PEACE AND THE PRICE SYSTEM
Evidently the conception of peace
on which its various spokesmen are proceeding is by
no means the same for all of them. In the current
German conception, e.g., as seen in the utterances
of its many and urgent spokesmen, peace appears to
be of the general nature of a truce between nations,
whose God-given destiny it is, in time, to adjust a
claim to precedence by wager of battle. They will
sometimes speak of it, euphemistically, with a view
to conciliation, as “assurance of the national
future,” in which the national future is taken
to mean an opportunity for the extension of the national
dominion at the expense of some other national establishment.
In the same connection one may recall the many eloquent
passages on the State and its paramount place and
value in the human economy. The State is useful
for disturbing the peace. This German notion
may confidently be set down as the lowest of the current
conceptions of peace; or perhaps rather as the notion
of peace reduced to the lowest terms at which it continues
to be recognisable as such. Next beyond in that
direction lies the notion of armistice; which differs
from this conception of peace chiefly in connoting
specifically a definite and relatively short interval
between warlike operations.
The conception of peace as being a
period of preparation for war has many adherents outside
the Fatherland, of course. Indeed, it has probably
a wider vogue and a readier acceptance among men who
interest themselves in questions of peace and war
than any other. It goes hand in hand with that
militant nationalism that is taken for granted, conventionally,
as the common ground of those international relations
that play a part in diplomatic intercourse. It
is the diplomatist’s metier to talk war
in parables of peace. This conception of peace
as a precarious interval of preparation has come down
to the present out of the feudal age and is, of course,
best at home where the feudal range of preconceptions
has suffered least dilapidation; and it carries the
feudalistic presumption that all national establishments
are competitors for dominion, after the scheme of
Macchiavelli. The peace which is had on this
footing, within the realm, is a peace of subjection,
more or less pronounced according as the given national
establishment is more or less on the militant order;
a warlike organisation being necessarily of a servile
character, in the same measure in which it is warlike.
In much the same measure and with
much the same limitations as the modern democratic
nations have departed from the feudal system of civil
relations and from the peculiar range of conceptions
which characterise that system, they have also come
in for a new or revised conception of peace.
Instead of its being valued chiefly as a space of time
in which to prepare for war, offensive or defensive,
among these democratic and provisionally pacific nations
it has come to stand in the common estimation as the
normal and stable manner of life, good and commendable
in its own right. These modern, pacific, commonwealths
stand on the defensive, habitually. They are
still pugnaciously national, but they have unlearned
so much of the feudal preconceptions as to leave them
in a defensive attitude, under the watch-word:
Peace with honour. Their quasi-feudalistic national
prestige is not to be trifled with, though it has
lost so much of its fascination as ordinarily not to
serve the purposes of an aggressive enterprise, at
least not without some shrewd sophistication at the
hands of militant politicians and their diplomatic
agents. Of course, an exuberant patriotism may
now and again take on the ancient barbarian vehemence
and lead such a provisionally pacific nation into
an aggressive raid against a helpless neighbour; but
it remains characteristically true, after all, that
these peoples look on the country’s peace as
the normal and ordinary course of things, which each
nation is to take care of for itself and by its own
force.
The ideal of the nineteenth-century
statesmen was to keep the peace by a balance of power;
an unstable equilibrium of rivalries, in which it was
recognised that eternal vigilance was the price of
peace by equilibration. Since then, by force
of the object-lesson of the twentieth-century wars,
it has become evident that eternal vigilance will
no longer keep the peace by equilibration, and the
balance of power has become obsolete. At the
same time things have so turned that an effective
majority of the civilised nations now see their advantage
in peace, without further opportunity to seek further
dominion. These nations have also been falling
into the shape of commonwealths, and so have lost
something of their national spirit.
With much reluctant hesitation and
many misgivings, the statesmen of these pacific nations
are accordingly busying themselves with schemes for
keeping the peace on the unfamiliar footing of a stable
equilibrium; the method preferred on the whole being
an equilibration of make-believe, in imitation of
the obsolete balance of power. There is a meticulous
regard for national jealousies and discriminations,
which it is thought necessary to keep intact.
Of course, on any one of these slightly diversified
plans of keeping the peace on a stable footing of
copartnery among the pacific nations, national jealousies
and national integrity no longer have any substantial
meaning. But statesmen think and plan in terms
of precedent; which comes to thinking and planning
in terms of make-believe, when altered circumstances
have made the precedents obsolete. So one comes
to the singular proposal of the statesmen, that the
peace is to be kept in concert among these pacific
nations by a provision of force with which to break
it at will. The peace that is to be kept on this
footing of national discriminations and national armaments
will necessarily be of a precarious kind; being, in
effect, a statesmanlike imitation of the peace as it
was once kept even more precariously by the pacific
nations in severalty.
Hitherto the movement toward peace
has not gone beyond this conception of it, as a collusive
safeguarding of national discrepancies by force of
arms. Such a peace is necessarily precarious,
partly because armed force is useful for breaking
the peace, partly because the national discrepancies,
by which these current peace-makers set such store,
are a constant source of embroilment. What the
peace-makers might logically be expected to concern
themselves about would be the elimination of these
discrepancies that make for embroilment. But what
they actually seem concerned about is their preservation.
A peace by collusive neglect of those remnants of
feudalistic make-believe that still serve to divide
the pacific nations has hitherto not seriously come
under advisement.
Evidently, hitherto, and for the calculable
future, peace is a relative matter, a matter of more
or less, whichever of the several working conceptions
spoken of above may rule the case. Evidently,
too, a peace designed to strengthen the national establishment
against eventual war, will count to a different effect
from a collusive peace of a defensive kind among the
pacific peoples, designed by its projectors to conserve
those national discrepancies on which patriotic statesmen
like to dwell. Different from both would be the
value of a peace by neglect of such useless national
discriminations as now make for embroilment. A
protracted season of peace should logically have a
somewhat different cultural value according to the
character of the public policy to be pursued under
its cover. So that a safe and sane conservation
of the received law and order should presumably best
be effected under cover of a collusive peace of the
defensive kind, which is designed to retain those
national discrepancies intact that count for so much
in the national life of today, both as a focus of
patriotic sentiment and as an outlet for national
expenditures. This plan would involve the least
derangement of the received order among the democratic
peoples, although the plan might itself undergo some
change in the course of time.
Among the singularities of the latterday
situation, in this connection, and brought out by
the experiences of the great war, is a close resemblance
between latterday warlike operations and the ordinary
processes of industry. Modern warfare and modern
industry alike are carried on by technological processes
subject to surveillance and direction by mechanical
engineers, or perhaps rather experts in engineering
science of the mechanistic kind. War is not now
a matter of the stout heart and strong arm. Not
that these attributes do not have their place and
value in modern warfare; but they are no longer the
chief or decisive factors in the case. The exploits
that count in this warfare are technological exploits;
exploits of technological science, industrial appliances,
and technological training. As has been remarked
before, it is no longer a gentlemen’s war, and
the gentleman, as such, is no better than a marplot
in the game as it is played.
Certain consequences follow from this
state of the case. Technology and industrial
experience, in large volume and at a high proficiency,
are indispensable to the conduct of war on the modern
plan, as well as a large, efficient and up-to-date
industrial community and industrial plant to supply
the necessary material of this warfare. At the
same time the discipline of the campaign, as it impinges
on the rank and file as well as on the very numerous
body of officers and technicians, is not at cross
purposes with the ordinary industrial employments of
peace, or not in the same degree as has been the case
in the past, even in the recent past. The experience
of the campaign does not greatly unfit the men who
survive for industrial uses; nor does it come in as
a sheer interruption of their industrial training,
or break the continuity of that range of habits of
thought which modern industry of the technological
order induces; not in the same degree as was the case
under the conditions of war as carried on in the nineteenth
century. The cultural, and particularly the technological,
incidence of this modern warfare should evidently
be appreciably different from what has been experienced
in the past, and from what this past experience has
induced students of these matters to look for among
the psychological effects of warlike experience.
