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Society
and the Crisis of Liberalism
by Vaclav Klaus
Liberalism
as a Hope for Society?
It is
always fashionable to talk about a crisis. It gives those
who use such terminology a special aura that they see the
world more sharply than the rest of us, that they possess
a noble vision of a better world, and that they know how to
get there. The question is where the feeling or certainty
of a crisis starts - in a deep and penetrating analysis of
the status quo or in an aprioristic, elitist, and moralistic
ambition? Is it merely a new fashion in thinking, an attempt
to create a niche in the very competitive market of ideas
or is it a real breakthrough?
At the
very beginning of my talk, I must confess that I do not see
around me any crisis, that I do not see any 'zerrissene Gesellschaft,'
1 that I do not know any feasible alternative
to Western liberalism, and especially that I do not believe
in authoritarian, constructivistic ways to create a brave
new world (of any form, color or smell). My position is based
both on theoretical arguments in economics and other social
sciences and on my personal experience with communism and
its transformation into a free, open society we have had an
opportunity to experience in the last decade. Both sources
of arguments have the same importance to me.
No one
would dare to claim that we are approaching paradise. There
are many problems in the real world and no one should neglect
or underestimate them. The only issue is how to tackle them,
what to do with them. Some of us believe in individual human
beings and in their motivation to better the world around
them provided basic institutions of society make it possible,
some believe in themselves and in the government which could
realise their recommendations of what to do with the world
they have ambitions to bring to perfection. We should agree
with Thomas Sowell that these two approaches very clearly
describe the current 'Conflict of Visions' and that the second,
antiliberal vision is 'The Vision of the Anointed' (to take
use of the titles of his two important books).
I strongly
believe in the liberal world order. Such a world is, of course,
not without preconditions. Together with Margaret Thatcher,
I am convinced that 'the life of free men and women has to
be a life of self-discipline, self-control and self-sacrifice'
and in this respect it has to be based on an elementary moral
system. At the same time I believe in the inherent
morality of markets, in the ethics of work and saving, in
the crucial link between freedom and private property. It
is not possible (or desirable) to legislate from above
or outside a better world.
Such
way of thinking has been recently put under a new, strong
and dangerous attack. The adjective 'dangerous' is appropriate
because I see a virus of demagogy and romanticism in the visions
of the preachers of communitarianism or a civic society as
it is called in some countries. There is no identity between
the two terms, but the idea of civic society (in its current,
Central European meaning) has many similarities with communitarianism.
And I am aware of the dangers of this idea. There was
perhaps some justification of (or an excuse for) the
idea of a civic society in the communist era when it was one
of the strategies for resistance (but I had never shared this
strategy). Communism is over, but the old anti-liberal ideas
are still with us. They can be seen in continuous attempts
to find third ways, to integrate markets with non-markets,
to construct capitalism with a human face, to attack individualism
(by caricaturing it), to mix genuine, spontaneously evolving
associations of individuals with organisations based on obligatory
membership, to disregard the crucial role of private property,
etc.
Communitarianism
as I see it represents a new version of an old
anti-liberal approach to society, a shift from traditional
liberal democracy to new forms of collectivism, a romantic
dream and 'a constructivistic attempt of imposing the moral
system of the face-to-face group on the large, anonymous society'(Radnitzky
1996), a new way of integrating society by organising it at
the microlevel.2
My first
argument regards the communitarian's analysis of the contemporary
society. They interpret it as an egoistic, individualistic
world where the basic form of social interaction takes place
among atomistic units (human beings). They are supposedly
alone, which means not rooted in various social institutions
which would give them other than purely egoistic motives of
behavior. I disagree with such interpretation of events. I
do not think it reflects the prevailing atmosphere in our
society. It may describe more or less pathological situation
of some individuals with problems of association, but not
the real world we know and live in.
There
is with all known undermining and weakening factors
and influences the family which remains to be
the main foundation of our society and of our public life.
In addition
to it, we are mostly voluntarily members of
other social institutions, which brings us into contact with
other people. It starts with schools, with the places we work
at, with free time activities (sports clubs), etc. The more
active we are, the more people we meet and collaborate with.
