peaceful equality, founded on fraternity and sacrifice, is
only a counterfeit of the Catholic doctrine of renunciation of the goods and pleasures of
this world, the principle of beggary, the panegyric of misery. Man may love his fellow
well enough to die for him; he does not love him well enough to work for him.
To the theory of sacrifice, which we have just refuted in fact and in
right, the adversaries of competition add another, which is just the opposite of the
first: for it is a law of the mind that, when it does not know the truth, which is its
point of equilibrium, it oscillates between two contradictions. This new theory of
anti-competitive socialism is that of encouragements.
What more social, more progressive in appearance, than encouragement of
labor and of industry? There is no democrat who does not consider it one of the finest
attributes of power, no utopian theorist who does not place it in the front rank as a
means of organizing happiness. Now, government is by nature so incapable of directing
labor that every reward bestowed by it is a veritable larceny from the common treasury. M.
Reybaud shall furnish us the text of this induction.
"The premiums granted to encourage exportation," observes M.
Reybaud somewhere, "are equivalent to the taxes paid for the importation of raw
material; the advantage remains absolutely null, and serves to encourage nothing but a
vast system of smuggling."
This result is inevitable. Abolish customs duties, and national industry
suffers, as we have already seen in the case of sesame; maintain the duties without
granting premiums for exportation, and national commerce will be beaten in foreign
markets. To obviate this difficulty do you resort to premiums? You but restore with one
hand what you have received with the other, and you provoke fraud, the last result, the
caput mortuum, of all encouragements of industry. Hence it follows that every
encouragement to labor, every reward bestowed upon industry, beyond the natural price of
its product, is a gratuitous gift, a bribe taken out of the consumer and offered in his
name to a favorite of power, in exchange for zero, for nothing. To encourage industry,
then, is synonymous at bottom with encouraging idleness: it is one of the forms of
swindling.
In the interest of our navy the government had thought it best to grant
to outfitters of transport-ships a premium for every man employed on their vessels. Now, I
continue to quote M. Reybaud:
On every vessel that starts for Newfoundland from sixty to seventy men
embark. Of this number twelve are sailors: the balance consists of villagers snatched from
their work in the fields, who, engaged as day laborers for the preparation of fish, remain
strangers to the rigging, and have nothing that is marine about them except their feet and
stomach. Nevertheless, these men figure on the rolls of the naval inscription, and there
perpetuate a deception. When there is occasion to defend the institution of premiums,
these are cited in its favor; they swell the numbers and contribute to success.
Base jugglery! doubtless some innocent reformer will exclaim. Be it so:
but let us analyze the fact, and try to disengage the general idea to be found therein.
In principle the only encouragement to labor that science can admit is
profit. For, if labor cannot find its reward in its own product, very far from encouraging
it, it should be abandoned as soon as possible, and, if this same labor results in a net
product, it is absurd to add to this net product a gratuitous gift, and thus overrate the
value of the service. Applying this principle, I say then: If the merchant service calls
only for ten thousand sailors, it should not be asked to support fifteen thousand; the
shortest course for the government is to put five thousand conscripts on State vessels,
and send them on their expeditions, like princes. Every encouragement offered to the
merchant marine is a direct invitation to fraud,--what do I say?--a proposal to pay wages
for an impossible service. Do the handling and discipline of vessels and all the
conditions of maritime commerce accommodate themselves to these adjuncts of a useless
personnel? What, then, can the ship-owner do in face of a government which offers him a
bonus to embark on his vessel people of whom he has no need? If the ministry throws the
money of the treasury into the street, am I guilty if I pick it up?
Thus--and it is a point worthy of notice--the theory of encouragements
emanates directly from the theory of sacrifice; and, in order to avoid holding man
responsible, the opponents of competition, by the fatal contradiction of their ideas, are
obliged to make him now a god, now a brute. And then they are astonished that society is
not moved by their appeal! Poor children! men will never be better or worse than you see
them now and than they always have been. As soon as their individual welfare solicits
them, they desert the general welfare: in which I find them, if not honorable, at least
worthy of excuse. It is your fault if you now demand of them more than they owe you and
now stimulate their greed with rewards which they do not deserve. Man has nothing more
precious than himself, and consequently no other law than his responsibility. The theory
of self-sacrifice, like that of rewards, is a theory of rogues, subversive of society and
morality; and by the very fact that you look either to sacrifice or to privilege for the
maintenance of order, you create a new antagonism in society. Instead of causing the birth
of harmony from the free activity of persons, you render the individual and the State
strangers to each other; in commanding union, you breathe discord.
To sum up, outside of competition there remains but this alternative,--
encouragement, which is a mystification, or sacrifice, which is hypocrisy.
Therefore competition, analyzed in its principle, is an inspiration of
justice; and yet we shall see that competition, in its results, is unjust.
2.--Subversive effects of competition, and the destruction of liberty
thereby.
The kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, says the Gospel, and the
violent take it by force. These words are the allegory of society. In society regulated by
labor, dignity, wealth, and glory are objects of competition; they are the reward of the
strong, and competition may be defined as the regime of force. The old economists did not
at first perceive this contradiction: the moderns have been forced to recognize it.
"To elevate a State from the lowest degree of barbarism to the
highest degree of opulence," wrote A. Smith, "but three things are necessary,--
peace, moderate taxes, and a tolerable administration of justice. All the rest is brought
about by the NATURAL COURSE OF THINGS."
On which the last translator of Smith, M. Blanqui, lets fall this gloomy
comment:
We have seen the natural course of things produce disastrous effects,
and create anarchy in production, war for markets, and piracy in competition. The division
of labor and the perfecting of machinery, which should realize for the great working
family of the human race the conquest of a certain amount of leisure to the advantage of
its dignity, have produced at many points nothing but degradation and misery. . . . . When
A. Smith wrote, liberty had not yet come with its embarrassments and its abuses, and the
Glasgow professor foresaw only its blessings. . . Smith would have written like M. de
Sismondi, if he had been a witness of the sad condition of Ireland and the manufacturing
districts of England in the times in which we live.
Now then, litterateurs, statesmen, daily publicists, believers and
half-believers, all you who have taken upon yourselves the mission of indoctrinating men,
do you hear these words which one would take for a translation from Jeremiah? Will you
tell us at last to what end you pretend to be conducting civilization? What advice do you
offer to society, to the country, in alarm?
But to whom do I speak? Ministers, journalists, sextons, and pedants! Do
such people trouble themselves about the problems of social economy? Have they ever heard
of competition?
A citizen of Lyons, a soul hardened to mercantile war, travelled in
Tuscany. He observes that from five to six hundred thousand straw hats are made annually
in that country, the aggregate value of which amounts to four or five millions of francs.
