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Title: RFK2 Redux Author: Kevin Carson Date: April 21, 2005 Language: en Topics: Democratic Party, green capitalism Source: Retrieved on 4th September 2021 from https://mutualist.blogspot.com/2005/04/rfk2-redux.html
Recently B.K. Marcus expressed his surprised pleasure, with some
reservations, at RFK Jr.âs apparent endorsement of a free market
approach to environmentalism.
I read this and Iâm awfully suspicious. Iâm suspicious of any Kennedy.
Iâm especially suspicious of a rich-boy Yankees in the spotlight.
But I read this. I reread this. And all I can say for now is:
âRight on, Bobby, Jr!â
As it turns out, his misgivings were probably based on sound instinct.
The Commons Blog and Steve Verdon go so far, respectively, as to
denounce Kennedy as a âFree Market Fraud,â
Of course, Robert Kennedy has little interest in the free market or
protecting property rights. Rather, he is a âfaux market
environmentalistâ and partisan defender of the federal environmental
regulatory bureaucracy....
and a âprevaricator.â
Both bloggers object strenuously to RFKâs claim to the âfree marketâ
label, owing to his frequent statements like this one in The Grist:
You have to force companies to internalize costs. All of the federal
environmental laws are designed to restore free-market capitalism in
America in this regard....
Iâm a free-marketeer. I go out into the marketplace and I catch the
polluters who are cheating the free market and I say, âWe are going to
force you to internalize your costs the same way you are internalizing
your profit.â Thatâs what the federal environmental laws allow us to do:
restore real property rights in America.
Kennedy seems, as evidenced by quotes like that above and the following
one from a Buzzflash interview, to view the federal regulatory state as
the best mechanism for internalizing costs:
But the energy industry gave $48 million to President Bush and the
Republican Party during the 2000 race, and the payback is billions of
dollars of relief from regulations that are meant to protect the
commons, including the Clean Air Actsâ resource performance standards,
which the Bush Administration abandoned last month. So itâs illegal for
those companies to put those substances into our air, but the Bush
Administration has now said that it is no longer going to enforce the
laws against them....
Let me add one other thing. Yesterday, the Bush Administration announced
that it wasnât going to enforce mercury standards....
A government regulation, enforced by administrative law, is about the
most inappropriate mechanism for cost internalization I can think of.
Even if you believe some form of federal action is necessary, which I do
not, some form of âgreen taxâ or Pigouvian tax on externalities (which
Verdon seems to suggest at one point) is a much better way of doing it.
Personally, Iâd prefer restoring the common law of public and private
nuisance as it existed before the commercial interests emasculated it in
the 19^(th) century, and let local juries assess damages against
corporations that pollute their neighborsâ air and groundwater. The
polluters might just decide that the EPA was a big olâ pussycat, after
all. Indeed, the whole point of administrative penalties enforced by
executive agencies was that they preempted potentially much costlier
civil actions and replaced them with a lowest-common-denominator
standard.
RFK2 continues:
All of our federal agencies have now been captured by the industries
that theyâre intended to regulate. The head of the Forest Service is a
timber industry lobbyist. The head of our public lands is a mining
industry lobbyist....
Captured? They are the creations of the agencies they were ostensibly
intended to regulate, as Gabriel Kolko might have told him. The great
land barons and timber interests worked hand in glove with âprogressiveâ
government to create conservation laws, as Murray Rothbard described the
process in Power and Market:
Conservation laws... must also be looked upon as grants of monopolistic
privilege. One outstanding example is the American governmentâs policy,
since the end of the nineteenth century, of âreservingâ vast land tracts
of the âpublic domainâ--i.e., the governmentâs land holdings....
Forests, in particular, have been reserved, ostensibly for the purpose
of conservation. What is the effect of withholding huge tracts of
timberland from production? It is to confer a monopolistic privilege,
and therefore a restrictionist price, on competing private lands and on
competing timber.
The great landed interests and the timber industry were, therefore,
major supporters of federal conservation policy.
Kennedyâs statement below, especially, demonstrates a muddled thought
process:
And the free market has to be protected through government regulation.
As I say, capitalists do not want free markets. They want profits. And
the best way to capture profits â to capture a reliable profit stream â
is to get control of government and use government to crush your
competition.
If government intervention itself, what Kolko called âpolitical
capitalism,â is the best way to capture profits, then it doesnât make
much sense to argue at the same time that government intervention is
also the best way to prevent such profiteering. Government cannot
simultaneously be the main cause of something, and the only way of
preventing it.
Mr. Kennedy also seems rather mixed up about the nature of the commons,
confusing a common with state property:
One of the central roles of government from the beginning of the first
organized communities has been protection â the safeguarding of the
commons on behalf of the public. The commons under Roman law â under the
Code of Justinian â were defined as those things that are not
susceptible to private ownership; in other words, the shared resources,
the air that we breathe, the waterways, the dune lands, wetlands,
wandering animals.
And under Roman law, if you were a citizen of Rome, the Emperor himself,
whether you were humble, noble, rich or poor, could not stop you from
crossing a beach flowing at an ebb and taking out the fish. Everybody
had a right to use those resources. Nobody had a right to use them in a
way that would diminish or injure their use and enjoyment by others.
