In Search of Economic Justice: A Reply by Robin Hahnel
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Response to "A Review Essay: In Search of Economic Justice,"
by Stephen R
Robin Hahnel
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In Search of
Economic Justice: A Reply
By Robin Hahnel
First of all, I want to thank Steve Shalom for probing the
themes discussed in my book, Economic Justice and Democracy: From
Competition to Cooperation (Routledge,
2005) at great length and depth in his review essay published in the Winter
2006 issue of New Politics. It
was in hope of stimulating the kind of thoughtful dialogue his essay
exemplifies that I wrote my book in the first place. I also want to thank him
for his excellent, comprehensive summary of what is covered in the book. He and
New Politics have done a better
job of telling interested readers what they will find in my book than I could
have.
I will not take time to comment on the many points where
Shalom expresses or expands upon points of agreement between us. Instead I will
confine my response to areas where Shalom disagrees with my analysis or
recommendations. Since -- unlike Shalom in his review essay -- I take up only
points of disagreement, I hasten to
caution readers not to infer from my reply that I believe there are fundamental
disagreements between myself and Shalom. Quite the contrary, Shalom and I seem
to be in close agreement about economic justice and democracy, and about what
it will take to replace the economics of competition and greed with the
economics of equitable cooperation.
Economic Justice: I
argued that economic justice requires
that people be compensated according to the sacrifices they make in work, but
for an economy to be humane
people's basic needs must be provided for in any case. While he is in broad
agreement, Shalom writes "I'm not sure this distinction is
compelling." Frankly, neither am I. Treating consumption based on
sacrifice as a matter of justice and consumption based on need as a matter of
humanity is probably overly simplistic. Let me explain what I was thinking, and
then qualify my conclusions in light of Shalom's criticism.
In any economy there are a large number of people who are
able to work, who are expected to work, and who do work. My principle concern
was how regular members of the workforce should be compensated. After
discussing a number of alternatives at great length, I concluded that the
system of compensating people who work is fair if and only if the rewards a
worker receives are commensurate with the sacrifices the worker makes. I
shortened this conclusion to "economic justice requires reward according
to sacrifice," and later in the book "reward according to
sacrifice" was listed as one of the defining features of the theoretical
model I advocate known as a participatory economy.
However, in real world economies we must also decide what
consumption rights should be given people who, for a variety of reasons, do not
work. There must be rules for judging who is able and expected to work, and who
is deemed not able, or not expected to work for some reason. After which,
consumption levels must be set for those who are not expected to work and for
those who are deemed able but who are, nonetheless, unwilling to work. My
comments on consumption rights for those who do not work were
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> brief for several reasons. First, while
reward according to sacrifice in work was a defining feature of a participatory
economy, specific rules for compensating those who do not work had never been
agreed on and were not considered a defining characteristic of a participatory
economy. Second, I considered the rules for rewarding those who work and the
rules for granting non-workers consumption rights to be logically separable.
For example, capitalism means reward
according to the market value of what is produced by the human and non-human
capital one owns. But at least in theory, a particular capitalist economy could
provide a generous safety net for those with little or no labor or capital
income. On the other hand, a participatory economy means
style='font-style:normal'>reward according to sacrifice. But a particular
participatory economy might have a less generous safety net for those who receive
little or nothing based on their sacrifices in work. Third, it seemed to me
that people who agree on the moral necessity of rewarding those who work
according to sacrifice might not necessarily agree on specific rules for
granting non-workers consumption rights. For example, advocates of rewarding
work according to sacrifice might disagree on the age at which workers should
no longer be expected to work. Or, they might disagree on whether pensions
should be the same for all retirees or vary somewhat depending on a person's
effort ratings over his or her work life. Or, they might disagree on the level
of consumption full time students should be awarded. And finally, while I
believe economic justice requires rewarding work according to sacrifice, I am
not sure there is only one way to allocate consumption rights to those who are
able but unwilling to work that is morally satisfactory. For example, consider
a very wealthy participatory economy where all who work enjoy consumption
considerably in excess of what is necessary to meet their basic needs, as
compared to a poor participatory economy where an average effort rating barely
covers a person's basic needs. In both economies I believe justice requires
rewarding those who work strictly according to their relative sacrifices. But while
I might criticize the wealthy participatory economy on moral grounds if it did
not guarantee those who are able but unwilling to work an allowance substantially
above subsistence, I would hesitate to criticize the poor participatory economy
for granting only a bare subsistence allowance to those who choose not to work.