This industry is almost the sole support of the people of the little State. "How is
it," he says to himself, "that so easily conducted a branch of agriculture and
manufactures has not been transported into Provence and Languedoc, where the climate is
the same as in Tuscany?" But, thereupon observes an economist, if the industry of the
peasants of Tuscany is taken from them, how will they contrive to live?
The manufacture of black silks had become for Florence a specialty the
secret of which she guarded preciously.
A shrewd Lyons manufacturer, the tourist notices with satisfaction, has
come to set up an establishment in Florence, and has finally got possession of the
peculiar processes of dyeing and weaving. Probably this DISCOVERY will diminish Florentine
exportation.--A Journey in Italy, by M. Fulchiron.
Formerly the breeding of the silk-worm was abandoned to the peasants of
Tuscany; whom it aided to live.
Agricultural societies have been formed; they have represented that the
silk-worm, in the peasant's sleeping-room, did not get sufficient ventilation or
sufficient steadiness of temperature, or as good care as it would have if the laborers who
breed them made it their sole business. Consequently rich, intelligent, and generous
citizens have built, amid the applause of the public, what are called bigattieres (from
bigatti, silk-worm).--M. de Sismondi.
And then, you ask, will these breeders of silk-worms, these
manufacturers of silks and hats, lose their work? Precisely: it will even be proved to
them that it is for their interest that they should, since they will be able to buy the
same products for less than it costs them to manufacture them. Such is competition.
Competition, with its homicidal instinct, takes away the bread of a
whole class of laborers, and sees in it only an improvement, a saving; it steals a secret
in a cowardly manner, and glories in it as a DISCOVERY; it changes the natural zones of
production to the detriment of an entire people, and pretends to have done nothing but
utilize the advantages of its climate. Competition overturns all notions of equity and
justice; it increases the real cost of production by needlessly multiplying the capital
invested, causes by turns the dearness of products and their depreciation, corrupts the
public conscience by putting chance in the place of right, and maintains terror and
distrust everywhere.
But what! Without this atrocious characteristic, competition would lose
its happiest effects; without the arbitrary element in exchange and the panics of the
market, labor would not continually build factory against factory, and, not being
maintained in such good working order, production would realize none of its marvels. After
having caused evil to arise from the very utility of its principle, competition again
finds a way to extract good from evil; destruction engenders utility, equilibrium is
realized by agitation, and it may be said of competition, as Samson said of the lion which
he had slain: De comedente cibus exiit, et de forti dulcedo. Is there anything, in all the
spheres of human knowledge, more surprising than political economy?
Let us take care, nevertheless, not to yield to an impulse of irony,
which would be on our part only unjust invective. It is characteristic of economic science
to find its certainty in its contradictions, and the whole error of the economists
consists in not having understood this. Nothing poorer than their criticism, nothing more
saddening than their mental confusion, as soon as they touch this question of competition:
one would say that they were witnesses forced by torture to confess what their conscience
would like to conceal. The reader will take it kindly if I put before his eyes the
arguments for laissez-passer, introducing him, so to speak, into the presence of a secret
meeting of economists.
M. Dunoyer opens the discussion.
Of all the economists M. Dunoyer has most energetically embraced the
positive side of competition, and consequently, as might have been expected, most
ineffectually grasped the negative side. M. Dunoyer, with whom nothing can be done when
what he calls principles are under discussion, is very far from believing that in matters
of political economy yes and no may be true at the same moment and to the same extent; let
it be said even to his credit, such a conception is the more repugnant to him because of
the frankness and honesty with which he holds his doctrines. What would I not give to gain
an entrance into this pure but so obstinate soul for this truth as certain to me as the
existence of the sun,--that all the categories of political economy are contradictions!
Instead of uselessly exhausting himself in reconciling practice and theory; instead of
contenting himself with the ridiculous excuse that everything here below has its
advantages and its inconveniences,--M. Dunoyer would seek the synthetic idea which solves
all the antinomies, and, instead of the paradoxical conservative which he now is, he would
become with us an inexorable and logical revolutionist.
"If competition is a false principle," says M. Dunoyer,
"it follows that for two thousand years humanity has been pursuing the wrong
road."
No, what you say does not follow, and your prejudicial remark is refuted
by the very theory of progress. Humanity posits its principles by turns, and sometimes at
long intervals: never does it give them up in substance, although it destroys successively
their expressions and formulas. This destruction is called NEGATION; because the general
reason, ever progressive, continually denies the completeness and sufficiency of its prior
ideas. Thus it is that, competition being one of the periods in the constitution of value,
one of the elements of the social synthesis, it is true to say at the same time that it is
indestructible in its principle, and that nevertheless in its present form it should be
abolished, denied. If, then, there is any one here who is in opposition to history, it is
you.
I have several remarks to make upon the accusations of which competition
has been the object. The first is that this regime, good or bad, ruinous or fruitful, does
not really exist as yet; that it is established nowhere except in a partial and most
incomplete manner.
This first observation has no sense. COMPETITION KILLS COMPETITION, as
we said at the outset; this aphorism may be taken for a definition. How, then, could
competition ever be complete?
Moreover, though it should be admitted that competition does not yet
exist in its integrity, that would simply prove that competition does not act with all the
power of elimination that there is in it; but that will not change at all its
contradictory nature. What need have we to wait thirty centuries longer to find out that,
the more competition develops, the more it tends to reduce the number of competitors?
The second is that the picture drawn of it is unfaithful; and that
sufficient heed is not paid to the extension which the general welfare has undergone,
including even that of the laboring classes.
If some socialists fail to recognize the useful side of competition, you
on your side make no mention of its pernicious effects. The testimony of your opponents
coming to complete your own, competition is shown in the fullest light, and from a double
falsehood we get the truth as a result. As for the gravity of the evil, we shall see
directly what to think about that.
The third is that the evil experienced by the laboring classes is not
referred to its real causes.
If there are other causes of poverty than competition, does that prevent
it from contributing its share? Though only one manufacturer a year were ruined by
competition, if it were admitted that this ruin is the necessary effect of the principle,
competition, as a principle, would have to be rejected.
The fourth is that the principal means proposed for obviating it would
be inexpedient in the extreme.
Possibly: but from this I conclude that the inadequacy of the remedies
proposed imposes a new duty upon you,--precisely that of seeking the most expedient means
of preventing the evil of competition.
The fifth, finally, is that the real remedies, in so far as it is
possible to remedy the evil by legislation, would be found precisely in the regime which
is accused of having produced it,--that is, in a more and more real regime of liberty and
competition.
Well! I am willing. The remedy for competition, in your opinion, is to
make competition universal. But, in order that competition may be universal, it is
necessary to procure for all the means of competing; it is necessary to destroy or modify
the predominance of capital over labor, to change the relations between employer and
workman, to solve, in a word, the antinomy of division and that of machinery; it is
necessary to ORGANIZE LABOR: can you give this solution?