It remains true that the discipline
of the campaign, however impersonal it may tend to
become, still inculcates personal subordination and
unquestioning obedience; and yet the modern tactics
and methods of fighting bear somewhat more on the
individual’s initiative, discretion, sagacity
and self-possession than once would have been true.
Doubtless the men who come out of this great war,
the common men, will bring home an accentuated and
acrimonious patriotism, a venomous hatred of the enemies
whom they have missed killing; but it may reasonably
be doubted if they come away with a correspondingly
heightened admiration and affection for their betters
who have failed to make good as foremen in charge
of this teamwork in killing. The years of the
war have been trying to the reputation of officials
and officers, who have had to meet uncharted exigencies
with not much better chance of guessing the way through
than their subalterns have had.
By and large, it is perhaps not to
be doubted that the populace now under arms will return
from the experience of the war with some net gain
in loyalty to the nation’s honour and in allegiance
to their masters; particularly the German subjects, the
like is scarcely true for the British; but a doubt
will present itself as to the magnitude of this net
gain in subordination, or this net loss in self-possession.
A doubt may be permitted as to whether the common
man in the countries of the Imperial coalition, e.g.,
will, as the net outcome of this war experience, be
in a perceptibly more pliable frame of mind as touches
his obligations toward his betters and subservience
to the irresponsible authority exercised by the various
governmental agencies, than he was at the outbreak
of the war. At that time, there is reason to believe,
there was an ominous, though scarcely threatening,
murmur of discontent beginning to be heard among the
working classes of the industrial towns. It is
fair to presume, however, that the servile discipline
of the service and the vindictive patriotism bred
of the fight should combine to render the populace
of the Fatherland more amenable to the irresponsible
rule of the Imperial dynasty and its subaltern royal
establishments, in spite of any slight effect of a
contrary character exercised by the training in technological
methods and in self-reliance, with which this discipline
of the service has been accompanied. As to the
case of the British population, under arms or under
compulsion of necessity at home, something has already
been said in an earlier passage; and much will apparently
depend, in their case, on the further duration of
the war. The case of the other nationalities involved,
both neutrals and belligerents, is even more obscure
in this bearing, but it is also of less immediate
consequence for the present argument.
The essentially feudal virtues of
loyalty and bellicose patriotism would appear to have
gained their great ascendency over all men’s
spirit within the Western civilisation by force of
the peculiarly consistent character of the discipline
of life under feudal conditions, whether in war or
peace; and to the same uniformity of these forces that
shaped the workday habits of thought among the feudal
nations is apparently due that profound institutionalisation
of the preconceptions of patriotism and loyalty, by
force of which these preconceptions still hold the
modern peoples in an unbreakable web of prejudice,
after the conditions favoring their acquirement have
in great part ceased to operate. These preconceptions
of national solidarity and international enmity have
come down from the past as an integral part of the
unwritten constitution underlying all these modern
nations, even those which have departed most widely
from the manner of life to which the peoples owe these
ancient preconceptions. Hitherto, or rather until
recent times, the workday experience of these peoples
has not seriously worked at cross purposes with the
patriotic spirit and its bias of national animosity;
and what discrepancy there has effectively been between
the discipline of workday life and the received institutional
preconceptions on this head, has hitherto been overborne
by the unremitting inculcation of these virtues by
interested politicians, priests and publicists, who
speak habitually for the received order of things.
That order of things which is known
on its political and civil side as the feudal system,
together with that era of the dynastic States which
succeeds the feudal age technically so called, was,
on its industrial or technological side, a system
of trained man-power organised on a plan of subordination
of man to man. On the whole, the scheme and logic
of that life, whether in its political (warlike) or
its industrial doings, whether in war or peace, runs
on terms of personal capacity, proficiency and relations.
The organisation of the forces engaged and the constraining
rules according to which this organisation worked,
were of the nature of personal relations, and the
impersonal factors in the case were taken for granted.
Politics and war were a field for personal valor,
force and cunning, in practical effect a field for
personal force and fraud. Industry was a field
in which the routine of life, and its outcome, turned
on “the skill, dexterity and judgment of the
individual workman,” in the words of Adam Smith.
The feudal age passed, being done
to death by handicraft industry, commercial traffic,
gunpowder, and the state-making politicians. But
the political States of the statemakers, the dynastic
States as they may well be called, continued the conduct
of political life on the personal plane of rivalry
and jealousy between dynasties and between their States;
and in spite of gunpowder and the new military engineering,
warfare continued also to be, in the main and characteristically,
a field in which man-power and personal qualities
decided the outcome, by virtue of personal “skill,
dexterity and judgment.” Meantime industry
and its technology by insensible degrees underwent
a change in the direction of impersonalisation, particularly
in those countries in which state-making and its warlike
enterprise had ceased, or were ceasing, to be the
chief interests and the controlling preconception of
the people.
The logic of the new, mechanical industry
which has supplanted handicraft in these countries,
is a mechanistic logic, which proceeds in terms of
matter-of-fact strains, masses, velocities, and the
like, instead of the “skill, dexterity and judgment”
of personal agents. The new industry does not
dispense with the personal agencies, nor can it even
be said to minimise the need of skill, dexterity and
judgment in the personal agents employed, but it does
take them and their attributes for granted as in some
sort a foregone premise to its main argument.
The logic of the handicraft system took the impersonal
agencies for granted; the machine industry takes the
skill, dexterity and judgment of the workmen for granted.
The processes of thought, and therefore the consistent
habitual discipline, of the former ran in terms of
the personal agents engaged, and of the personal relations
of discretion, control and subordination necessary
to the work; whereas the mechanistic logic of the
modern technology, more and more consistently, runs
in terms of the impersonal forces engaged, and inculcates
an habitual predilection for matter-of-fact statement,
and an habitual preconception that the findings of
material science alone are conclusive.
In those nations that have made up
the advance guard of Western civilisation in its movement
out of feudalism, the disintegrating effect of this
matter-of-fact animus inculcated by the later state
of the industrial arts has apparently acted effectively,
in some degree, to discredit those preconceptions
of personal discrimination on which dynastic rule
is founded. But in no case has the discipline
of this mechanistic technology yet wrought its perfect
work or come to a definitive conclusion. Meantime
war and politics have on the whole continued on the
ancient plane; it may perhaps be fair to say that
politics has so continued because warlike enterprise
has continued still to be a matter of such personal
forces as skill, dexterity and judgment, valor and
cunning, personal force and fraud. Latterly, gradually,
but increasingly, the technology of war, too, has
been shifting to the mechanistic plane; until in the
latest phases of it, somewhere about the turn of the
century, it is evident that the logic of warfare too
has come to be the same mechanistic logic that makes
the modern state of the industrial arts.
What, if anything, is due by consequence
to overtake the political strategy and the political
preconceptions of the new century, is a question that
will obtrude itself, though with scant hope of finding
a ready answer. It may even seem a rash, as well
as an ungraceful, undertaking to inquire into the
possible manner and degree of prospective decay to
which the received political ideals and virtues would
appear to be exposed by consequence of this derangement
of the ancient discipline to which men have been subjected.
So much, however, would seem evident, that the received
virtues and ideals of patriotic animosity and national
jealousy can best be guarded against untimely decay
by resolutely holding to the formal observance of all
outworn punctilios of national integrity and discrimination,
in spite of their increasing disserviceability, as
would be done, e.g., or at least sought to be
done, in the installation of a league of neutral nations
to keep the peace and at the same time to safeguard
those “national interests” whose only
use is to divide these nations and keep them in a
state of mutual envy and distrust.
Those peoples who are subject to the
constraining governance of this modern state of the
industrial arts, as all modern peoples are in much
the same measure in which they are “modern,”
are, therefore, exposed to a workday discipline running
at cross purposes with the received law and order
as it takes effect in national affairs; and to this
is to be added that, with warlike enterprise also
shifted to this same mechanistic-technological ground,
war can no longer be counted on so confidently as
before to correct all the consequent drift away from
the ancient landmarks of dynastic, pseudo-dynastic,
and national enterprise in dominion.