In any case, these were the major reasons I treated the issue of consumption
rights for non-workers separately and only briefly. This is also why I said
"While I believe justice requires compensating people according to the
sacrifices they make, it seems to me that it is our humanity that compels us to
provide for those in need." (p. 32)
However, I now believe I devoted too little attention to a
discussion of procedures for determining who should be exempted from work, and
the terms of compensation for those who are exempted as well as for those who
are able but unwilling to work. While I believe it is possible to reach a
definitive conclusion regarding a fair rule for rewarding those who do work, as
explained above I am less sure a definitive conclusion can be reached regarding
a single way to allocate consumption rights to all who do not work that is
morally defensible. However, the issue of consumption rights for non-workers is
of great moral importance, and I regret if my treatment gave the impression I
believe otherwise. Moreover, I now think I was wrong to argue that consumption
rights for non-workers is a matter only of humanity and not of justice as well.
To take an obvious example, if a wealthy participatory economy failed to grant
pensioners consumption rights sufficient even to meet their basic needs during
retirement, it would be treating them unjustly as well as inhumanely. In
general, Shalom is correct that justice as well as humanity are both relevant
to compensating those exempted from work. I also suspect that when push comes
to shove the distinction between "for reasons of justice" and
"for reasons of humanity" break down the deeper we go into a moral
evaluation of the distribution of consumption rights.
Economism: Shalom
agrees with me that "economism" is an error that plagued much of the
left during the twentieth century and is a bad habit we must overcome. However,
he argues that I "overreach" when I object to referring to a society simply
as "capitalist" when it is also patriarchal and racist. In defense of
continuing to use the word "capitalist" as a general-purpose
designation, Shalom argues that "all current-day societies are racist,
sexist, heterosexist, able-ist and authoritarian," and therefore, he
argues, "these terms don't distinguish between one group of countries and
another, while the term capitalist does." I don't think our disagreement
over semantics is important since we both have long criticized economism.
However, it seems to me the usefulness of the word "capitalism" to
distinguish between the economic systems of different countries has all but
disappeared, while the danger of using only an economic concept as our
general-purpose label for modern day societies remains as great as ever.
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> In the twentieth century there were a
number of countries with non-capitalist economies for significant periods of
time. Shalom and I agree that these twentieth century, non-capitalist economies
were not "socialist" in the sense that workers and consumers managed
and coordinated their own economic endeavors -- which they did not. I call
these economies "coordinator" economies to indicate that a
non-capitalist class of managers and planners controlled and directed the
labors of others, and I do not think Shalom disagrees with this analysis even
if he does not refer to them as "coordinator" economies himself.
style='mso-footnote-id:ftn1' href="#_ftn1" name="_ftnref1" title="">
class=MsoFootnoteReference>[1]
But today almost every country has a capitalist economy. So I no longer find
the word capitalism useful to "distinguish" between the economies of
different countries. There are important differences between more humane
style='font-style:normal'> capitalist economies like Sweden and less humane
capitalist economies like the United States. So we need words like "social
democratic" and "neoliberal" to distinguish between different
sub-species of real world capitalism. But until we replace private enterprise
and markets in some country with institutions supportive of the economics of
equitable cooperation, to all intents and purposes the word
"capitalism" has lost any distinctive value among existing economies.
On the other hand, I fear that failing to mention crucial features of other
important spheres of social life -- like the fact that inter-communal relations
are racist, and gender relations are sexist -- when we seek labels to identify a
country's defining structural features can serve to disguise the importance of
non-economic forces just as much today as it did during the twentieth century.
I concede the semantic benefits of brevity, but to refer to any country today
merely as "capitalist" not only provides no useful information and is
therefore a waste of time, it can still easily perpetuate economistic myths. If
brevity is prized, "no word" is briefer than "capitalism"
and conveys as much information in the twenty-first century world we live in.
Effort Rating Inflation:
Shalom does not accept my answer to his question: "What is to prevent a
group of coworkers from all exaggerating the effort of one another?" He
quotes my answer accurately: "To prevent the possibility of 'effort rating
inflation' the average effort rating a council awards its members cannot exceed
the worker council's ratio of the social benefits of its outputs divided by the
social costs of its inputs." (190) But he says: "I don't think the
social benefits to social cost ratio will prevent it."
Shalom is wrong to believe the above rule will not prevent
effort rating inflation. Any rule that caps the average effort rating for every
worker council will stop effort rating inflation in its tracks. As long as
there is a cap on the average effort rating in my council, exaggerating the
ratings of any members must necessarily come out of the effort ratings of other
members. Only if there is no limit on how high the average effort rating for my
worker council can be is there an incentive for me and my coworkers to inflate
one another's effort ratings. Any system of caps will prevent effort rating
inflation. Different caps for worker councils chosen randomly will stop effort
rating inflation, but of course arbitrary caps would be grossly unfair.