M. Dunoyer then develops, with a courage worthy of a better cause, his
own utopia of universal competition: it is a labyrinth in which the author stumbles and
contradicts himself at every step.
"Competition," says M. Dunoyer, "meets a multitude of
obstacles."
In fact, it meets so many and such powerful ones that it becomes
impossible itself. For how is triumph possible over obstacles inherent in the constitution
of society and consequently inseparable from competition itself?
In addition to the public services, there is a certain number of
professions the practice of which the government has seen fit to more or less exclusively
reserve; there is a larger number of which legislation has given a monopoly to a
restricted number of individuals. Those which are abandoned to competition are subjected
to formalities and restrictions, to numberless barriers, which keep many from approaching,
and in these consequently competition is far from being unlimited. In short, there are few
which are not submitted to varied taxes, necessary doubtless, etc.
What does all this mean? M. Dunoyer doubtless does not intend that
society shall dispense with government, administration, police, taxes, universities, in a
word, with everything that constitutes a society. Then, inasmuch as society necessarily
implies exceptions to competition, the hypothesis of universal competition is chimerical,
and we are back again under the regime of caprice,--a result foretold in the definition of
competition. Is there anything serious in this reasoning of M. Dunoyer?
Formerly the masters of the science began by putting far away from them
every preconceived idea, and devoted themselves to tracing facts back to general laws,
without ever altering or concealing them. The researches of Adam Smith, considering the
time of their appearance, are a marvel of sagacity and lofty reasoning. The economic
picture presented by Quesnay, wholly unintelligible as it appears, gives evidence of a
profound sentiment of the general synthesis. The introduction to J. B. Say's great
treatise dwells exclusively upon the scientific characteristics of political economy, and
in every line is to be seen how much the author felt the need of absolute ideas. The
economists of the last century certainly did not constitute the science, but they sought
this constitution ardently and honestly.
How far we are today from these noble thoughts! No longer do they seek a
science; they defend the interests of dynasty and caste. The more powerless routine
becomes, the more stubbornly they adhere to it; they make use of the most venerated names
to stamp abnormal phenomena with a quality of authenticity which they lack; they tax
accusing facts with heresy; they calumniate the tendencies of the century; and nothing
irritates an economist so much as to pretend to reason with him.
"The peculiar characteristic of the present time," cries M.
Dunoyer, in a tone of keen discontent, "is the agitation of all classes; their
anxiety, their inability to ever stop at anything and be contented; the infernal labor
performed upon the less fortunate that they may become more and more discontented in
proportion to the increased efforts of society to make their lot really less
pitiful."
Indeed! Because the socialists goad political economy, they are
incarnate devils! Can there be anything more impious, in fact, than to teach the
proletaire that he is wronged in his labor and his wages, and that, in the surroundings in
which he lives, his poverty is irremediable?
M. Reybaud repeats, with greater emphasis, the wail of his master, M.
Dunoyer: one would think them the two seraphim of Isaiah chanting a Sanctus to
competition. In June, 1844, at the time when he published the fourth edition of his
"Contemporary Reformers," M. Reybaud wrote, in the bitterness of his soul:
To socialists we owe the organization of labor, the right to labor; they
are the promoters of the regime of surveillance. . . . The legislative chambers on either
side of the channel are gradually succumbing to their influence. . . . Thus utopia is
gaining ground. . . .
And M. Reybaud more and more deplores the SECRET INFLUENCE OF SOCIALISM
on the best minds, and stigmatizes--see the malice!--the UNPERCEIVED CONTAGION with which
even those who have broken lances against socialism allow themselves to be inoculated.
Then he announces, as a last act of his high justice against the wicked, the approaching
publication, under the title of "Laws of Labor," of a work in which he will
prove (unless some new evolution takes place in his ideas) that the laws of labor have
nothing in common, either with the right to labor or with the organization of labor, and
that the best of reforms is laissez-faire.
"Moreover," adds M. Reybaud, "the tendency of political
economy is no longer to theory, but to practice. The abstract portions of the science seem
henceforth fixed. The controversy over definitions is exhausted, or nearly so. The works
of the great economists on value, capital, supply and demand, wages, taxes, machinery,
farm-rent, increase of population, over-accumulation of products, markets, banks,
monopolies, etc., seem to have set the limit of dogmatic researches, and form a body of
doctrine beyond which there is little to hope."
FACILITY OF SPEECH, IMPOTENCE IN ARGUMENT,--such would have been the
conclusion of Montesquieu upon this strange panegyric of the founders of social economy.
THE SCIENCE IS COMPLETE! M. Reybaud makes oath to it; and what he proclaims with so much
authority is repeated at the Academy, in the professors' chairs, in the councils of State,
in the legislative halls; it is published in the journals; the king is made to say it in
his New Year's addresses; and before the courts the cases of claimants are decided
accordingly.
THE SCIENCE IS COMPLETE! What fools we are, then, socialists, to hunt
for daylight at noonday, and to protest, with our lanterns in our hands, against the
brilliancy of these solar rays!
But, gentlemen, it is with sincere regret and profound distrust of
myself that I find myself forced to ask you for further light.
If you cannot cure our ills, give us at least kind words, give us
evidence, give us resignation.
"It is obvious," says M. Dunoyer, "that wealth is
infinitely better distributed in our day than it ever has been."
"The equilibrium of pains and pleasures," promptly continues
M. Reybaud, "ever tends to restore itself on earth."
What, then! What do you say? WEALTH BETTER DISTRIBUTED, EQUILIBRIUM
RESTORED! Explain yourselves, please, as to this better distribution. Is equality coming,
or inequality going? Is solidarity becoming closer, or competition diminishing? I will not
quit you until you have answered me, non missura cutem. . . . For, whatever the cause of
the restoration of equilibrium and of the better distribution which you point out, I
embrace it with ardor, and will follow it to its last consequences. Before 1830--I select
the date at random--wealth was not so well distributed: how so? Today, in your opinion, it
is better distributed: why? You see what I am coming at: distribution being not yet
perfectly equitable and the equilibrium not absolutely perfect, I ask, on the one hand,
what obstacle it is that disturbs the equilibrium, and, on the other, by virtue of what
principle humanity continually passes from the greater to the less evil and from the good
to the better? For, in fact, this secret principle of amelioration can be neither
competition, nor machinery, nor division of labor, nor supply and demand: all these
principles are but levers which by turns cause value to oscillate, as the Academy of Moral
Sciences has very clearly seen. What, then, is the sovereign law of well-being? What is
this rule, this measure, this criterion of progress, the violation of which is the
perpetual cause of poverty? Speak, and quit your haranguing.