As has been noted above, modern warfare
not only makes use of, and indeed depends on, the
modern industrial technology at every turn of the
operations in the field, but it draws on the ordinary
industrial resources of the countries at war in a
degree and with an urgency never equalled. No
nation can hope to make a stand in modern warfare,
much less to make headway in warlike enterprise, without
the most thoroughgoing exploitation of the modern
industrial arts. Which signifies for the purpose
in hand that any Power that harbors an imperial ambition
must take measures to let its underlying population
acquire the ways and means of the modern machine industry,
without reservation; which in turn signifies that
popular education must be taken care of to such an
extent as may be serviceable in this manner of industry
and in the manner of life which this industrial system
necessarily imposes; which signifies, of course, that
only the thoroughly trained and thoroughly educated
nations have a chance of holding their place as formidable
Powers in this latterday phase of civilisation.
What is needed is the training and education that go
to make proficiency in the modern fashion of technology
and in those material sciences that conduce to technological
proficiency of this modern order. It is a matter
of course that in these premises any appreciable illiteracy
is an intolerable handicap. So is also any training
which discourages habitual self-reliance and initiative,
or which acts as a check on skepticism; for the skeptical
frame of mind is a necessary part of the intellectual
equipment that makes for advance, invention and understanding
in the field of technological proficiency.
But these requirements, imperatively
necessary as a condition of warlike success, are at
cross purposes with that unquestioning respect of
persons and that spirit of abnegation that alone can
hold a people to the political institutions of the
old order and make them a willing instrument in the
hands of the dynastic statesmen. The dynastic
State is apparently caught in a dilemma. The
necessary preparation for warlike enterprise on the
modern plan can apparently be counted on, in the long
run, to disintegrate the foundations of the dynastic
State. But it is only in the long run that this
effect can be counted on; and it is perhaps not securely
to be counted on even in a moderately long run of
things as they have run hitherto, if due precautions
are taken by the interested statesmen, as
would seem to be indicated by the successful conservation
of archaic traits in the German peoples during the
past half century under the archaising rule of the
Hohenzollern. It is a matter of habituation,
which takes time, and which can at the same time be
neutralised in some degree by indoctrination.
Still, when all is told, it will probably
have to be conceded that, e.g., such a nation
as Russia will fall under this rule of inherent disability
imposed by the necessary use of the modern industrial
arts. Without a fairly full and free command
of these modern industrial methods on the part of
the Russian people, together with the virtual disappearance
of illiteracy, and with the facile and far-reaching
system of communication which it all involves, the
Russian Imperial establishment would not be a formidable
power or a serious menace to the pacific nations;
and it is not easy to imagine how the Imperial establishment
could retain its hold and its character under the
conditions indicated.
The case of Japan, taken by itself,
rests on somewhat similar lines as these others.
In time, and in this case the time-allowance should
presumably not be anything very large, the Japanese
people are likely to get an adequate command of the
modern technology; which would, here as elsewhere,
involve the virtual disappearance of the present high
illiteracy, and the loss, in some passable measure,
of the current superstitiously crass nationalism of
that people. There are indications that something
of that kind, and of quite disquieting dimensions,
is already under way; though with no indication that
any consequent disintegrating habits of thought have
yet invaded the sacred close of Japanese patriotic
devotion.
Again, it is a question of time and
habituation. With time and habituation the emperor
may insensibly cease to be of divine pedigree, and
the syndicate of statesmen who are doing business under
his signature may consequently find their measures
of Imperial expansion questioned by the people who
pay the bills. But so long as the Imperial syndicate
enjoy their present immunity from outside obstruction,
and can accordingly carry on an uninterrupted campaign
of cumulative predation in Korea, China and Manchuria,
the patriotic infatuation is less likely to fall off,
and by so much the decay of Japanese loyalty will be
retarded. Yet, even if allowed anything that may
seem at all probable in the way of a free hand for
aggression against their hapless neighbours, the skepticism
and insubordination to personal rule that seems inseparable
in the long run from addiction to the modern industrial
arts should be expected presently to overtake the
Japanese spirit of loyal servitude. And the opportunity
of Imperial Japan lies in the interval. So also
does the menace of Imperial Japan as a presumptive
disturber of the peace at large.
At the cost of some unavoidable tedium,
the argument as regards these and similar instances
may be summarised. It appears, in the (possibly
doubtful) light of the history of democratic institutions
and of modern technology hitherto, as also from the
logical character of this technology and its underlying
material sciences, that consistent addiction to the
peculiar habits of thought involved in its carrying
on will presently induce a decay of those preconceptions
in which dynastic government and national ambitions
have their ground. Continued addiction to this
modern scheme of industrial life should in time eventuate
in a decay of militant nationalism, with a consequent
lapse of warlike enterprise. At the same time,
popular proficiency in the modern industrial arts,
with all that that implies in the way of intelligence
and information, is indispensable as a means to any
successful warlike enterprise on the modern plan.
The menace of warlike aggression from such dynastic
States, e.g., as Imperial Germany and Imperial
Japan is due to their having acquired a competent
use of this modern technology, while they have not
yet had time to lose that spirit of dynastic loyalty
which they have carried over from an archaic order
of things, out of which they have emerged at a very
appreciably later period (last half of the nineteenth
century) than those democratic peoples whose peace
they now menace. As has been said, they have
taken over this modern state of the industrial arts
without having yet come in for the defects of its
qualities. This modern technology, with its underlying
material sciences, is a novel factor in the history
of human culture, in that addiction to its use conduces
to the decay of militant patriotism, at the same time
that its employment so greatly enhances the warlike
efficiency of even a pacific people, at need, that
they can not be seriously molested by any other peoples,
however valorous and numerous, who have not a competent
use of this technology. A peace at large among
the civilised nations, by loss of the militant temper
through addiction to this manner of arts of peace,
therefore, carries no risk of interruption by an inroad
of warlike barbarians, always provided that
those existing archaic peoples who might pass muster
as barbarians are brought into line with the pacific
nations on a footing of peace and equality. The
disparity in point of outlook as between the resulting
peace at large by neglect of bootless animosities,
on the one hand, and those historic instances of a
peaceable civilisation that have been overwhelmed
by warlike barbarian invasions, on the other hand,
should be evident.
It is always possible, indeed it would
scarcely be surprising to find, that the projected
league of neutrals or of nations bent on peace can
not be brought to realisation at this juncture; perhaps
not for a long time yet. But it should at the
same time seem reasonable to expect that the drift
toward a peaceable settlement of national discrepancies
such as has been visible in history for some appreciable
time past will, in the absence of unforeseen hindrances,
work out to some such effect in the course of further
experience under modern conditions. And whether
the projected peace compact at its inception takes
one form or another, provided it succeeds in its main
purpose, the long-term drift of things under its rule
should logically set toward some ulterior settlement
of the general character of what has here been spoken
of as a peace by neglect or by neutralisation of discrepancies.
It should do so, in the absence of
unforeseen contingencies; more particularly if there
were no effectual factor of dissension included in
the fabric of institutions within the nation.
But there should also, e.g., be no difficulty
in assenting to the forecast that when and if national
peace and security are achieved and settled beyond
recall, the discrepancy in fact between those who
own the country’s wealth and those who do not
is presently due to come to an issue. Any attempt
to forecast the form which this issue is to take,
or the manner, incidents, adjuncts and sequelae of
its determination, would be a bolder and a more ambiguous,
undertaking. Hitherto attempts to bring this question
to an issue have run aground on the real or fancied
jeopardy to paramount national interests. How,
if at all, this issue might affect national interests
and international relations, would obviously depend
in the first instance on the state of the given national
establishment and the character of the international
engagements entered into in the formation of this
projected pacific league. It is always conceivable
that the transactions involving so ubiquitous an issue
might come to take on an international character and
that they might touch the actual or fanciful interests
of these diverse nations with such divergent effect
as to bring on a rupture of the common understanding
between them and of the peace-compact in which the
common understanding is embodied.