That principle is echoed in the Magna Carta and in the constitutions of
all of our states, through a doctrine thatâs called the Public Trust
Doctrine. And itâs at the heart of our environmental laws. And again,
from the beginning of time, the first acts of tyranny were to privatize
the commons. In fact, the Magna Carta was passed because of the Battle
of Runneymede, which was precipitated by King Johnâs efforts to turn the
rivers, the fisheries and the deer over to private corporations and
privileged parties.
For too many free market libertarians, this would be the cue to bring in
a horrible misrepresentation of Garrett Hardinâs Tragedy of the Commons,
and an argument that the only solution is to âprivatizeâ forests into
the hands of the usual big busienss suspects. Verdon does himself
credit, and throws away any chance for sitting at the vulgar libertarian
kool kids table, by coming to the defense of the commons as a legitimate
form of property.
....Kennedy is also prevaricating when he talks about both the tragedy
of the commons as well as firms internalizing costs.
First, there is no law in economics that says a common resources has to
result in the tragedy of the commons scenario. In fact, there are
instances where common resources are managed just fine with little or no
government internvention.
Verdon then quotes this statement from a review of Elinor Ostrom et
al.âs Governing the Commons to bolster his position:
In contrast to the proposition of the tragedy of the commons argument,
common pool problems sometimes are solved by voluntary organizations
rather than by a coercive state. Among the cases considered are communal
tenure in meadows and forests, irrigation communities and other water
rights, and fisheries.
(In fairness to Hardin, he himself specified that his argument applied
only to an unregulated common.)
Contrary to popular stereotype, quite a few free market libertarians are
amenable to the idea of the common, as a form of socially-owned (not
state-owned) property. For example, check out this article by Roderick
Long, and this one by Carlton Hobbs.
Still another Kennedy quote that raises some problems is this:
And thatâs whatâs happening in this country â the free market is being
eliminated. And in many of the major sectors, the free market has
already disappeared. There is no free market left in agriculture. A
farmer canât raise a pig and get it slaughtered, and bring it to a
stockyard and sell it. The stockyards are gone. The farmers are out of
business, and hog production and meat production and chicken production
in this country is now controlled by giant agri-businesses, as is grain
production. The same is true in the energy sector, and in the media â
youâve got 17,000 news outlets in this country that are now controlled
by 11 corporations.
He apparently confuses a particular market structure--what neoclassical
economists call âperfect competitionâ--with the free market, and regards
it as governmentâs job to promote the âfree marketâ by actively
intervening to breaking up concentrations of ownership. In that sense,
he is a throwback to the liberals at the turn of the 20^(th) century,
who regarded a petty bourgeois economy of small firms and atomistic
competition as their beau ideal, but considered federal anti-trust
action necessary to maintain such an economy in existence. For him, the
free market is not a set of procedural rules, but a particular outcome.
He confuses a symptom with the disease.
Now, I agree with Mr. Kennedyâs view that the state of affairs he
describes in the block quote above is not a free market. But not because
any particular level of concentration violates the model of âperfect
competitionâ necessary for a free market. I object, rather, because I
believe such levels of concentration came about through massive state
intervention to cartelize the market; further, I do not believe that
such concentration is possible through a free market mechanism, in the
vast majority of cases. If, however, the levels of concentration he
describes were the outcome of a genuinely free market, and resulted from
superior efficiency of such large-scale organization against
smaller-scale competitors rather than from state coercion, then I would
have to accept them as legitimate (despite some aesthetic revulsion).
Kennedy is greatly in need of theoretical clarity; he needs to state
exactly why such market concentration is incompatible with the free
market. Does he believe that certain outcomes of a free market can
create, without government intervention, the preconditions for a
non-free market? Does the market concentration he describes result from
laissez-faire, or from state intervention? And if the latter, how does
it gibe with his claim that government intervention is necessary to
prevent concentration?
His theoretical confusion in this regard reminds me of Chomsky, who
sometimes writes in great detail of the utter dependence of large
corporations on the state to externalize their costs on the taxpayer and
protect them from competition, and then at other times calls for a
dramatic strenghtening of the state as the only way to break up âprivate
concentrations of power.â For Chomsky, the corporation is utterly
dependent on the state, but at the same time threatens to achieve total
power if the state does not restrain it.
But despite all these caveats, I cannot go so far as Kennedyâs other
critics in calling him a prevaricator or a fraud. He is, all in all,
much superior to the general run of Democratic politicians (not to
mention having a claim to the âfree marketâ title at least as good as
that of the hangers-on at ASI and the Globalization Institute). Although
admittedly he isnât thinking very clearly about the solutions, he often
hits fairly near the mark in pointing out the problems. And even when
heâs somewhat off the mark, his general approach is quite an improvement
on that of most big government liberals. He at least sees that the big
polluters are engaged in some sort of collusion with the government, and
that government action is somehow involved in preventing costs from
being internalized. Heâs not nearly as far from the right path as other
members of his party, and could well be amenable to rational persuasion
regarding legitimate free market environmentalist policies. Certainly,
in using âfree marketâ as a god-term rather than a devil-term, and
portraying big business as its main enemy, heâs light years ahead of the
average âprogressive.â After reading the work of someone like, say,
Thomas Frank, who treats âlaissez-faireâ and âfree marketâ as synonyms
for the feudal dominion of GM and Wal-Mart, RFK Jr.âs rhetoric is a
breath of fresh air.
All things considered, I still think Kennedy holds more promise for
fruitful cooperation with the free market left than almost any other
prominent Democratic figure.