Wealth is better distributed, you say. Show us your proofs. M. Dunoyer:
According to official documents, taxes are assessed on scarcely less
than eleven million separate parcels of landed property. The number of proprietors by whom
these taxes are paid is estimated at six millions; so that, assuming four individuals to a
family, there must be no less than twenty-four million inhabitants out of thirty-four who
participate in the ownership of the soil.
Then, according to the most favorable figures, there must be ten million
proletaires in France, or nearly one-third of the population. Now, what have you to say to
that? Add to these ten millions half of the twenty- four others, whose property, burdened
with mortgages, parcelled out, impoverished, wretched, gives them no support, and still
you will not have the number of individuals whose living is precarious.
The number of twenty-four million proprietors perceptibly tends to
increase.
I maintain that it perceptibly tends to decrease. Who is the real
proprietor, in your opinion,--the nominal holder, assessed, taxed, pawned, mortgaged, or
the creditor who collects the rent? Jewish and Swiss money-lenders are today the real
proprietors of Alsace; and proof of their excellent judgment is to be found in the fact
that they have no thought of acquiring landed estates: they prefer to invest their
capital.
To the landed proprietors must be added about fifteen hundred thousand
holders of patents and licenses, or, assuming four persons to a family, six million
individuals interested as leaders in industrial enterprises.
But, in the first place, a great number of these licensed individuals
are landed proprietors, and you count them twice. Further, it may be safely said that, of
the whole number of licensed manufacturers and merchants, a fourth at most realize
profits, another fourth hold their own, and the rest are constantly running behind in
their business. Take, then, half at most of the six million so-called leaders in
enterprises, which we will add to the very problematical twelve million landed
proprietors, and we shall attain a total of fifteen million Frenchmen in a position, by
their education, their industry, their capital, their credit, their property, to engage in
competition. For the rest of the nation, or nineteen million souls, competition, like
Henri IV.'s pullet in the pot, is a dish which they produce for the class which can pay
for it, but which they never touch.
Another difficulty. These nineteen million men, within whose reach
competition never comes, are hirelings of the competitors. In the same way formerly the
serfs fought for the lords, but without being able themselves to carry a banner or put an
army on foot. Now, if competition cannot by itself become the common condition, why should
not those for whom it offers nothing but perils, exact guarantees from the barons whom
they serve? And if these guarantees can not be denied them, how could they be other than
barriers to competition, just as the truce of God, invented by the bishops, was a barrier
to feudal wars? By the constitution of society, I said a little while ago, competition is
an exceptional matter, a privilege; now I ask how it is possible for this privilege to
coexist with equality of rights?
And think you, when I demand for consumers and wage-receivers guarantees
against competition, that it is a socialist's dream? Listen to two of your most
illustrious confreres, whom you will not accuse of performing an infernal work.
M. Rossi (Volume I., Lecture 16) recognizes in the State the right to
regulate labor, WHEN THE DANGER IS TOO GREAT AND THE GUARANTEES INSUFFICIENT, which means
always. For the legislator must secure public order by PRINCIPLES and LAWS: he does not
wait for unforeseen facts to arise in order that he may drive them back with an arbitrary
hand. Elsewhere (Volume II., pp. 73-77) the same professor points out, as consequences of
exaggerated competition, the incessant formation of a financial and landed aristocracy and
the approaching downfall of small holders, and he raises the cry of alarm. M. Blanqui, on
his side, declares that the organization of labor is recognized by economic science as in
the order of the day (he has since retracted the statement), urges the participation of
workers in the profits and the advent of the collective laborer, and thunders continually
against the monopolies, prohibitions, and tyranny of capital. Qui habet aures audiendi
audiat! M. Rossi, as a writer on criminal law, decrees against the robberies of
competition; M. Blanqui, as examining magistrate, proclaims the guilty parties: it is the
counterpart of the duet sung just now by MM. Reybaud and Dunoyer. When the latter cry
HOSANNA, the former respond, like the Fathers in the Councils, ANATHEMA.
But, it will be said, MM. Blanqui and Rossi mean to strike only the
ABUSES of competition; they have taken care not to proscribe the PRINCIPLE, and in that
they are thoroughly in accord with MM. Reybaud and Dunoyer.
I protest against this distinction, in the interest of the fame of the
two professors.
In fact, abuse has invaded everything, and the exception has become the
rule. When M. Troplong, defending, with all the economists, the liberty of commerce,
admitted that the coalition of the cab companies was one of those facts against which the
legislator finds himself absolutely powerless, and which seem to contradict the sanest
notions of social economy, he still had the consolation of saying to himself that such a
fact was wholly exceptional, and that there was reason to believe that it would not become
general. Now, this fact has become general: the most conservative jurisconsult has only to
put his head out of his window to see that today absolutely everything has been
monopolized through competition,--transportation (by land, rail, and water), wheat and
flour, wine and brandy, wood, coal, oil, iron, fabrics, salt, chemical products, etc. It
is sad for jurisprudence, that twin sister of political economy, to see its grave
anticipations contradicted in less than a lustre, but it is sadder still for a great
nation to be led by such poor geniuses and to glean the few ideas which sustain its life
from the brushwood of their writings.
In theory we have demonstrated that competition, on its useful side,
should be universal and carried to its maximum of intensity; but that, viewed on its
negative side, it must be everywhere stifled, even to the last vestige. Are the economists
in a position to effect this elimination? Have they foreseen the consequences, calculated
the difficulties? If the answer should be affirmative, I should have the boldness to
propose the following case to them for solution.
A treaty of coalition, or rather of association,--for the courts would
be greatly embarrassed to define either term,--has just united in one company all the coal
mines in the basin of the Loire. On complaint of the municipalities of Lyons and Saint
Etienne, the ministry has appointed a commission charged with examining the character and
tendencies of this frightful society.
Well, I ask, what can the intervention of power, with the assistance of
civil law and political economy, accomplish here?
They cry out against coalition. But can the proprietors of mines be
prevented from associating, from reducing their general expenses and costs of
exploitation, and from working their mines to better advantage by a more perfect
understanding with each other? Shall they be ordered to begin their old war over again,
and ruin themselves by increased expenses, waste, over-production, disorder, and decreased
prices? All that is absurd.
Shall they be prevented from increasing their prices so as to recover
the interest on their capital? Then let them be protected themselves against any demands
for increased wages on the part of the workmen; let the law concerning joint-stock
companies be reenacted; let the sale of shares be prohibited; and when all these measures
shall have been taken, as the capitalist-proprietors of the basin cannot justly be forced
to lose capital invested under a different condition of things, let them be indemnified.
Shall a tariff be imposed upon them? That would be a law of maximum. The
State would then have to put itself in the place of the exploiters; keep the accounts of
their capital, interest, and office expenses; regulate the wages of the miners, the
salaries of the engineers and directors, the price of the wood employed in the extraction
of the coal, the expenditure for material; and, finally, determine the normal and
legitimate rate of profit. All this cannot be done by ministerial decree: a law is
necessary. Will the legislator dare, for the sake of a special industry, to change the
public law of the French, and put power in the place of property? Then of two things one:
either commerce in coals will fall into the hands of the State, or else the State must
find some means of reconciling liberty and order in carrying on the mining industry, in
which case the socialists will ask that what has been executed at one point be imitated at
all points.