In the beginning, that is to say in
the beginnings out of which this modern era of the
Western civilisation has arisen, with its scheme of
law and custom, there grew into the scheme of law and
custom, by settled usage, a right of ownership and
of contract in disposal of ownership, which
may or may not have been a salutary institutional
arrangement on the whole, under the circumstances of
the early days. With the later growth of handicraft
and the petty trade in Western Europe this right of
ownership and contract came to be insisted on, standardised
under legal specifications, and secured against molestation
by the governmental interests; more particularly and
scrupulously among those peoples that have taken the
lead in working out that system of free or popular
institutions that marks the modern civilised nations.
So it has come to be embodied in the common law of
the modern world as an inviolable natural right.
It has all the prescriptive force of legally authenticated
immemorial custom.
Under the system of handicraft and
petty trade this right of property and free contract
served the interest of the common man, at least in
much of its incidence, and acted in its degree to shelter
industrious and economical persons from hardship and
indignity at the hands of their betters. There
seems reason to believe, as is commonly believed, that
so long as that relatively direct and simple scheme
of industry and trade lasted, the right of ownership
and contract was a salutary custom, in its bearing
on the fortunes of the common man. It appears
also, on the whole, to have been favorable to the
fuller development of the handicraft technology, as
well as to its eventual outgrowth into the new line
of technological expedients and contrivances that presently
gave rise to the machine industry and the large-scale
business enterprise.
The standard theories of economic
science have assumed the rights of property and contract
as axiomatic premises and ultimate terms of analysis;
and their theories are commonly drawn in such a form
as would fit the circumstances of the handicraft industry
and the petty trade, and such as can be extended to
any other economic situation by shrewd interpretation.
These theories, as they run from Adam Smith down through
the nineteenth century and later, appear tenable, on
the whole, when taken to apply to the economic situation
of that earlier time, in virtually all that they have
to say on questions of wages, capital, savings, and
the economy and efficiency of management and production
by the methods of private enterprise resting on these
rights of ownership and contract and governed by the
pursuit of private gain. It is when these standard
theories are sought to be applied to the later situation,
which has outgrown the conditions of handicraft, that
they appear nugatory or meretricious. The “competitive
system” which these standard theories assume
as a necessary condition of their own validity, and
about which they are designed to form a defensive hedge,
would, under those earlier conditions of small-scale
enterprise and personal contact, appear to have been
both a passably valid assumption as a premise and a
passably expedient scheme of economic relations and
traffic. At that period of its life-history it
can not be said consistently to have worked hardship
to the common man; rather the reverse. And the
common man in that time appears to have had no misgivings
about the excellence of the scheme or of that article
of Natural Rights that underlies it.
This complexion of things, as touches
the effectual bearing of the institution of property
and the ancient customary rights of ownership, has
changed substantially since the time of Adam Smith.
The “competitive system,” which he looked
to as the economic working-out of that “simple
and obvious system of natural liberty” that always
engaged his best affections, has in great measure
ceased to operate as a routine of natural liberty,
in fact; particularly in so far as touches the fortunes
of the common man, the impecunious mass of the people.
De jure, of course, the competitive system
and its inviolable rights of ownership are a citadel
of Natural Liberty; but de facto the common
man is now, and has for some time been, feeling the
pinch of it. It is law, and doubtless it is good
law, grounded in immemorial usage and authenticated
with statute and precedent. But circumstances
have so changed that this good old plan has in a degree
become archaic, perhaps unprofitable, or even mischievous,
on the whole, and especially as touches the conditions
of life for the common man. At least, so the common
man in these modern democratic and commercial countries
is beginning to apprehend the matter.
Some slight and summary characterisation
of these changing circumstances that have affected
the incidence of the rights of property during modern
times may, therefore, not be out of place; with a view
to seeing how far and why these rights may be due
to come under advisement and possible revision, in
case a state of settled peace should leave men’s
attention free to turn to these internal, as contrasted
with national interests.
Under that order of handicraft and
petty trade that led to the standardisation of these
rights of ownership in the accentuated form which
belongs to them in modern law and custom, the common
man had a practicable chance of free initiative and
self-direction in his choice and pursuit of an occupation
and a livelihood, in so far as rights of ownership
bore on his case. At that period the workman was
the main factor in industry and, in the main and characteristically,
the question of his employment was a question of what
he would do. The material equipment of industry the
“plant,” as it has come to be called was
subject of ownership, then as now; but it was then
a secondary factor and, notoriously, subsidiary to
the immaterial equipment of skill, dexterity and judgment
embodied in the person of the craftsman. The body
of information, or general knowledge, requisite to
a workmanlike proficiency as handicraftsman was sufficiently
slight and simple to fall within the ordinary reach
of the working class, without special schooling; and
the material equipment necessary to the work, in the
way of tools and appliances, was also slight enough,
ordinarily, to bring it within the reach of the common
man. The stress fell on the acquirement of that
special personal skill, dexterity and judgment that
would constitute the workman a master of his craft.
Given a reasonable measure of pertinacity, the common
man would be able to compass the material equipment
needful to the pursuit of his craft, and so could make
his way to a livelihood; and the inviolable right
of ownership would then serve to secure him the product
of his own industry, in provision for his own old-age
and for a fair start in behalf of his children.
At least in the popular conception, and presumably
in some degree also in fact, the right of property
so served as a guarantee of personal liberty and a
basis of equality. And so its apologists still
look on the institution.
In a very appreciable degree this
complexion of things and of popular conceptions has
changed since then; although, as would be expected,
the change in popular conceptions has not kept pace
with the changing circumstances. In all the characteristic
and controlling lines of industry the modern machine
technology calls for a very considerable material
equipment; so large an equipment, indeed, that this
plant, as it is called, always represents a formidable
amount of invested wealth; and also so large that
it will, typically, employ a considerable number of
workmen per unit of plant. On the transition to
the machine technology the plant became the unit of
operation, instead of the workman, as had previously
been the case; and with the further development of
this modern technology, during the past hundred and
fifty years or so, the unit of operation and control
has increasingly come to be not the individual or
isolated plant but rather an articulated group of
such plants working together as a balanced system and
keeping pace in common, under a collective business
management; and coincidently the individual workman
has been falling into the position of an auxiliary
factor, nearly into that of an article of supply, to
be charged up as an item of operating expenses.
Under this later and current system, discretion and
initiative vest not in the workman but in the owners
of the plant, if anywhere. So that at this point
the right of ownership has ceased to be, in fact,
a guarantee of personal liberty to the common man,
and has come to be, or is coming to be, a guarantee
of dependence. All of which engenders a feeling
of unrest and insecurity, such as to instill a doubt
in the mind of the common man as to the continued
expediency of this arrangement and of the prescriptive
rights of property on which the arrangement rests.
There is also an insidious suggestion,
carrying a sinister note of discredit, that comes
in from ethnological science at this point; which
is adapted still further to derange the common man’s
faith in this received institution of ownership and
its control of the material equipment of industry.
To students interested in human culture it is a matter
of course that this material equipment is a means of
utilising the state of the industrial arts; that it
is useful in industry and profitable to its owners
only because and in so far as it is a creation of
the current technological knowledge and enables its
owner to appropriate the usufruct of the current industrial
arts. It is likewise a matter of course that
this technological knowledge, that so enables the
material equipment to serve the purposes of production
and of private gain, is a free gift of the community
at large to the owners of industrial plant; and, under
latterday conditions, to them exclusively. The
state of the industrial arts is a joint heritage of
the community at large, but where, as in the modern
countries, the work to be done by this technology
requires a large material equipment, the usufruct of
this joint heritage passes, in effect, into the hands
of the owners of this large material equipment.
