Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by MacsHeadroom 3810 days ago
>One thing I haven't seen mentioned is the fact that markets are created, not discovered.

Probably because most capitalists don't believe this?

>nor did the property rights regarding their shares.

Debatable. Most capitalists would say that property rights naturally exist and that "shares" are simply an agreed upon way of dividing property rights over a complexity of assets and agreements (i.e. a business).

>Taxing large profits is no more "unnatural" than protecting the right to these profits in the first place.

True. Obviously a laissez-faire capitalists would say they're both unnatural- as they would say most, if not all, concepts created via legislative action are also "unnatural." Of course, people don't typically expend effort fighting "unnatural" injustice that benefits them- especially when money is on the line, and even more so state protected stock holder money.

>A business acting unethically but legally is most rectifiably a problem with the law,

Since when is it the legislature's job to enforce morality?

4 comments

> Since when is it the legislature's job to enforce morality

Our laws are a constantly shifting mirror of our ethics (through the prism of "everyone" and "political reality")

Look at divorce, abortion, women's property rights, environmental obligations etc etc

The GP is well placed to say if a company is acting legally but unethically changing the law is often fastest and simpler fix -most eapecially for whole industries (hello banking)

"Most capitalists would say that property rights naturally exist ..."

I would like those capitalists to show me the "property rights" molecule.

The concept of "property rights without responsibility" is a Roman invention. There are alternatives. US law takes property rights more seriously than most other countries, because the US never had to get rid of feudalism. Also, one of the few lawbooks available in the early days of the US was Blackstone, who was a property rights absolutist.

In feudalism, land ownership implies the obligation to protect the inhabitants and gives them certain rights. One remnant of this is that, in Britain, you have the right to walk on the undeveloped private property of others. Also, most European countries afford renters much stronger rights than the US does.

Many nomadic societies, from the Mongols to native Americans, don't recognize the right to own real estate you're not currently using. Sharia law has the concept that land can be unowned by anyone, and can revert to that state if unused, although many Islamic countries do not do that in practice.

So no, property rights do not stem from "natural law".

The comment you are replying to isn't disagreeing with you.

The people who believe property rights are "natural" aren't saying they aren't a human creation at all. Just that they are a human right, like other rights that are also human creations.

The justification for this is something like you own your labor and slavery is wrong, and if you use your labor to produce something, it's unfair for anyone to take it from you. Likewise it's your right to trade it for something someone else made, or do whatever. And from that you get capitalism and property rights as we know them.

However this argument doesn't cover property rights over natural resources or land. There are some arguments for that like the homesteading principle. But in general there is an argument to be made that natural resources should be publicly owned, or at least rented with the profits going to the public.

Also this argument is deontological. A consequentialist would say if violating someone's rights helps more people than it hurts, you should do it anyway. And an economist would point out that pure property rights don't work in the first place, because of market failures like public goods, common goods, information asymmetry, natural monopolies, etc. So everyone is better off if we violate them at least a little.

The people who believe property rights are "natural" aren't saying they aren't a human creation at all. Just that they are a human right, like other rights that are also human creations.

I don't think this is true; why would it need the "natural" moniker in such case? Natural rights proponents claim that such rights are not invented, but an universal truth, either endowed by a god (like in the US Declaration of Independence) or derived from some natural property, such as human reason.

This is contrast with people who claim that all rights are subjective creations, not an innate property of nature nor a consequence of such, and therefore are not universal.

> But in general there is an argument to be made that natural resources should be publicly owned, or at least rented with the profits going to the public.

First made famous by Henry George, if anyone is interested.

An interesting use-case for cryptocurrencies/blockchain-like technology.

It's not a "natural law", but pretty close to it. It's a social convention (behavioral equilibrium) that guarantees peace and cooperation. The greatest philosopher of property rights was David Hume and the best continuator of Hume is Anthony de Jasay: http://oll.libertyfund.org/titles/2455/231884
I would like you to show me the "sarcasm" molecule
Ignoring the obvious that it's a 'when did you stop beating your wife?' statement, one might ask to see the 'your wealth is mine while I can bully you into handing over a sizable portion of it' molecule.
> Probably because most capitalists don't believe this?

That's what they may say. But the primary job of salesmen and the advertising industry is to create markets where none existed before. I.e. convince people to buy stuff they otherwise wouldn't even think about.

That’s what legislatures do all day. (And economists are generally theologians masquerading as scientists.) For instance, capitalism requires enormous legislation and bureaucracy. Starting with a property regime (so I can "own" natural resources), police to beat those who disobey, throw people off their land so nearly everyone has to obey capitalists/managers all day, and so on. All backed by a bizarre morality.

(And the more you get closer to so-called pure free markets, the more bureaucracy there is. Take Graeber's "Iron law of liberalism": "Any market reform, government initiative intended to reduce red tape and promote market forces will have the ultimate effect of increasing the total number of regulations, the total amount of paperwork, and the total number of bureaucrats the government employs.")

This is a cartoonish view of things. On top of that, most of history speaks of the contrary.