The coalition of the Loire mines has posited the social question in
terms which permit no more evasion. Either competition,--that is, monopoly and what
follows; or exploitation by the State,--that is, dearness of labor and continuous
impoverishment; or else, in short, a solution based upon equality,--in other words, the
organization of labor, which involves the negation of political economy and the end of
property.
But the economists do not proceed with this abrupt logic: they love to
bargain with necessity. M. Dupin (session of the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences,
June 10, 1843) expresses the opinion that, "though competition may be useful within
the nation, it must be prevented between nations."
To PREVENT or to LET ALONE,--such is the eternal alternative of the
economists: beyond it their genius does not go. In vain is it cried out at them that it is
not a question of PREVENTING anything or of PERMITTING everything; that what is asked of
them, what society expects of them, is a RECONCILIATION: this double idea does not enter
their head.
"It is necessary," M. Dunoyer replies to M. Dupin, "to
DISTINGUISH theory from practice."
My God! everybody knows that M. Dunoyer, inflexible as to principles in
his works, is very accommodating as to practice in the Council of State. But let him
condescend to once ask himself this question: Why am I obliged to continually distinguish
practice from theory? Why do they not harmonize?
M. Blanqui, as a lover of peace and harmony, supports the learned M.
Dunoyer,--that is, theory. Nevertheless he thinks, with M. Dupin,--that is, with
practice,--that competition is not EXEMPT FROM REPROACH. So afraid is M. Blanqui of
calumniating and stirring up the fire!
M. Dupin is obstinate in his opinion. He cites, as evils for which
competition is responsible, fraud, sale by false weights, the exploitation of children.
All doubtless in order to prove that competition WITHIN THE NATION may be useful!
M. Passy, with his usual logic, observes that there will always be
dishonest people who, etc. Accuse human nature, he cries, but not competition.
At the very outset M. Passy's logic wanders from the question.
Competition is reproached with the inconveniences which result from its nature, not with
the frauds of which it is the occasion or pretext. A manufacturer finds a way of replacing
a workman who costs him three francs a day by a woman to whom he gives but one franc. This
expedient is the only one by which he can meet a falling market and keep his establishment
in motion. Soon to the working women he will add children. Then, forced by the necessities
of war, he will gradually reduce wages and add to the hours of labor. Where is the guilty
party here? This argument may be turned about in a hundred ways and applied to all
industries without furnishing any ground for accusing human nature.
M. Passy himself is obliged to admit it when he adds: "As for the
compulsory labor of children, the fault is on the parents." Exactly. And the fault of
the parents on whom?
"In Ireland," continues this orator, "there is no
competition, and yet poverty is extreme."
On this point M. Passy's ordinary logic has been betrayed by an
extraordinary lack of memory. In Ireland there is a complete, universal monopoly of the
land, and unlimited, desperate competition for farms. Competition-monopoly are the two
balls which unhappy Ireland drags, one after each foot.
When the economists are tired of accusing human nature, the greed of
parents, and the turbulence of radicals, they find delectation in picturing the felicity
of the proletariat. But there again they cannot agree with each other or with themselves;
and nothing better depicts the anarchy of competition than the disorder of their ideas.
Today the wife of the workingman dresses in elegant robes which in a
previous century great ladies would not have disdained.--M. Chevalier: Lecture 4.
And this is the same M. Chevalier who, according to his own calculation,
estimates that the total national income would give thirteen cents a day to each
individual. Some economists even reduce this figure to eleven cents. Now, as all that goes
to make up the large fortunes must come out of this sum, we may accept the estimate of M.
de Morogues that the daily income of half the French people does not exceed five cents
each.
"But," continues M. Chevalier, with mystical exaltation,
"does not happiness consist in the harmony of desires and enjoyments, in thebalance
of needs and satisfactions? Does it not consist in a certain condition of soul, the
conditions of which it is not the function of political economy to prevent, and which it
is not its mission to engender? This is the work of religion and philosophy."
Economist, Horace would say to M: Chevalier, if he were living at the
present day, attend simply to my income, and leave me to take care of my soul: Det vitam,
det opes; {ae}quum mi animum ipse parabo.
M. Dunoyer again has the floor:
It would be easy, in many cities, on holidays, to confound the working
class with the bourgeois class [why are there two classes?], so fine is the dress of the
former. No less has been the progress in nourishment. Food is at once more abundant, more
substantial, and more varied. Bread is better everywhere. Meat, soup, white bread, have
become, in many factory towns, infinitely more common than they used to be. In short, the
average duration of life has been raised from thirty-five years to forty.
Farther on M. Dunoyer gives a picture of English fortunes according to
Marshall. It appears from this picture that in England two million five hundred thousand
families have an income of only two hundred and forty dollars. Now, in England an income
of two hundred and forty dollars corresponds to an income of one hundred and forty-six
dollars in our country, which, divided between four persons, gives each thirty-six dollars
and a half, or ten cents a day. That is not far from the thirteen cents which M. Chevalier
allows to each individual in France: the difference in favor of the latter arises from the
fact that, the progress of wealth being less advanced in France, poverty is likewise less.
What must one think of the economists' luxuriant descriptions or of their figures?
"Pauperism has increased to such an extent in England,"
confesses M. Blanqui, "that the English government has had to seek a refuge in those
frightful work-houses". . . .
As a matter of fact, those pretended work-houses, where the work
consists in ridiculous and fruitless occupations, are, whatever may be said, simply
torture-houses. For to a reasonable being there is no torture like that of turning a mill
without grain and without flour, with the sole purpose of avoiding rest, without thereby
escaping idleness.
"This organization [the organization of competition],"
continues M. Blanqui, "tends to make all the profits of labor pass into the hands of
capital. . . . It is at Reims, at Mulhouse, at Saint-Quentin, as at Manchester, at Leeds,
at Spitalfields, that the existence of the workers is most precarious". . . .
Then follows a frightful picture of the misery of the workers. Men,
women, children, young girls, pass before you, starved, blanched, ragged, wan, and wild.
The description ends with this stroke:
The workers in the mechanical industries can no longer supply recruits
for the army.
It would seem that these do not derive much benefit from M. Dunoyer's
white bread and soup.
M. Villerme regards the licentiousness of young working girls as
INEVITABLE. Concubinage is their customary status; they are entirely subsidized by
employers, clerks, and students. Although as a general thing marriage is more attractive
to the people than to the bourgeoisie, there are many proletaires, Malthusians without
knowing it, who fear the family and go with the current. Thus, as workingmen are flesh for
cannon, workingwomen are flesh for prostitution: that explains the elegant dressing on
Sunday. After all, why should these young women be expected to be more virtuous than their
mistresses?