These owners have, ordinarily, contributed
nothing to the technology, the state of the industrial
arts, from which their control of the material equipment
of industry enables them to derive a gain. Indeed,
no class or condition of men in the modern community with
the possible exception of politicians and the clergy can
conceivably contribute less to the community’s
store of technological knowledge than the large owners
of invested wealth. By one of those singular inversions
due to production being managed for private gain,
it happens that these investors are not only not given
to the increase and diffusion of technological knowledge,
but they have a well-advised interest in retarding
or defeating improvements in the industrial arts in
detail. Improvements, innovations that heighten
productive efficiency in the general line of production
in which a given investment is placed, are commonly
to be counted on to bring “obsolescence by supersession”
to the plant already engaged in that line; and therefore
to bring a decline in its income-yielding capacity,
and so in its capital or investment value.
Invested capital yields income because
it enjoys the usufruct of the community’s technological
knowledge; it has an effectual monopoly of this usufruct
because this machine technology requires large material
appliances with which to do its work; the interest
of the owners of established industrial plant will
not tolerate innovations designed to supersede these
appliances. The bearing of ownership on industry
and on the fortunes of the common man is accordingly,
in the main, the bearing which it has by virtue of
its monopoly control of the industrial arts, and its
consequent control of the conditions of employment
and of the supply of vendible products. It takes
effect chiefly by inhibition and privation; stoppage
of production in case it brings no suitable profit
to the investor, refusal of employment and of a livelihood
to the workmen in case their product does not command
a profitable price in the market.
The expediency of so having the nation’s
industry managed on a footing of private ownership
in the pursuit of private gain, by persons who can
show no equitable personal claim to even the most modest
livelihood, and whose habitual method of controlling
industry is sabotage refusal to let production
go on except it affords them an unearned income the
expediency of all this is coming to be doubted by those
who have to pay the cost of it. And it does not
go far to lessen their doubts to find that the cost
which they pay is commonly turned to no more urgent
or useful purpose than a conspicuously wasteful consumption
of superfluities by the captains of sabotage and their
domestic establishments.
This may not seem a veracious and
adequate account of these matters; it may, in effect,
fall short of the formulation: The truth, the
whole truth, and nothing but the truth; nor does the
question here turn on its adequacy as a statement
of fact. Without prejudice to the question of
its veracity and adequacy, it is believed to be such
an account of these matters as will increasingly come
easy and seem convincing to the common man who, in
an ever increasing degree, finds himself pinched with
privation and insecurity by a run of facts which will
consistently bear this construction, and who perforce
sees these facts from the prejudiced standpoint of
a loser. To such a one, there is reason to believe,
the view so outlined will seem all the more convincing
the more attentively the pertinent facts and their
bearing on his fortunes are considered. How far
the contrary prejudice of those whose interest or training
inclines them the other way may lead them to a different
construction of these pertinent facts, does not concern
the present argument; which has to do with this run
of facts only as they bear on the prospective frame
of mind of that unblest mass of the population who
will have opportunity to present their proposals when
peace at large shall have put national interests out
of their preferential place in men’s regard.
At the risk of what may seem an excessively
wide digression, there is something further to be
said of the capitalistic sabotage spoken of above.
The word has by usage come to have an altogether ungraceful
air of disapproval. Yet it signifies nothing
more vicious than a deliberate obstruction or retardation
of industry, usually by legitimate means, for the
sake of some personal or partisan advantage. This
morally colorless meaning is all that is intended
in its use here. It is extremely common in all
industry that is designed to supply merchantable goods
for the market. It is, in fact, the most ordinary
and ubiquitous of all expedients in business enterprise
that has to do with supplying the market, being always
present in the businessman’s necessary calculations;
being not only a usual and convenient recourse but
quite indispensable as an habitual measure of business
sagacity. So that no personal blame can attach
to its employment by any given businessman or business
concern. It is only when measures of this nature
are resorted to by employees, to gain some end of
their own, that such conduct becomes (technically)
reprehensible.
Any businesslike management of industry
is carried on for gain, which is to be got only on
condition of meeting the terms of the market.
The price system under which industrial business is
carried on will not tolerate production in excess
of the market demand, or without due regard to the
expenses of production as determined by the market
on the side of the supplies required. Hence any
business concern must adjust its operations, by due
acceleration, retardation or stoppage, to the market
conditions, with a view to what the traffic will bear;
that is to say, with a view to what will yield the
largest obtainable net gain. So long as the price
system rules, that is to say so long as industry is
managed on investment for a profit, there is no escaping
this necessity of adjusting the processes of industry
to the requirements of a remunerative price; and this
adjustment can be taken care of only by well-advised
acceleration or curtailment of the processes of industry;
which answers to the definition of sabotage. Wise
business management, and more particularly what is
spoken of as safe and sane business management, therefore,
reduces itself in the main to a sagacious use of sabotage;
that is to say a sagacious limitation of productive
processes to something less than the productive capacity
of the means in hand.
To anyone who is inclined to see these
matters of usage in the light of their history and
to appraise them as phenomena of habituation, adaptation
and supersession in the sequence of cultural proliferation,
there should be no difficulty in appreciating that
this institution of ownership that makes the core
of the modern institutional structure is a precipitate
of custom, like any other item of use and wont; and
that, like any other article of institutional furniture,
it is subject to the contingencies of supersession
and obsolescence. If prevalent habits of thought,
enforced by the prevalent exigencies of life and livelihood,
come to change in such a way as to make life under
the rule imposed by this institution seem irksome,
or intolerable, to the mass of the population; and
if at the same time things turn in such a way as to
leave no other and more urgent interest or exigency
to take precedence of this one and hinder its being
pushed to an issue; then it should reasonably follow
that contention is due to arise between the unblest
mass on whose life it is a burden and the classes who
live by it. But it is, of course, impossible
to state beforehand what will be the precise line
of cleavage or what form the division between the two
parties in interest will take. Yet it is contained
in the premises that, barring unforeseen contingencies
of a formidable magnitude, such a cleavage is due
to follow as a logical sequel of an enduring peace
at large. And it is also well within the possibilities
of the case that this issue may work into an interruption
or disruption of the peace between the nations.
In this connection it may be called
to mind that the existing governmental establishments
in these pacific nations are, in all cases, in the
hands of the beneficiary, or kept classes, beneficiaries
in the sense in which a distinction to that effect
comes into the premises of the case at this point.
The responsible officials and their chief administrative
officers, so much as may at all reasonably
be called the “Government” or the “Administration,” are
quite invariably and characteristically drawn from
these beneficiary classes; nobles, gentlemen, or business
men, which all comes to the same thing for the purpose
in hand; the point of it all being that the common
man does not come within these precincts and does
not share in these counsels that assume to guide the
destiny of the nations.
Of course, sporadically and ephemerally,
a man out of the impecunious and undistinguished mass
may now and again find his way within the gates; and
more frequently will a professed “Man of the
People” sit in council. But that the rule
holds unbroken and inviolable is sufficiently evident
in the fact that no community will let the emoluments
of office for any of its responsible officials, even
for those of a very scant responsibility, fall to
the level of the habitual livelihood of the undistinguished
populace, or indeed to fall below what is esteemed
to be a seemly income for a gentleman. Should
such an impecunious one be thrown up into a place
of discretion in the government, he will forthwith
cease to be a common man and will be inducted into
the rank of gentleman, so far as that feat
can be achieved by taking thought or by assigning
him an income adequate to a reputably expensive manner
of life. So obvious is the antagonism between
a vulgar station in life and a position of official
trust, that many a “selfmade man” has advisedly
taken recourse to governmental position, often at some
appreciable cost, from no apparent motive other than
its known efficacy as a Levitical corrective for a
humble origin. And in point of fact, neither here
nor there have the underbred majority hitherto learned
to trust one of their own kind with governmental discretion;
which has never yet, in the popular conviction, ceased
to be a perquisite of the gently-bred and the well-to-do.