To caricature life in the contemporary Western world as an
uncooperative game (or fight) of isolated, self-centred and
self-interested individuals is not justified. We should not
be ashamed of self-interest because it is not true that self-interest
is a motivation unworthy of human beings. In addition to it,
we know at least since Adam Smith that society
cannot rest on the noblest motives and we know as well that
self-interest is the strongest motive, whether we like it
or not. It does not imply that self-interest blocks our interest
in other people and their well-being. In the language of economics
we can say that the well-being of other people can be, and
very often is, a factor in our 'utility function' (with a
positive sign).
My second
argument relates to communitarianism as an alternative ideology.
I have already mentioned some of my arguments but I would
like to repeat the two most important ones:
- communitarianism
wants to change human beings (instead of taking
them as they are);
- communitarianism
in its aversion to individualism and its advocacy of
coercive ways of human associating is another form
of collectivism.
We are
with our communist past oversensitive to both
aspects of communitarianism.
Because
of ambitions to change human beings, communitarianism is a
form of elitism. Its advocates have the feeling that they
have been chosen to advise, to moralise, to know better than
the 'normal' people what is right or wrong, what the people
should do, what will be good for them. They want us not only
to be free, but to be good, just, moral as well. Of course,
in their definition of what is good, just and moral. Similarly
as Margaret Thatcher, I start with the assumption that liberty
is an individual quality and, therefore, we should not collectivise
it.
Communitarianism
wants to socialise us by forcing us into artificial, not genuine,
not spontaneously formed groups or groupings. In this respect,
it is another version of corporatism or syndicalism, of organisations
with obligatory membership which bring together people of
the same profession, age, habits or interests We used to live
in a 'world of obligatory memberships'. There was one tourist
organisation, one organisation of pet-fans, one horse-riding
club, etc. And we know what it means. For that reason, we
want to be 'free to choose' (or eventually not to choose).
My third
argument regards the ways how to get to the brave new world
of communitarianism. One dangerous procedure how to do it
is to create an intellectual climate hostile to traditional
Western liberalism. This proved to be very easy to do and
very efficient. After the collapse of communism, in the moment
of a strange, ideological vacuum, communitarianism (and environmentalism)
took their chance. They came with new arguments against our
contemporary society, relied on the feeling of 'the end of
ideologies' and based their tactics on people's inclination
to permanently search for something new (or quasi-new).
Communitarianism
cannot win through preaching only. Its preachers are here,
but they cannot start a mass movement which would lead to
a social revolution. Instead of it, they try to reach legislators
and to legislate the world according to their dreams. And
this is something I am afraid of, because we live in world
of 'unconstrained' parliamentarianism. When I dare to say
unconstrained I mean unconstrained by the feeling of the whole
of society and of its fragility. Milton Friedman (1998) recently
pointed put it crystal clear: 'We are ruled by a majority,
but it is a majority composed of a coalition of minorities
É No minority has an incentive to be concerned about
the cumulative effects of the measures passed.' And this is
very dangerous, especially when the decision-makers' and legislators'
thinking is based on 'an incredible mishmash of pseudosocial
science, pop-psychology, vacuous moralising, rank ideology,
and political bias'(Manne 1997). It is our task to limit the
introduction of systemic changes based on such aprioristic
backgrounds and motivations, and instead to rely on spontaneous
evolution of human institutions.
If the
communitarians concentrate on founding specific institutions
and on working in them, I would be on their side, But it must
be done retail, not wholesale. It is necessary to do something
specific, not to keep advising others what to do.
References
Friedman,
Milton 1998, Two Lucky People, University of Chicago
Press, Chicago.
Manne,
Henry G. 1997, 'The Judiciary and Free Markets,' Harvard
Journal of Law and Public Policy 21(1).
Radnitzky,
Gerard 1996, 'The Inconsistency of Liberal Compromises,' Journal
des Economistes et des Etudes Humaines 7(4).
Wilson,
James Q. 1998, Two Nations, American Enterprise Institute,
Washington, D.C.
Endnotes
1. Die zerrissene Gesellschaft ('the torn society')
is the title of the whole 1998 Alpach Forum.
2. Communitarianism may, however, also be a simple
and much more modest empirical hypothesis that a deeper and
denser network of human associations creates more of a social
capital, but real communitarianism is much more.
Vaclav
Klaus is
a former Prime Minister of the Czech Republic. This paper
is based on his address to the Alpach Forum 1998 Seminar devoted
to 'Society and the Crisis of Liberalism,' 22 August 1998.
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