M. Buret, crowned by the Academy:
I affirm that the working class is abandoned body and soul to the good
pleasure of industry.
The same writer says elsewhere:
The feeblest efforts of speculation may cause the price of bread to vary
a cent a pound and more: which represents $124,100 for thirty-four million men.
I may remark, in passing, that the much-lamented Buret regarded the idea
of the existence of monopolists as a popular prejudice. Well, sophist! monopolist or
speculator, what matters the name, if you admit the thing?
Such quotations would fill volumes. But the object of this treatise is
not to set forth the contradictions of the economists and to wage fruitless war upon
persons. Our object is loftier and worthier: it is to unfold the System of Economical
Contradictions, which is quite a different matter. Therefore we will end this sad review
here; and, before concluding, we will throw a glance at the various means proposed whereby
to remedy the inconveniences of competition.
3.--Remedies against competition.
Can competition in labor be abolished?
It would be as well worth while to ask if personality, liberty,
individual responsibility can be suppressed.
Competition, in fact, is the expression of collective activity; just as
wages, considered in its highest acceptation, is the expression of the merit and demerit,
in a word, the responsibility, of the laborer. It is vain to declaim and revolt against
these two essential forms of liberty and discipline in labor. Without a theory of wages
there is no distribution, no justice; without an organization of competition there is no
social guarantee, consequently no solidarity.
The socialists have confounded two essentially distinct things when,
contrasting the union of the domestic hearth with industrial competition, they have asked
themselves if society could not be constituted precisely like a great family all of whose
members would be bound by ties of blood, and not as a sort of coalition in which each is
held back by the law of his own interests.
The family is not, if I may venture to so speak, the type, the organic
molecule, of society. In the family, as M. de Bonald has very well observed, there exists
but one moral being, one mind, one soul, I had almost said, with the Bible, one flesh. The
family is the type and the cradle of monarchy and the patriciate: in it resides and is
preserved the idea of authority and sovereignty, which is being obliterated more and more
in the State. It was on the model of the family that all the ancient and feudal societies
were organized, and it is precisely against this old patriarchal constitution that modern
democracy protests and revolts.
The constitutive unit of society is the workshop.
Now, the workshop necessarily implies an interest as a body and private
interests, a collective person and individuals. Hence a system of relations unknown in the
family, among which the opposition of the collective will, represented by the EMPLOYER,
and individual wills, represented by the WAGE-RECEIVERS, figures in the front rank. Then
come the relations from shop to shop, from capital to capital,--in other words,
competition and association. For competition and association are supported by each other;
they do not exist independently; very far from excluding each other, they are not even
divergent. Whoever says competition already supposes a common object; competition, then,
is not egoism, and the most deplorable error of socialism consists in having regarded it
as the subversion of society.
Therefore there can be no question here of destroying competition, as
impossible as to destroy liberty; the problem is to find its equilibrium, I would
willingly say its police. For every force, every form of spontaneity, whether individual
or collective, must receive its determination: in this respect it is the same with
competition as with intelligence and liberty. How, then, will competition be harmoniously
determined in society?
We have heard the reply of M. Dunoyer, speaking for political economy:
Competition must be determined by itself. In other words, according to M. Dunoyer and all
the economists, the remedy for the inconveniences of competition is more competition; and,
since political economy is the theory of property, of the absolute right of use and abuse,
it is clear that political economy has no other answer to make. Now, this is as if it
should be pretended that the education of liberty is effected by liberty, the instruction
of the mind by the mind, the determination of value by value, all of which propositions
are evidently tautological and absurd.
And, in fact, to confine ourselves to the subject under discussion, it
is obvious that competition, practised for itself and with no other object than to
maintain a vague and discordant independence, can end in nothing, and that its
oscillations are eternal. In competition the struggling elements are capital, machinery,
processes, talent, and experience,--that is, capital again; victory is assured to the
heaviest battalions. If, then, competition is practised only to the advantage of private
interests, and if its social effects have been neither determined by science nor reserved
by the State, there will be in competition, as in democracy, a continual tendency from
civil war to oligarchy, from oligarchy to despotism, and then dissolution and return to
civil war, without end and without rest. That is why competition, abandoned to itself, can
never arrive at its own constitution: like value, it needs a superior principle to
socialize and define it. These facts are henceforth well enough established to warrant us
in considering them above criticism, and to excuse us from returning to them. Political
economy, so far as the police of competition is concerned, having no means but competition
itself, and unable to have any other, is shown to be powerless.
It remains now to inquire what solution socialism contemplates. A single
example will give the measure of its means, and will permit us to come to general
conclusions regarding it.
Of all modern socialists M. Louis Blanc, perhaps, by his remarkable
talent, has been most successful in calling public attention to his writings. In his
"Organization of Labor," after having traced back the problem of association to
a single point, competition, he unhesitatingly pronounces in favor of its abolition. From
this we may judge to what an extent this writer, generally so cautious, is deceived as to
the value of political economy and the range of socialism. On the one hand, M. Blanc,
receiving his ideas ready made from I know not what source, giving everything to his
century and nothing to history, rejects absolutely, in substance and in form, political
economy, and deprives himself of the very materials of organization; on the other, he
attributes to tendencies revived from all past epochs, which he takes for new, a reality
which they do not possess, and misconceives the nature of socialism, which is exclusively
critical. M. Blanc, therefore, has given us the spectacle of a vivid imagination ready to
confront an impossibility; he has believed in the divination of genius; but he must have
perceived that science does not improvise itself, and that, be one's name Adolphe Boyer,
Louis Blanc, or J. J. Rousseau, provided there is nothing in experience, there is nothing
in the mind.
M. Blanc begins with this declaration:
We cannot understand those who have imagined I know not what mysterious
coupling of two opposite principles. To graft association upon competition is a poor idea:
it is to substitute hermaphrodites for eunuchs.
These three lines M. Blanc will always have reason to regret. They prove
that, when he published the fourth edition of his book, he was as little advanced in logic
as in political economy, and that he reasoned about both as a blind man would reason about
colors. Hermaphrodism, in politics, consists precisely in exclusion, because exclusion
always restores, in some form or other and in the same degree, the idea excluded; and M.
Blanc would be greatly surprised were he to be shown, by his continual mixture in his book
of the most contrary principles,-- authority and right, property and communism,
aristocracy and equality, labor and capital, reward and sacrifice, liberty and
dictatorship, free inquiry and religious faith,--that the real hermaphrodite, the double-
sexed publicist, is himself. M. Blanc, placed on the borders of democracy and socialism,
one degree lower than the Republic, two degrees beneath M. Barrot, three beneath M.