It is not difficult to prevent effort rating inflation, the
trick is to do it fairly. Here Shalom has put his finger on an important issue
that has generated debate among advocates of participatory economics. Some
advocates support equal caps on the average effort rating for all worker
councils. Others support a cap for each council equal to the social benefit to
social cost ratio for that council. The case for caps equal to a council's
social benefit to social cost ratio rests on the belief that the planning procedure
will successfully charge worker councils for the true social cost of all their
inputs, including any differences in the skill of their members. In which case,
any differences in ratios between worker councils must be the result of
differences in average efforts in those councils, and it is only fair to permit
the councils where workers really did exert greater effort on average to
distribute effort ratings among themselves that are higher on average. The
danger with this rule is that the planning system may fail to level the playing
field among worker councils. In which case a higher social benefit to social
cost ratio could be the result of members whose higher skill was not reflected
in a higher indicative price their council was charged for using this more valuable
social resource, and not, in fact, the result of greater effort. The case for
equal caps for all worker councils rests on the assumption that there will be
very little difference in the average effort in different worker councils.
Those who support this rule have less faith in the accuracy of the indicative
prices generated by the participatory planning process and more faith that the
law of large numbers makes significant differences in average efforts at least
between workplaces with many members improbable. In sum, either rule will
prevent effort rating inflation, and there is debate among advocates of
participatory economics about which is more likely to be fair.
12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman"'>Self-Management and Participatory
Planning:
Shalom characterizes participatory
planning as a referendum approach to planning which insufficiently allows for deliberative
democracy. He also questions whether the model can live up to its advance
billing that it delivers economic democracy: "A final problem with the
participatory economic model is the question of whether it actually
accomplishes Hahnel's goal of economic self-management: that is, letting
everyone have a say proportional to the degree to which they are affected by
the decision…. Does it really give me one-third the say in a decision relative
to someone who is affected by the decision three times as much as me? Unlike
some aspects of the model which are documented in great mathematical detail,
the claim that the model yields self-management seems to me unproven."
12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman"'>
12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman"'>Participatory planning is not
style='font-size:12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman"'> planning via
referendum, as I will explain. Once we have a clearer understanding of the
planning procedure it will be easier to discuss the sense in which a
participatory economy can live up to the goal of economic self-management.
12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman"'>
12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman"'>This is the only passage in my book that
mentions how a referendum might be used in real world applications of
participatory planning:
12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman"'>
0in;margin-left:.2in;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height:normal'>
style='font-size:12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman"'>We did suggest one time-saving
procedure that could be used if people in a participatory economy want to.
After a number of iterations had already settled the major contours of the
plan… the professional staff of the Iteration Facilitation Board could define a
few feasible plans within those contours for all to vote on…. The purpose would
be to save the time otherwise required to go through further iterations to
whittle proposals down to a feasible plan when there is very little left to be
decided in any case. For example, if 97% of the plan is already settled in the
first 7 iterations, people may decide it is not worth another 7 iterations to
resolve the remaining 3%. If they wish, they could ask the IFB staff to
formulate, say, 5 different ways to settle the remaining 3% of the plan and
submit them to a referendum…. [Such a referendum] could be used, or not,
depending on how participants felt about the diminishing productivity of
further iterations [in the participatory planning procedure which is not a
referendum], and how much people were willing to trust the IFB to formulate
different "end game" options." (219-220)
12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman"'>
12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman"'>Unlike the participatory planning
procedure, an end-game referendum is not a defining feature of a participatory
economy. It is an idea mentioned merely as a pragmatic way to save time, and
only as a way to save time when so little of the plan remains to be determined that
people simply want a quick way to cut to the chase. Our intent is to propose a
non-referendum process -- the iterative planning process that is unique to the
model of a participatory economy -- for determining all important elements of
the national economic plan. To make clear we do not propose planning via
referendum I pointed out that even if a referendum were used it would only be
used to determine something like the last 3% of the plan -- minor details only,
the "end game." We did not propose that an Iteration Facilitation
Board be permitted to draw up a set of alternative national economic plans for
workers and consumers to vote on in a referendum, any more than we proposed
that representatives from different worker and consumer councils and federations
gather in one big meeting to propose different national economic plans, debate
their merits, and somehow agree on one.
href="#_ftn2" name="_ftnref2" title="">
style='mso-special-character:footnote'>[2]
12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman"'>
12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman"'>How do we suggest that the national plan
be determined -- or 97% of the plan if people opt for a referendum to settle
the last 3%? The participatory planning procedure we propose is neither a one-big-meeting
nor a referendum model. Other critics have misconstrued participatory planning
as a one-big-meeting model, and proceeded to point out flaws in the
one-big-meeting approach to national economic planning as if these were valid
criticisms of participatory planning. I believe Shalom has misconstrued
participatory planning as a referendum approach to planning and that is why he
fails to see that it is, in fact, unlike referenda, a procedure designed to
facilitate and enhance meaningful, deliberative, economic democracy. Perhaps
the procedure is often misconstrued precisely because the model of
participatory planning is unique in the history of economic planning.