Let it be presumed that this state
of things will continue without substantial alteration,
so far as regards the complexion of the governmental
establishments of these pacific nations, and with such
allowance for overstatement in the above characterisation
as may seem called for. These governmental establishments
are, by official position and by the character of
their personnel, committed more or less consistently
to the maintenance of the existing law and order.
And should no substantial change overtake them as
an effect of the war experience, the pacific league
under discussion would be entered into by and between
governments of this complexion. Should difficulties
then arise between those who own and those who do
not, in any one of these countries, it would become
a nice question whether the compact to maintain the
peace and national integrity of the several nations
comprised in the league should be held to cover the
case of internal dissensions and possible disorders
partaking of the character of revolt against the established
authorities or against the established provisions
of law. A strike of the scope and character of
the one recently threatened, and narrowly averted,
on the American railroads, e.g., might easily
give rise to disturbances sufficiently formidable to
raise a question of the peace league’s jurisdiction;
particularly if such a disturbance should arise in
a less orderly and less isolated country than the
American republic; so as unavoidably to carry the
effects of the disturbance across the national frontiers
along the lines of industrial and commercial intercourse
and correlation. It is always conceivable that
a national government standing on a somewhat conservative
maintenance of the received law and order might feel
itself bound by its conception of the peace to make
common cause with the keepers of established rights
in neighboring states, particularly if the similar
interests of their own nation were thought to be placed
in jeopardy by the course of events.
Antecedently it seems highly probable
that the received rights of ownership and disposal
of property, particularly of investment, will come
up for advisement and revision so soon as a settled
state of peace is achieved. And there should
seem to be little doubt but this revision would go
toward, or at least aim at the curtailment or abrogation
of these rights; very much after the fashion in which
the analogous vested rights of feudalism and the dynastic
monarchy have been revised and in great part curtailed
or abrogated in the advanced democratic countries.
Not much can confidently be said as to the details
of such a prospective revision of legal rights, but
the analogy of that procedure by which these other
vested rights have been reduced to a manageable disability,
suggests that the method in the present case also would
be by way of curtailment, abrogation and elimination.
Here again, as in analogous movements of disuse and
disestablishment, there would doubtless be much conservative
apprehension as to the procuring of a competent substitute
for the supplanted methods of doing what is no longer
desirable to be done; but here as elsewhere, in a
like conjuncture, the practicable way out would presumably
be found to lie along the line of simple disuse and
disallowance of class prerogative. Taken at its
face value, without unavoidable prejudice out of the
past, this question of a substitute to replace the
current exploitation of the industrial arts for private
gain by capitalistic sabotage is not altogether above
a suspicion of drollery.
Yet it is not to be overlooked that
private enterprise on the basis of private ownership
is the familiar and accepted method of conducting
industrial affairs, and that it has the sanction of
immemorial usage, in the eyes of the common man, and
that it is reenforced with the urgency of life and
death in the apprehension of the kept classes.
It should accordingly be a possible outcome of such
a peace as would put away international dissension,
that the division of classes would come on in a new
form, between those who stand on their ancient rights
of exploitation and mastery, and those who are unwilling
longer to submit. And it is quite within the
possibilities of the case that the division of opinion
on these matters might presently shift back to the
old familiar ground of international hostilities;
undertaken partly to put down civil disturbances in
given countries, partly by the more archaic, or conservative,
peoples to safeguard the institutions of the received
law and order against inroads from the side of the
iconoclastic ones.
In the apprehension of those who are
speaking for peace between the nations and planning
for its realisation, the outlook is that of a return
to, or a continuance of, the state of things before
the great war came on, with peace and national security
added, or with the danger of war eliminated.
Nothing appreciable in the way of consequent innovation,
certainly nothing of a serious character, is contemplated
as being among the necessary consequences of such
a move into peace and security. National integrity
and autonomy are to be preserved on the received lines,
and international division and discrimination is to
be managed as before, and with the accustomed incidents
of punctilio and pecuniary equilibration. Internationally
speaking, there is to dawn an era of diplomacy without
afterthought, whatever that might conceivably mean.
There is much in the present situation
that speaks for such an arrangement, particularly
as an initial phase of the perpetual peace that is
aimed at, whatever excursive variations might befall
presently, in the course of years. The war experience
in the belligerent countries and the alarm that has
disturbed the neutral nations have visibly raised
the pitch of patriotic solidarity in all these countries;
and patriotism greatly favors the conservation of
established use and wont; more particularly is it
favorable to the established powers and policies of
the national government. The patriotic spirit
is not a spirit of innovation. The chances of
survival, and indeed of stabilisation, for the accepted
use and wont and for the traditional distinctions of
class and prescriptive rights, should therefore seem
favorable, at any rate in the first instance.
Presuming, therefore, as the spokesmen
of such a peace-compact are singularly ready to presume,
that the era of peace and good-will which they have
in view is to be of a piece with the most tranquil
decades of the recent past, only more of the same
kind, it becomes a question of immediate interest
to the common man, as well as to all students of human
culture, how the common man is to fare under this regime
of law and order, the mass of the population
whose place it is to do what is to be done, and thereby
to carry forward the civilisation of these pacific
nations. It may not be out of place to recall,
by way of parenthesis, that it is here taken for granted
as a matter of course that all governmental establishments
are necessarily conservative in all their dealings
with this heritage of culture, except so far as they
may be reactionary. Their office is the stabilisation
of archaic institutions, the measure of archaism varying
from one to another.
With due stabilisation and with a
sagacious administration of the established scheme
of law and order, the common man should find himself
working under conditions and to results of the familiar
kind; but with the difference that, while legal usage
and legal precedent remain unchanged, the state of
the industrial arts can confidently be expected to
continue its advance in the same general direction
as before, while the population increases after the
familiar fashion, and the investing business community
pursues its accustomed quest of competitive gain and
competitive spending in the familiar spirit and with
cumulatively augmented means. Stabilisation of
the received law and order will not touch these matters;
and for the present it is assumed that these matters
will not derange the received law and order. The
assumption may seem a violent one to the students
of human culture, but it is a simple matter of course
to the statesmen.
To this piping time of peace the nearest
analogues in history would seem to be the Roman peace,
say, of the days of the Antonines, and passably the
British peace of the Victorian era. Changes in
the scheme of law and order supervened in both of
these instances, but the changes were, after all,
neither unconscionably large nor were they of a subversive
nature. The scheme of law and order, indeed,
appears in neither instance to have changed so far
as the altered circumstances would seem to have called
for. To the common man the Roman peace appears
to have been a peace by submission, not widely different
from what the case of China has latterly brought to
the appreciation of students. The Victorian peace,
which can be appreciated more in detail, was of a more
genial character, as regards the fortunes of the common
man. It started from a reasonably low level of
hardship and de facto iniquity, and was occupied
with many prudent endeavours to improve the lot of
the unblest majority; but it is to be admitted that
these prudent endeavours never caught up with the
march of circumstances. Not that these prudent
measures of amelioration were nugatory, but it is
clear that they were not an altogether effectual corrective
of the changes going on; they were, in effect, systematically
so far in arrears as always to leave an uncovered
margin of discontent with current conditions.
It is a fact of history that very appreciable sections
of the populace were approaching an attitude of revolt
against what they considered to be intolerable conditions
when that era closed. Much of what kept them within
bounds, that is to say within legal bounds, was their
continued loyalty to the nation; which was greatly,
and for the purpose needfully, reenforced by a lively
fear of warlike aggression from without. Now,
under the projected pax orbis terrarum all
fear of invasion, it is hopefully believed, will be
removed; and with the disappearance of this fear should
also disappear the drag of national loyalty on the
counsels of the underbred.
If this British peace of the nineteenth
century is to be taken as a significant indication
of what may be looked for under a regime of peace
at large, with due allowance for what is obviously
necessary to be allowed for, then what is held in
promise would appear to be an era of unexampled commercial
prosperity, of investment and business enterprise
on a scale hitherto not experienced. These developments
will bring their necessary consequences affecting
the life of the community, and some of the consequences
it should be possible to foresee. The circumstances
conditioning this prospective era of peace and prosperity
will necessarily differ from the corresponding circumstances
that conditioned the Victorian peace, and many of
these points of difference it is also possible to
forecast in outline with a fair degree of confidence.