Thiers, is also, whatever he may say and whatever he may do, a descendant through four
generations from M. Guizot, a doctrinaire.
"Certainly," cries M. Blanc, "we are not of those who
anathematize the principle of authority. This principle we have a thousand times had
occasion to defend against attacks as dangerous as absurd. We know that, when organized
force exists nowhere in a society, despotism exists everywhere."
Thus, according to M. Blanc, the remedy for competition, or rather, the
means of abolishing it, consists in the intervention of authority, in the substitution of
the State for individual liberty: it is the inverse of the system of the economists.
I should dislike to have M. Blanc, whose social tendencies are well
known, accuse me of making impolitic war upon him in refuting him. I do justice to M.
Blanc's generous intentions; I love and I read his works, and I am especially thankful to
him for the service he has rendered in revealing, in his "History of Ten Years,"
the hopeless poverty of his party. But no one can consent to seem a dupe or an imbecile:
now, putting personality entirely aside, what can there be in common between socialism,
that universal protest, and the hotch-potch of old prejudices which make up M. Blanc's
republic? M. Blanc is never tired of appealing to authority, and socialism loudly declares
itself anarchistic; M. Blanc places power above society, and socialism tends to
subordinate it to society; M. Blanc makes social life descend from above, and socialism
maintains that it springs up and grows from below; M. Blanc runs after politics, and
socialism is in quest of science. No more hypocrisy, let me say to M. Blanc: you desire
neither Catholicism nor monarchy nor nobility, but you must have a God, a religion, a
dictatorship, a censorship, a hierarchy, distinctions, and ranks. For my part, I deny your
God, your authority, your sovereignty, your judicial State, and all your representative
mystifications; I want neither Robespierre's censer nor Marat's rod; and, rather than
submit to your androgynous democracy, I would support the status quo. For sixteen years
your party has resisted progress and blocked opinion; for sixteen years it has shown its
despotic origin by following in the wake of power at the extremity of the left centre: it
is time for it to abdicate or undergo a metamorphosis.
Implacable theorists of authority, what then do you propose which the
government upon which you make war cannot accomplish in a fashion more tolerable than
yours?
M. Blanc's SYSTEM may be summarized in three points:
1. To give power a great force of initiative,--that is, in plain
English, to make absolutism omnipotent in order to realize a utopia.
2. To establish public workshops, and supply them with capital, at the
State's expense.
3. To extinguish private industry by the competition of national
industry.
And that is all.
Has M. Blanc touched the problem of value, which involves in itself
alone all others? He does not even suspect its existence.
Has he given a theory of distribution? No. Has he solved the antinomy of
the division of labor, perpetual cause of the workingman's ignorance, immorality, and
poverty? No. Has he caused the contradiction of machinery and wages to disappear, and
reconciled the rights of association with those of liberty? On the contrary, M. Blanc
consecrates this contradiction. Under the despotic protection of the State, he admits in
principle the inequality of ranks and wages, adding thereto, as compensation, the ballot.
Are not workingmen who vote their regulations and elect their leaders free? It may very
likely happen that these voting workingmen will admit no command or difference of pay
among them: then, as nothing will have been provided for the satisfaction of industrial
capacities, while maintaining political equality, dissolution will penetrate into the
workshop, and, in the absence of police intervention, each will return to his own affairs.
These fears seem to M. Blanc neither serious nor well-founded: he awaits the test calmly,
very sure that society will not go out of his way to contradict him.
And such complex and intricate questions as those of taxation, credit,
international trade, property, heredity,--has M. Blanc fathomed them? Has he solved the
problem of population? No, no, no, a thousand times no: when M. Blanc cannot solve a
difficulty, he eliminates it. Regarding population, he says:
As only poverty is prolific, and as the social workshop will cause
poverty to disappear, there is no reason for giving it any thought.
In vain does M. de Sismondi, supported by universal experience, cry out
to him:
We have no confidence in those who exercise delegated powers. We believe
that any corporation will do its business worse than those who are animated by individual
interest; that on the part of the directors there will be negligence, display, waste,
favoritism, fear of compromise, all the faults, in short, to be noticed in the
administration of the public wealth as contrasted with private wealth. We believe,
further, that in an assembly of stockholders will be found only carelessness, caprice,
negligence, and that a mercantile enterprise would be constantly compromised and soon
ruined, if it were dependent upon a deliberative commercial assembly.
M. Blanc hears nothing; he drowns all other sounds with his own sonorous
phrases; private interest he replaces by devotion to the public welfare; for competition
he substitutes emulation and rewards. After having posited industrial hierarchy as a
principle, it being a necessary consequence of his faith in God, authority, and genius, he
abandons himself to mystic powers, idols of his heart and his imagination.
Thus M. Blanc begins by a coup d' Etat, or rather, according to his
original expression, by an application of the FORCE OF INITIATIVE which he gives to power;
and he levies an extraordinary tax upon the rich in order to supply the proletariat with
capital. M. Blanc's logic is very simple,--it is that of the Republic: power can
accomplish what the people want, and what the people want is right. A singular fashion of
reforming society, this of repressing its most spontaneous tendencies, denying its most
authentic manifestations, and, instead of generalizing comfort by the regular development
of traditions, displacing labor and income! But, in truth, what is the good of these
disguises? Why so much beating about the bush? Was it not simpler to adopt the agrarian
law straightway? Could not power, by virtue of its force of initiative, at once declare
all capital and tools the property of the State, save an indemnity to be granted to the
present holders as a transitional measure? By means of this peremptory, but frank and
sincere, policy, the economic field would have been cleared away; it would not have cost
utopia more, and M. Blanc could then have proceeded at his ease, and without any
hindrance, to the organization of society.
But what do I say? organize! The whole organic work of M. Blanc consists
in this great act of expropriation, or substitution, if you prefer: industry once
displaced and republicanized and the great monopoly established, M. Blanc does not doubt
that production will go on exactly as one would wish; he does not conceive it possible
that any one can raise even a single difficulty in the way of what he calls his SYSTEM.
And, in fact, what objection can be offered to a conception so radically null, so
intangible as that of M. Blanc? The most curious part of his book is in the select
collection which he has made of objections proposed by certain incredulous persons, which
he answers, as may be imagined, triumphantly. These critics had not seen that, in
discussing M. Blanc's SYSTEM, they were arguing about the dimensions, weight, and form of
a mathematical point. Now, as it has happened, the controversy maintained by M. Blanc has
taught him more than his own meditations had done; and one can see that, if the objections
had continued, he would have ended by discovering what he thought he had invented,--the
organization of labor.
But, in fine, has the aim, however narrow, which M. Blanc pursued,--
namely, the abolition of competition and the guarantee of success to an enterprise
patronized and backed by the State,--been attained? On this subject I will quote the
reflections of a talented economist, M. Joseph Garnier, to whose words I will permit
myself to add a few comments.