Participatory planning is not only an alternative to authoritarian, or command
planning, it is also an alternative to one-big-meeting and
style='font-size:12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman"'> to a referendum -- the
two best known approaches to democratic planning. Here is how I described the
procedure in brief:
12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman"'>
0in;margin-left:.2in;margin-bottom:.0001pt;line-height:normal'>
style='font-size:12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman";letter-spacing:-.15pt'>The
participants in the planning procedure are the worker councils and federations,
the consumer councils and federations, and an Iteration Facilitation Board
(IFB). Conceptually, the planning procedure is quite simple. (1) The IFB
announces what we call "indicative prices" for all final goods and
services, capital goods, natural resources, and categories of labor. (2)
Consumer councils and federations respond with consumption proposals. Worker
councils and federations respond with production proposals listing the outputs
they propose to make and the inputs they need to make them. (3) The IFB then
calculates the excess demand or supply for each final good and service, capital
good, natural resource, and category of labor, and adjusts the indicative price
for the good up, or down, in light of the excess demand or supply. (4) Using
the new indicative prices consumer and worker councils and federations revise
and resubmit their proposals. Individual worker and consumer councils must
continue to revise their proposals until they submit one that is accepted by
the other councils. The planning process continues until there are no longer
excess demands for any goods, any categories of labor, any primary inputs, or
any capital stocks -- in other words, until a feasible plan is reached."
(193)
12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman";letter-spacing:-.15pt'>
12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman"'>
12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman"'>This iterative procedure in which worker
and consumer councils propose and revise their own activities is an alternative
to both (1) a meeting where alternative different national economic plans are proposed
and debated by representatives of interested parties, and (2) a referendum on different
alternative national economic plans drawn up by an external agency. But if
there are no meetings between the different worker and consumer councils and
federations where is the deliberation? There is deliberation inside each
council and federation regarding its own proposal and how to revise it during
each iteration of the planning procedure -- because decisions about what they,
themselves will do are the decisions that most affect their members. The manner
in which those in other councils and federations "deliberate" about
what my council or federation has proposed to do is carefully constrained to
protect my self-management. The guiding principle is that only if others
believe my proposal would use scarce productive resources belonging to everyone
style='mso-footnote-id:ftn3' href="#_ftn3" name="_ftnref3" title="">
class=MsoFootnoteReference>[3]
inefficiently or unfairly should they be able to intervene. The procedure is
designed to provide others with quantitative information necessary to determine
if this appears to be the case, and it is designed so others have an incentive
to intervene only if they have reason to believe this truly is the case. Because
we recognize that quantitative information often does not tell the whole story,
i.e. that an exchange of statistics is not all there is to deliberative
democracy, we also recommended that councils provide qualitative information
about the why's and wherefore's of their proposals to supplement the quantitative
signals others will consult. Deliberation can also take the form of requests
for face to face meetings with representatives from other councils to explain
or seek explanation, and face to face meetings that are part of appeal
procedures. But we have labored mightily to avoid overburdening the main
planning process with meetings, and particularly meetings without a clear
agenda and clear criteria for settling disagreements. We have tried to come up
with a procedure that avoids unstructured, inefficient deliberation where everyone
proposes, debates, and votes on what everyone will do (one-big-meeting to agree
on a national plan). We also sought to avoid lack of deliberation altogether as
everyone votes on a list of alternative national plans drawn up by experts
based on whatever information they could gather and whatever values they
thought were important (a national referendum on a national plan). Instead we devised
a format that provides meaningful deliberation through a carefully structured,
social, iterative process where workers and consumers have a great deal of control
over what their own economic activities will be at the same time they can effectively
protect themselves from socially irresponsible behavior by others.