It is in the main these economic factors going to condition
the civilisation of the promised future that will have
to be depended on to give the cue to any student interested
in the prospective unfolding of events.
The scheme of law and order governing
all modern nations, both in the conduct of their domestic
affairs and in their national policies, is in its
controlling elements the scheme worked out through
British (and French) experience in the eighteenth
century and earlier, as revised and further accommodated
in the nineteenth century. Other peoples, particularly
the Dutch, have of course had their part in the derivation
and development of this modern scheme of institutional
principles, but it has after all been a minor part;
so that the scheme at large would not differ very
materially, if indeed it should differ sensibly, from
what it is, even if the contribution of these others
had not been had. The backward nations, as e.g.,
Germany, Russia, Spain, etc., have of course
contributed substantially nothing but retardation and
maladjustment to this modern scheme of civil life;
whatever may be due to students resident in those
countries, in the way of scholarly formulation.
This nineteenth century scheme it is proposed to carry
over into the new era; and the responsible spokesmen
of the projected new order appear to contemplate no
provision touching this scheme of law and order, beyond
the keeping of it intact in all substantial respects.
When and in so far as the projected
peace at large takes effect, international interests
will necessarily fall somewhat into the background,
as being no longer a matter of precarious equilibration,
with heavy penalties in the balance; and diplomacy
will consequently become even more of a make-believe
than today something after the fashion
of a game of bluff played with irredeemable “chips.”
Commercial, that is to say business, enterprise will
consequently come in for a more undivided attention
and be carried on under conditions of greater security
and of more comprehensive trade relations. The
population of the pacified world may be expected to
go on increasing somewhat as in the recent past; in
which connection it is to be remarked that not more
than one-half, presumably something less than one-half,
of the available agricultural resources have been
turned to account for the civilised world hitherto.
The state of the industrial arts, including means of
transport and communication, may be expected to develop
farther in the same general direction as before, assuming
always that peace conditions continue to hold.
Popular intelligence, as it is called, more
properly popular education, may be expected
to suffer a further advance; necessarily so, since
it is a necessary condition of any effectual advance
in the industrial arts, every appreciable
technological advance presumes, as a requisite to
its working-out in industry, an augmented state of
information and of logical facility in the workmen
under whose hands it is to take effect.
Of the prescriptive rights carried
over into the new era, under the received law and
order, the rights of ownership alone may be expected
to have any material significance for the routine
of workday life; the other personal rights that once
seemed urgent will for everyday purposes have passed
into a state of half-forgotten matter-of-course.
As now, but in an accentuated degree, the rights of
ownership will, in effect, coincide and coalesce with
the rights of investment and business management.
The market that is to say the rule of the
price-system in all matters of production and livelihood may
be expected to gain in volume and inclusiveness; so
that virtually all matters of industry and livelihood
will turn on questions of market price, even beyond
the degree in which that proposition holds today.
The progressive extension and consolidation of investments,
corporate solidarity, and business management may
be expected to go forward on the accustomed lines,
as illustrated by the course of things during the
past few decades. Market conditions should accordingly,
in a progressively increased degree, fall under the
legitimate discretionary control of businessmen, or
syndicates of businessmen, who have the disposal of
large blocks of invested wealth, “big
business,” as it is called, should reasonably
be expected to grow bigger and to exercise an increasingly
more unhampered control of market conditions, including
the money market and the labor market.
With such improvements in the industrial
arts as may fairly be expected to come forward, and
with the possible enhancement of industrial efficiency
which should follow from a larger scale of organisation,
a wider reach of transport and communication, and
an increased population, with these increasing
advantages on the side of productive industry, the
per-capita product as well as the total product should
be increased in a notable degree, and the conditions
of life should possibly become notably easier and
more attractive, or at least more conducive to efficiency
and personal comfort, for all concerned. Such
would be the first and unguarded inference to be drawn
from the premises of the case as they offer themselves
in the large; and something of that kind is apparently
what floats before the prophetic vision of the advocates
of a league of nations for the maintenance of peace
at large. These premises, and the inferences
so drawn from them, may be further fortified and amplified
in the same sense on considering that certain very
material economies also become practicable, and should
take effect “in the absence of disturbing causes,”
on the establishment of such a peace at large.
It will of course occur to all thoughtful persons that
armaments must be reduced, perhaps to a minimum, and
that the cost of these things, in point of expenditures
as well as of man-power spent in the service, would
consequently fall off in a corresponding measure.
So also, as slight further reflection will show, would
the cost of the civil service presumably fall off
very appreciably; more particularly the cost of this
service per unit of service rendered. Some such
climax of felicities might be looked for by hopeful
persons, in the absence of disturbing causes.
Under the new dispensation the standard
of living, that is to say the standard of expenditure,
would reasonably be expected to advance in a very
appreciable degree, at least among the wealthy and
well-to-do; and by pressure of imitative necessity
a like effect would doubtless also be had among the
undistinguished mass. It is not a question of
the standard of living considered as a matter of the
subsistence minimum, or even a standard of habitually
prevalent creature comfort, particularly not among
the wealthy and well-to-do. These latter classes
have long since left all question of material comfort
behind in their accepted standards of living and in
the continued advance of these standards. For
these classes who are often spoken of euphemistically
as being “in easy circumstances,” it is
altogether a question of a standard of reputable expenditure,
to be observed on pain of lost self-respect and of
lost reputation at large. As has been remarked
in an earlier passage, wants of this kind are indefinitely
extensible. So that some doubt may well be entertained
as to whether the higher productive efficiency spoken
of will necessarily make the way of life easier, in
view of this need of a higher standard of expenditure,
even when due account is taken of the many economies
which the new dispensation is expected to make practicable.
One of the effects to be looked for
would apparently be an increased pressure on the part
of aspiring men to get into some line of business
enterprise; since it is only in business, as contrasted
with the industrial occupations, that anyone can hope
to find the relatively large income required for such
an expensive manner of life as will bring any degree
of content to aspirants for pecuniary good repute.
So it should follow that the number of businessmen
and business concerns would increase up to the limit
of what the traffic could support, and that the competition
between these rival, and in a sense over-numerous,
concerns would push the costs of competition to the
like limit. In this respect the situation would
be of much the same character as what it now is, with
the difference that the limit of competitive expenditures
would be rather higher than at present, to answer
to the greater available margin of product that could
be devoted to this use; and that the competing concerns
would be somewhat more numerous, or at least that the
aggregate expenditure on competitive enterprise would
be somewhat larger; as, e.g., costs of advertising,
salesmanship, strategic litigation, procuration of
legislative and municipal grants and connivance, and
the like.
It is always conceivable, though it
may scarcely seem probable, that these incidents of
increased pressure of competition in business traffic
might eventually take up all the slack, and leave no
net margin of product over what is available under
the less favorable conditions of industry that prevail
today; more particularly when this increased competition
for business gains is backed by an increased pressure
of competitive spending for purposes of a reputable
appearance. All this applies in retail trade
and in such lines of industry and public service as
partakes of the nature of retail trade, in the respect
that salesmanship and the costs of salesmanship enter
into their case in an appreciable measure; this is
an extensive field, it is true, and incontinently
growing more extensive with the later changes in the
customary methods of marketing products; but it is
by no means anything like the whole domain of industrial
business, and by no means a field in which business
is carried on without interference of a higher control
from outside its own immediate limits.
All this generously large and highly
expensive and profitable field of trade and of trade-like
industry, in which the businessmen in charge deal
somewhat directly with a large body of customers, is
always subject to limitations imposed by the condition
of the market; and the condition of the market is
in part not under the control of these businessmen,
but is also in part controlled by large concerns in
the background; which in their turn are after all
also not precisely free agents; in fact not much more
so than their cousins in the retail trade, being confined
in all their motions by the constraint of the price-system
that dominates the whole and gathers them all in its
impersonal and inexorable net.