The government, according to M. Blanc, would choose MORAL WORKMEN, and
would give them GOOD WAGES.
So M. Blanc must have men made expressly for him: he does not flatter
himself that he can act on any sort of temperaments. As for wages, M. Blanc promises that
they shall be GOOD; that is easier than to define their measure.
M. Blanc admits by his hypothesis that these workshops would yield a net
product, and, further, would compete so successfully with private industry that the latter
would change into national workshops.
How could that be, if the cost of the national workshops is higher than
that of the free workshops? I have shown in the third chapter that three hundred workmen
in a mill do not produce for their employer, among them all, a regular net income of
twenty thousand francs, and that these twenty thousand francs, distributed among the three
hundred laborers, would add but eighteen centimes a day to their income. Now, this is true
of all industries. How will the national workshop, which owes ITS WORKMEN GOOD WAGES, make
up this deficit? By emulation, says M. Blanc.
M. Blanc points with extreme complacency to the Leclaire establishment,
a society of house-painters doing a very successful business, which he regards as a living
demonstration of his system. M. Blanc might have added to this example a multitude of
similar societies, which would prove quite as much as the Leclaire establishment,--that
is, no more. The Leclaire establishment is a collective monopoly, supported by the great
society which envelops it. Now, the question is whether entire society can become a
monopoly, in M. Blanc's sense and patterned after the Leclaire establishment: I deny it
positively. But a fact touching more closely the question before us, and which M. Blanc
has not taken into consideration, is that it follows from the distribution accounts
furnished by the Leclaire establishment that, the wages paid being much above the general
average, the first thing to do in a reorganization of society would be to start up
competition with the Leclaire establishment, either among its own workmen or outside.
Wages would be regulated by the government. The members of the social
workshop would dispose of them as they liked, and THE INDISPUTABLE EXCELLENCE OF LIFE IN
COMMON WOULD NOT BE LONG IN CAUSING ASSOCIATION IN LABOR TO GIVE BIRTH TO VOLUNTARY
ASSOCIATION IN PLEASURE.
Is M. Blanc a communist, yes or no? Let him declare himself once for
all, instead of holding off; and if communism does not make him more intelligible, we
shall at least know what he wants.
In reading the supplement in which M. Blanc has seen fit to combat the
objections which some journals have raised, we see more clearly the incompleteness of his
conception, daughter of at least three fathers,-- Saint-Simonism, Fourierism, and
communism,--with the aid of politics and a little, a very little, political economy.
According to his explanations, the State would be only the regulator,
legislator, protector of industry, not the universal manufacturer or producer. But as he
exclusively protects the social workshops to destroy private industry, he necessarily
brings up in monopoly and falls back into the Saint-Simonian theory in spite of himself,
at least so far as production is concerned.
M. Blanc cannot deny it: his SYSTEM is directed against private
industry; and with him power, by its force of initiative, tends to extinguish all
individual initiative, to proscribe free labor. The coupling of contraries is odious to M.
Blanc: accordingly we see that, after having sacrificed competition to association, he
sacrifices to it liberty also. I am waiting for him to abolish the family.
Nevertheless hierarchy would result from the elective principle, as in
Fourierism, as in constitutional politics. But these social workshops again, regulated by
law,--will they be anything but corporations? What is the bond of corporations? The law.
Who will make the law? The government. You suppose that it will be good? Well, experience
has shown that it has never been a success in regulating the innumerable accidents of
industry. You tell us that it will fix the rate of profits, the rate of wages; you hope
that it will do it in such a way that laborers and capital will take refuge in the social
workshop. But you do not tell us how equilibrium will be established between these
workshops which will have a tendency to life in common, to the phalanstery; you do not
tell us how these workshops will avoid competition within and without; how they will
provide for the excess of population in relation to capital; how the manufacturing social
workshops will differ from those of the fields; and many other things besides. I know well
that you will answer: By the specific virtue of the law! And if your government, your
State, knows not how to make it? Do you not see that you are sliding down a declivity, and
that you are obliged to grasp at something similar to the existing law? It is easy to see
by reading you that you are especially devoted to the invention of a power susceptible of
application to your system; but I declare, after reading you carefully, that in my opinion
you have as yet no clear and precise idea of what you need. What you lack, as well as all
of us, is the true conception of liberty and equality, which you would not like to disown,
and which you are obliged to sacrifice, whatever precautions you may take.
Unacquainted with the nature and functions of power, you have not dared
to stop for a single explanation; you have not given the slightest example.
Suppose we admit that the workshops succeed as producers; there will
also be commercial workshops to put products in circulation and effect exchanges. And who
then will regulate the price? Again the law? In truth, I tell you, you will need a new
appearance on Mount Sinai; otherwise you will never get out of your difficulties, you,
your Council of State, your chamber of representatives, or your areopagus of senators.
The correctness of these reflections cannot be questioned. M. Blanc,
with his organization by the State, is obliged always to end where he should have begun
(so beginning, he would have been saved the trouble of writing his book),--that is, in the
STUDY OF ECONOMIC SCIENCE. As his critic very well says: "M. Blanc has made the grave
mistake of using political strategy in dealing with questions which are not amenable to
such treatment"; he has tried to summon the government to a fulfillment of its
obligations, and he has succeeded only in demonstrating more clearly than ever the
incompatibility of socialism with haranguing and parliamentary democracy. His pamphlet,
all enamelled with eloquent pages, does honor to his literary capacity: as for the
philosophical value of the book, it would be absolutely the same if the author had
confined himself to writing on each page, in large letters, this single phrase: I PROTEST.
To sum up:
Competition, as an economic position or phase, considered in its origin,
is the necessary result of the intervention of machinery, of the establishment of the
workshop, and of the theory of reduction of general costs; considered in its own
significance and in its tendency, it is the mode by which collective activity manifests
and exercises itself, the expression of social spontaneity, the emblem of democracy and
equality, the most energetic instrument for the constitution of value, the support of
association. As the essay of individual forces, it is the guarantee of their liberty, the
first moment of their harmony, the form of responsibility which unites them all and makes
them solidary.
But competition abandoned to itself and deprived of the direction of a
superior and efficacious principle is only a vague movement, an endless oscillation of
industrial power, eternally tossed about between those two equally disastrous
extremes,--on the one hand, corporations and patronage, to which we have seen the workshop
give birth, and, on the other, monopoly, which will be discussed in the following chapter.
Socialism, while protesting, and with reason, against this anarchical
competition, has as yet proposed nothing satisfactory for its regulation, as is proved by
the fact that we meet everywhere, in the utopias which have seen the light, the
determination or socialization of value abandoned to arbitrary control, and all reforms
ending, now in hierarchical corporation, now in State monopoly, or the tyranny of
communism.