12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman"'>
12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman"'>Can a participatory economy deliver
perfect self-management where every person has decision making authority
exactly to the degree they are affected in every decision that is made? No, of
course not. Nor have I ever believed or claimed that it can. It is important to
understand clearly what our goal should be: Try to distribute decision making
power in proportion to the degree different people are affected. But the best
we can do is devise procedures that approximate this goal.
ftn4' href="#_ftn4" name="_ftnref4" title="">
style='mso-special-character:footnote'>[4]
Moreover, unlike efficiency, where different decision making rules can be subjected
to mathematical models and proofs, measuring the degree of self-management does
not lend itself to that kind of analysis. So how does a participatory economy
better approximate
economic self-management than other kinds of economies do? 1) Every worker has
one vote in his or her worker council. 2) In larger worker councils sub-units
govern their own internal affairs via one worker one vote. 3) Job Complexes in
every workplace are balanced for empowerment. 4) Every consumer has one vote in
his or her consumer council. 5) Federations that govern different levels of
collective consumption are governed by democratic decision making procedures
where ultimately each federation member has one vote.
ftn5' href="#_ftn5" name="_ftnref5" title="">
style='mso-special-character:footnote'>[5]
6) Worker and consumer councils and federations not only propose what they will
do in the initial round of the participatory planning procedure, they alone
make all revisions regarding their own activity during subsequent iterations of
the planning procedure. 7) During the planning process councils can vote not to
approve proposals of other councils if they have good reason to believe those
proposals would use scarce productive resources belonging to everyone either
inefficiently or unfairly.
name="_ftnref6" title="">
style='mso-special-character:footnote'>[6]
"Does it really give me one-third the say in a decision relative to
someone who is affected by the decision three times as much as me?" If Shalom
means by one-third exactly .333333, then the answer is "no." If he
means will workers in a council have considerably more say over what they
produce and how they produce it than other workers who also have an interest in
how society's scarce productive resources are used, or if he means will consumers
in a neighborhood have considerably more say over their own mixture of local
public goods than other consumers who also have a claim on society's scarce
resources; then the answer is "yes." Nothing more exact was ever intended,
or in my opinion possible.
12.0pt;font-family:"Times New Roman";letter-spacing:-.15pt'>
Handling Pollution in the Planning Process
style='font-style:normal'>:
Shalom claims I have not only not solved the NIMBY problem, my
proposal aggravates it. "By giving veto power to a region it will lead to
a more extreme version of the MIMBY (not in my back yard) problem that plagues
capitalism. Say we need a vaccine to save millions of lives, but the factory
that produces the vaccine pollutes. Where do we locate the factory? The region
where the pollution would cause the least harm says we do not want any
pollution, hence we veto construction of the factory in our region…. This is
nothing more than a giant game of chicken -- who's going to concede first --
with the most socially irresponsible regions benefiting most."
Apparently Shalom misunderstands the procedure I
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> recommend for handling pollution. NIMBY
happens because local residents do not want to incur the entire social cost of
hosting Shalom's vaccine factory while they only enjoy a tiny fraction of the
benefit of having the vaccine available for all. In other words, NIMBY occurs
because local residents are not properly
compensated. But my proposal is precisely to compensate local residents. Shalom
identifies the best solution: Build the factory -- because presumably the
social benefits far outweigh the social costs. Locate the factory where the
pollution would cause the least harm -- because that minimizes the social
costs. My recommendation will achieve this result. As long as the social
benefits of the vaccine outweigh the social costs -- including the damage
caused residents of a region by pollution where the vaccine factory is located
-- a worker council will propose to produce it and the planning procedure will
approve the request. Any region willing to host the vaccine factory will be
compensated for the damage according to the indicative price of the pollutant.
In effect regions will bid against one another to host the vaccine factory
weighing the compensation they would receive against the damage they would
incur. The planning procedure will hone in on an indicative price for the
pollutant that will be too low for regions where the damage would be relatively
high to find it worth their while to host the factory, but high enough so that
the region where the damage is least will find it in their interest to host the
factory. Problem solved.
Shalom's concern that "allowing veto power is a very
different decision-making rule" than "people have input into a
decision in proportion to how much they are affected" is also based on a
misunderstanding of when and how vetoes are used in the planning procedure. Residents
are allowed to veto pollution as long as they are not sufficiently
compensated. If they cannot be compensated
enough to make it worth their while to give their permission, then permitting
the pollution is socially inefficient and should not be permitted. Other
participants in the planning process are allowed to veto a worker council's
proposal if the proposal would use scarce productive resources in a
way that would leave others worse off. As
long as the social benefits of the proposal exceed the social costs this will
not be the case, and others would be cutting off their nose to spite their face
if they vetoed such a proposal. Moreover, the procedure I recommend is suited
to handle issues like desires for open space and scenic vistas not just
pollutants which can be measured in physical units. As a matter of fact, one of
its advantages is that it generates better quantitative estimates of how much
people value what the profession terms "environmental amenities" than
contingent valuation surveys commonly used today precisely because market
systems fail to provide quantitative estimates for these kinds of
"goods."
