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version of Section B.
B.6 But will not the decisions made by intelligent individuals with their
own financial success or failure on the line be better most of the
time?
This question refers to an argument commonly used by capitalists to justify
the fact that investment decisions are removed from public control
under capitalism, with private investors making all the decisions.
Clearly the assumption behind this argument is that individuals suddenly
lose their intelligence when they get together and discuss their common
interests. But surely, through debate, we can enrich our ideas by
social interaction. In the marketplace we do not discuss but instead
act as atomised individuals.
This issue involves the "Isolation Paradox," according to
which the very logic of individual decision-making is different from
that of collective decision-making. An example is the "tyranny
of small decisions." Let us assume that in the soft drink industry
some companies start to produce (cheaper) non-returnable bottles.
The end result of this is that most, if not all, the companies making
returnable bottles lose business and switch to non-returnables. Result?
Increased waste and environmental destruction.
This is because market price fails to take into account social costs
and benefits, indeed it mis-estimates them for both buyer/seller
and to others not involved in the transaction. This is because, as
Schumacher points out, the "strength of the idea of private enterprise
lies in its terrifying simplicity. It suggests that the totality of
life can be reduced to one aspect - profits..." [Small is Beautiful,
p. 215] But life cannot be reduced to one aspect without impoverishing
it and so capitalism "knows the price of everything but the value
of nothing."
Therefore the market promotes "the tyranny of small decisions" and
this can have negative outcomes for those involved. The capitalist
"solution" to this problem is no solution, namely to act after the
event. Only after the decisions have been made and their effects felt
can action be taken. But by then the damage has been done. Can suing
a company really replace a fragile eco-system? In addition,
the economic context has been significantly altered, because investment
decisions are often difficult to unmake.
In other words, the operations of the market provide an unending
source of examples for the argument that the aggregate results of
the pursuit of private interest may well be collectively damaging.
And as collectives are made up of individuals, that means damaging
to the individuals involved. The remarkable ideological success of
"free market" capitalism is to identify the anti-social choice with
self-interest, so that any choice in the favour of the interests which
we share collectively is treated as a piece of self-sacrifice. However,
by atomising decision making, the market often actively works against
the self-interest of the individuals that make it up.
Game theory is aware that the sum of rational choices do not automatically
yield a rational group outcome. Indeed, it terms such situations as
"collective action" problems. By not agreeing common standards, a
"race to the bottom" can ensue in which a given society reaps choices
that we are individuals really don't want. The rational pursuit of
individual self-interest leaves the group, and so most individuals,
worse off. The problem is not bad individual judgement (far from it,
the individual is the only person able to know what is best for them
in a given situation). It is the absence of social discussion and
remedies that compels people to make unbearable choices because the
available menu presents no good options.
By not discussing the impact of their decisions with everyone
who will be affected, the individuals in question have not made a
better decision. Of course, under our present highly centralised statist
and capitalist system, such a discussion would be impossible to implement,
and its closest approximation -- the election process -- is too vast,
bureaucratic and dominated by wealth to do much beyond passing a few
toothless laws which are generally ignored when they hinder profits.
However, let's consider what the situation would be like under libertarian
socialism, where the local community assemblies discuss the question
of returnable bottles along with the workforce. Here the function
of specific interest groups (such as consumer co-operatives, ecology
groups, workplace Research and Development action committees and so
on) would play a critical role in producing information. Knowledge,
as Bakunin, Kropotkin, etc. knew, is widely dispersed throughout society
and the role of interested parties is essential in making it available
to others. Based upon this information and the debate it provokes,
the collective decision reached would most probably favour returnables
over waste. This would be a better decision from a social and ecological
point of view, and one that would benefit the individuals who discussed
and agreed upon its effects on themselves and their society.
In other words, anarchists think we have to take an active part
in creating the menu as well as picking options from it which reflect
our individual tastes and interests.
It needs to be emphasised that such a system does not involve discussing
and voting on everything under the sun, which would paralyse all activity.
To the contrary, most decisions would be left to those interested
(e.g. workers decide on administration and day-to-day decisions within
the factory), the community decides upon policy (e.g. returnables
over waste). Neither is it a case of electing people to decide for
us, as the decentralised nature of the confederation of communities
ensures that power lies in the hands of local people.
This process in no way implies that "society" decides what an individual
is to consume. That, like all decisions affecting the individual only,
is left entirely up to the person involved. Communal decision-making
is for decisions that impact both the individual and society, allowing
those affected by it to discuss it among themselves as equals, thus
creating a rich social context within which individuals can act. This
is an obvious improvement over the current system, where decisions
that often profoundly alter people's lives are left to the discretion
of an elite class of managers and owners, who are supposed to "know
best."
There is, of course, the danger of "tyranny of the majority" in
any democratic system, but in a direct libertarian democracy, this
danger would be greatly reduced, for reasons discussed in section
I.5.6 ( Won't there be a danger of a "tyranny
of the majority" under libertarian socialism?).
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