Shalom's last criticism is: "Hahnel's environmental
procedure seems inconsistent with his general decision-making rule. The problem
is that he defines the relevant region as that geographic area where residents
believe they are affected by a pollutant, without taking into account the
degree to which people are affected." I am aware that those within a
region affected by a pollutant will not be equally damaged. This is most
obviously true for a non-uniform pollutant where those who live closer to the
source receive more of the pollutant. If this were the only reason some in a
region are affected more than others, we might be tempted to award votes within
the regional federation in proportion to one's distance from the source since
there is an objective and measurable relationship between quantity of pollutant
and distance from the source, although wind patterns would complicate
measurements even in this case. (I think this would work better than Shalom's
proposal to create nested regions with multiple indicative prices for the same
pollutant.) However, there are other reasons beside proximity to the source
that people are affected differently by pollutants. Many pollutants harm the
very old, the very young, and those who are in poor health more than they harm healthy
people in the prime of life. Even more problematic is the fact that just as
people have different "preferences" for how many apples they would be
willing to give up for an orange, people have different "preferences"
for how much consumption they would give up to have less pollution.
The problem of how to get people to reveal their true
preferences for public goods -- or in this case, their true aversion for a
public bad -- has been studied at great length. The literature on
"incentive compatible mechanisms" for providing public goods and
collecting revenue to pay for them identifies two critical issues: (1) Will a
"mechanism" provide the socially efficient amount of a public good? (Or
in this case, permit the socially efficient amount of a public bad to be
produced.) (2) Will a "mechanism" make those who benefit more from a
public good pay more than those who benefit less? (Or in this case, compensate
those who suffer more to a greater extent than those who suffer less.) Prior to
the 1970s economists believed it was impossible to design a mechanism that did
both. It is impossible to provide the efficient amount of a public good unless
people reveal their preferences truthfully. But it was long assumed that if
people who report a higher preference are charged more than people who report a
lower preference there would be an incentive for everyone to understate how
much they benefit from the public good. (In our case, the problem is if we give
more compensation to those damaged to a greater extent, everyone will have an
incentive to exaggerate how much they are harmed.) In the early 1970s Edward
Clarke and Theodore Groves sparked a flurry of creative theoretical work
designing new "incentive compatible mechanisms" for providing public
goods that, in theory, can induce people to reveal their true preferences while
still charging those who benefit more.
href="#_ftn7" name="_ftnref7" title="">
style='mso-special-character:footnote'>[7]
However, even economists responsible for these theoretical breakthroughs conceded
that none of their "mechanisms" seemed to have any practical
application because they required a great deal of information gathering and
processing. However, it is possible to design a mechanism that will produce the
efficient amount of a public good (or bad) without undue complication if we
abandon the attempt to calibrate how much we charge (or compensate) individuals
on the basis of how much they benefit (or suffer), and that is what I
recommended. If 1000 people are affected adversely by a pollutant, and if each
will receive one one-thousandth of the total compensation awarded victims for a
certain level of pollution, each of the 1000 people has an incentive to vote honestly
about how much of the pollutant they want their region to accept. If these
"honest" votes are averaged the efficient level of pollution will be
reached. However, under this procedure those who are damaged to a greater
extent will receive no more compensation personally than those who are damaged
to a lesser extent. This is unfortunate, but I think I agree with other
economic theorists that people would probably decide that any remedy was more
trouble than it was worth.
name="_ftnref8" title="">
style='mso-special-character:footnote'>[8]
However, I should have qualified my claim that the procedure not only obeys the
polluter pays principle but it also compensates the victims of pollution. It
compensates the victims as a group, but individuals within the group are not
compensated exactly according to their individual damages.
Shalom does put his finger on an issue that bears attention.
How to define who is affected by a particular pollutant and who is not will not
always be simple to determine or agree on. I did say that scientists in the
employ of federations would have to assist in this matter. I also said that if
a larger federation comes to the conclusion that its members are affected it
should be included in the definition of the region of those affected. However,
since there is compensation, federations representing people who truly are not
affected might be tempted to misrepresent their case. So interested parties may
well contest where to draw the borders for regions where people are affected by
a pollutant. Perhaps environmental courts would be required if disagreements
proved sufficiently troublesome.
name="_ftnref9" title="">
style='mso-special-character:footnote'>[9]
However, I should point out that there is no way to draw borders so all within
a border are equally damaged by a pollutant. Unfortunately life is not that
simple.
International Economic Relations and the Fifty Percent
Rule:
Shalom has several objections to my proposal that a
participatory economy use what I call the "fifty percent rule" when
engaging in international trade and investment. The rule is that a
participatory economy must agree to terms of trade that give more than fifty
percent of the efficiency gain from
specialization and trade to any
country that is poorer than the participatory economy. The same rule applies to
interest rates on international loans. Shalom's first objection is that the
assessment is based on "the relative wealth of another country as a whole,
rather than of the specific individuals who stand to gain or lose from the
transaction." Shalom worries: "What if the entire benefit from the
transaction goes to the rich capitalist who owns the coffee plantation or the
garment factory, with the impoverished workers getting nothing?" This is a
valid concern, but Shalom himself explains why it is very difficult to do
anything about: "Most economies do not provide outsiders (or most
insiders, for that matter) with sufficient information to judge the actual
impact of a trade." But instead of concluding that the best that can be
done is to apply a simple fifty percent rule which requires no calculation
beyond the average wealth of different countries, Shalom concludes that lack of
information regarding the internal distributive impacts of international trade
(or investment) make "it hard to see how the fifty percent rule could be
applied in practice." But I proposed the fifty percent rule precisely
because the kind of evaluation Shalom wants is usually impossible to apply in
practice while the fifty percent rule is easy to apply. I have no disagreement
with Shalom's suggestion that perhaps fair trade groups and unions in a wealthy
participatory economy should monitor the fifty percent rule to identify cases
where it should be suspended. But I agree with him that the determinations
necessary would not be easy. I also suspect a more effective way to handle
these concerns is for the government of a participatory economy to heed the
recommendations of organizations representing the oppressed and the political
opposition in poorer capitalist trading partners regarding suspension of
international economic relations. It is better if the suspension is done at
their suggestion than on the initiative of organizations in the wealthier
economy no matter how well intended.
href="#_ftn10" name="_ftnref10" title="">
style='mso-special-character:footnote'>[10]
Shalom is correct that if poorer countries receive only 51%
of the efficiency gains international economic injustice would persist for
centuries. But Shalom also surmised correctly that I proposed the fifty percent
rule only as a minimum requirement to prevent a participatory economy from
violating its core principles. I would join Shalom in praise of any wealthy
participatory economy that adopted a rule such as "the percentage of the
efficiency gain going to the poorer country should be equal to the ratio of the
GDP per capita of the richer country divided by the GDP per capita of the
poorer country."
Conclusion: As I warned
readers I have not reviewed the many points of agreement between myself and
Shalom. When I review our disagreements it seems to me we do so usually because
Shalom wants more economic justice, more self-management, or more environmental
protection than he fears a participatory economy actually offers. I do not
disagree with him that it would be nice to figure out ways to better achieve
the goals we share. And if anyone can come up with ways to do so that are also
practical -- that is, not more trouble than they are worth -- I will be
delighted. But I do think we need to recognize that often we are trying to
design procedures that at best
can only approximate our goals. Often my answer to a Shalom criticism is that
what I have proposed is the best that can be done, or what he has proposed
instead would not work or is not worth the extra trouble. But I always hope he
is right and I am wrong!
name="_ftn1" title="">
footnote'>[1]In a related
comment Shalom objects to John Bellamy Foster's claim that
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> Mao tried unsuccessfully to combat the
rise of a new ruling class in China. Shalom writes: "But surely Mao -- the
most powerful member of a dictatorial ruling party -- was not a champion of
democracy. He was the head of the new ruling class that was the CCP. That his
faction within the party lost out to another faction does not make this a
struggle against class rule, for democracy, or for socialism." I agree
with Shalom that Mao was hardly pro-democracy, but I believe Foster is correct
that Mao was anti-coordinator class. In my interpretation a political faction
within the CCP sometimes led by Mao himself, and often aided and abetted by Mao
as chairman of the entire CCP, fought long and hard to prevent the coordinator
class from rising to power within the Chinese economy. I agree with Shalom that
it would be a mistake to interpret opportunistic appeals from Mao's faction of
the CCP for the masses to challenge party officials supporting their factional
opponents in the CCP as evidence that Mao was pro-democracy. But I do not think
one can sensibly explain a great deal of what occurred during the Cultural
Revolution and its aftermath without recognizing that what was often referred
to as the Maoist faction within the CCP staunchly opposed handing the economy
over to coordinator rule. No, they were not pro-democracy, but they were
anti-coordinator class nonetheless. As losers in a bitter political struggle
that lasted for more than two decades, tens of millions who belonged to Mao's
anti-coordinator faction of the CCP, including his wife, paid a very high
personal price for their political convictions.
name="_ftn2" title="">
footnote'>[2] When I refer
to the "one big meeting" approach to formulating a national economic
plan I do not mean to imply that representatives of different councils and
federations would only meet one time. As a matter of fact, I am convinced this
approach would result in endless meetings where these representatives would go over
the same ground repeatedly as they discussed and debated different plans. I
think coming up with an agenda for such an ongoing meeting, and
formulating coherent criteria for
evaluating alternative national economic plans presented at such meetings is
impossible. Consequently, I
suspect what would eventually happen if people ever tried the "one big
meeting" approach to democratic planning would be that a plan with little
merit would eventually receive a majority vote when attendees exhausted
themselves and realized further discussion held little prospect of yielding a
superior result.
name="_ftn3" title="">
footnote'>[3] Scarce
productive resources belonging to everyone include not only all natural and
human-made capital, but all human
capital as well. A participatory economy considers scarce productive skills and
talents of its members as well as all
productive knowledge to be part of the overall productive asset base
that is the common property of everyone.
name="_ftn4" title="">
footnote'>[4] In my view
the same hold for economic justice. It is important to understand clearly what
our goal should be: reward according to sacrifice (for those who work.) But the
best we can do is devise ways to reasonably approximate this result.
name="_ftn5" title="">
footnote'>[5] These
include federations which have the right to set the level of pollution their
members are willing to tolerate as discussed below. I should also point out
that the exact democratic voting
procedures within federations have never been fully specified. Should
federation collective consumption proposals be drawn up by delegates selected
by councils comprising the federation who meet for that purpose, or submitted
directly by councils for consideration? Should collective consumption
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> proposals be voted on by delegates
representing each council or by all federation members? There are important
issues to weigh when thinking about how to best design decision making
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> procedures inside federations.
Advocates of participatory economics have simply agreed that these procedures
must be thoroughly democratic.
name="_ftn6" title="">
footnote'>[6] While there
are very specific procedures for calculating the social benefits and costs
associated with proposals, I should point out that nobody has proposed exact
rules for voting to approve or disapprove proposals. There are obviously many
possibilities whose relative merits should be weighed. Consensus seems overly
demanding while a simple majority might be too lenient. There is
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> an extensive political science
literature on the advantages and disadvantages of different voting procedures I
believe may be useful. On the other hand, deciding on a particular voting
procedure may best be left to those implementing participatory planning when
the time comes. I, for one, never see the harm of thinking about important
issues in advance even if it turns out there is good reason to expect there is
no single, best voting rule for all kinds of proposals, for all rounds of the
planning procedure, or for all participatory economies.
name="_ftn7" title="">
footnote'>[7] See chapter
3 in Robin Hahnel and Michael Albert, Quiet Revolution in Welfare Economics
style='font-style:normal'> (Princeton UP, 1990) for a thorough discussion of
this literature. The trick is to find a way to tax those who receive greater
benefit more than those who receive less benefit, but not
style='font-style:normal'> to use the information anyone provides about their
own willingness to pay for the public good to do so. One way to do this is to
charge everyone the same amount initially, but then subtract from each person's
assessment the sum of everyone else's
normal'> reported willingness to
pay. For any who report a high willingness to pay,
yes"> less will be substracted from their assessment since their
high willingness to pay is not
included in the amount subtracted for them. For any who report a low
willingness to pay, more will be substracted from their assessment since their
low willingness to pay is not
included in the amount subtracted for them. Since nobody's own reported
willingness to pay figures in the calculation of their own assessment there is
no incentive to lie about how much one really benefits from a public good.
name="_ftn8" title="">
footnote'>[8] It would be
interesting to investigate whether there may be fewer practical disadvantages
of using the "incentive compatible mechanisms" for public good
provision designed by Groves, Clarke, and others in the 1970s inside
federations in a participatory economy than there are in market economies. It
may be that a participatory economy is better suited to implementing one of
these innovative mechanisms which calibrate charges (compensation) for public
goods (bads) according to how much a person benefits (is harmed). If any
federation chose to implement one of these alternatives I would certainly not
criticize them. I, along with Clarke and Groves, would be most interested in
how the experiment worked out in practice!
name="_ftn9" title="">
footnote'>[9] Hopefully
drawing borders for relevant environmental regions in a participatory economy
can be handled better than the Republican controlled Texas State Legislature
recently handled redrawing US
Congressional Districts in response to Tom DeLay's prodding!
name="_ftn10" title="">
footnote'>[10] When the
ANC asked other countries to boycott investing in South Africa as part of its
campaign to overthrow apartheid, any participatory economy would have joined
the boycott immediately.