There is a colloquial saying among
businessmen, that they are not doing business for
their health; which being interpreted means that they
are doing business for a price. It is out of
a discrepancy in price, between purchase and sale,
or between transactions which come to the same result
as purchase and sale, that the gains of business are
drawn; and it is in terms of price that these gains
are rated, amassed and funded. It is necessary,
for a business concern to achieve a favorable balance
in terms of price; and the larger the balance in terms
of price the more successful the enterprise.
Such a balance can not be achieved except by due regard
to the conditions of the market, to the effect that
dealings must not go on beyond what will yield a favorable
balance in terms of price between income and outgo.
As has already been remarked above, the prescriptive
and indispensable recourse in all this conduct of business
is sabotage, limitation of supply to bring a remunerative
price result.
The new dispensation offers two new
factors bearing on this businesslike need of a sagacious
sabotage, or rather it brings a change of coefficients
in two factors already familiar in business management:
a greater need, for gainful business, of resorting
to such limitation of traffic; and a greater facility
of ways and means for enforcing the needed restriction.
So, it is confidently to be expected that in the prospective
piping time of peace the advance in the industrial
arts will continue at an accelerated rate; which may
confidently be expected to affect the practicable
increased production of merchantable goods; from which
it follows that it will act to depress the prices of
these goods; from which it follows that if a profitable
business is to be done in the conduct of productive
industry a greater degree of continence than before
will have to be exercised in order not to let prices
fall to an unprofitable figure; that is to say, the
permissible output must be held short of the productive
capacity of such industry by a wider margin than before.
On the other hand, it is well known out of the experience
of the past few decades that a larger coalition of
invested capital, controlling a larger proportion
of the output, can more effectually limit the supply
to a salutary maximum, such as will afford reasonable
profits. And with the new dispensation affording
a freer scope for business enterprise on conditions
of greater security, larger coalitions than before
are due to come into bearing. So that the means
will be at hand competently to meet this more urgent
need of a stricter limitation of the output, in spite
of any increased productive capacity conferred on
the industrial community by any conceivable advance
in the industrial arts. The outcome to be looked
for should apparently be such an effectual recourse
to capitalistic sabotage as will neutralise any added
advantage that might otherwise accrue to the community
from its continued improvements in technology.
In spite of this singularly untoward
conjuncture of circumstances to be looked for, there
need be no serious apprehension that capitalistic
sabotage, with a view to maintaining prices and the
rate of profits, will go all the way, to the result
indicated, at least not on the grounds so indicated
alone. There is in the modern development of
technology, and confidently to be counted on, a continued
flow of new contrivances and expedients designed to
supersede the old; and these are in fact successful,
in greater or less measure, in finding their way into
profitable use, on such terms as to displace older
appliances, underbid them in the market, and render
them obsolete or subject to recapitalisation on a
lowered earning-capacity. So far as this unremitting
flow of innovations has its effect, that is to say
so far as it can not be hindered from having an effect,
it acts to lower the effectual cost of products to
the consumer. This effect is but a partial and
somewhat uncertain one, but it is always to be counted
in as a persistent factor, of uncertain magnitude,
that will affect the results in the long run.
As has just been spoken of above,
large coalitions of invested wealth are more
competent to maintain, or if need be to advance, prices
than smaller coalitions acting in severalty,
or even when acting in collusion. This state
of the case has been well illustrated by the very
successful conduct of such large business organisations
during the past few decades; successful, that is,
in earning large returns on the investments engaged.
Under the new dispensation, as has already been remarked,
coalitions should reasonably be expected to grow
to a larger size and achieve a greater efficiency
for the same purpose.
The large gains of the large corporate
coalitions are commonly ascribed by their promoters,
and by sympathetic theoreticians of the ancient line,
to economies of production made practicable by a larger
scale of production; an explanation which is disingenuous
only so far as it needs be. What is more visibly
true on looking into the workings of these coalitions
in detail is that they are enabled to maintain prices
at a profitable, indeed at a strikingly profitable,
level by such a control of the output as would be
called sabotage if it were put in practice by interested
workmen with a view to maintain wages. The effects
of this sagacious sabotage become visible in the large
earnings of these investments and the large gains
which, now and again, accrue to their managers.
Large fortunes commonly are of this derivation.
In cases where no recapitalisation
has been effected for a considerable series of years
the yearly earnings of such businesslike coalitions
have been known to approach fifty percent on the capitalised
value. Commonly, however, when earnings rise
to a striking figure, the business will be recapitalised
on the basis of its earning-capacity, by issue of a
stock dividend, by reincorporation in a new combination
with an increased capitalisation, and the like.
Such augmentation of capital not unusually has been
spoken of by theoretical writers and publicists as
an increase of the community’s wealth, due to
savings; an analysis of any given case is likely to
show that its increased capital value represents an
increasingly profitable procedure for securing a high
price above cost, by stopping the available output
short of the productive capacity of the industries
involved. Loosely speaking, and within the limits
of what the traffic will bear, the gains in such a
case are proportioned to the deficiency by which the
production or supply under control falls short of
productive capacity. So that the capitalisation
in the case comes to bear a rough proportion to the
material loss which this organisation of sabotage
is enabled to inflict on the community at large; and
instead of its being a capitalisation of serviceable
means of production it may, now and again, come to
little else than a capitalisation of chartered sabotage.
Under the new dispensation of peace
and security at large this manner of capitalisation
and business enterprise might reasonably be expected
to gain something in scope and security of operation.
Indeed, there are few things within the range of human
interest on which an opinion may more confidently
be formed beforehand. If the rights of property,
in their extent and amplitude, are maintained intact
as they are before the law today, the hold which business
enterprise on the large scale now has on the affairs
and fortunes of the community at large is bound to
grow firmer and to be used more unreservedly for private
advantage under the new conditions contemplated.
The logical result should be an accelerated
rate of accumulation of the country’s wealth
in the hands of a relatively very small class of wealthy
owners, with a relatively inconsiderable semi-dependent
middle class of the well-to-do, and with the mass
of the population even more nearly destitute than
they are today. At the same time it is scarcely
to be avoided that this wholly dependent and impecunious
mass of the population must be given an appreciably
better education than they have today. The argument
will return to the difficulties that are liable to
arise out of this conjuncture of facts, in the way
of discontent and possible disturbance.
Meantime, looking to the promise of
the pacific future in the light of the pacific past,
certain further consequences, particularly consequences
of the economic order, that may reasonably be expected
to follow will also merit attention. The experience
of the Victorian peace is almost as pointed in its
suggestion on this head as if it had been an experiment
made ad hoc; but with the reservation that the
scale of economic life, after all, was small in the
Victorian era, and its pace was slack, compared with
what the twentieth century should have to offer under
suitable conditions of peace and pecuniary security.
In the light of this most instructive modern instance,
there should appear to be in prospect a growth of
well-bred families resting on invested wealth and
so living on unearned incomes; larger incomes and consequently
a more imposingly well-bred body of gentlefolk, sustained
and vouched for by a more munificent expenditure on
superfluities, than the modern world has witnessed
hitherto. Doubtless the resulting growth of gentlemen
and gentlewomen would be as perfect after their kind
as these unexampled opportunities of gentle breeding
might be expected to engender; so that even their
British precursors on the trail of respectability would
fall somewhat into insignificance by comparison, whether
in respect of gentlemanly qualities or in point of
cost per unit.
The moral, and even more particularly
the aesthetic, value of such a line of gentlefolk,
and of the culture which they may be expected to place
on view, this cultural side of the case,
of course, is what one would prefer to dwell on, and
on the spiritual gains that might be expected to accrue
to humanity at large from the steady contemplation
of this meritorious respectability so displayed at
such a cost.
But the prosaic necessity of the argument
turns back to the economic and civil bearing of this
prospective development, this virtual bifurcation
of the pacified nation into a small number of gentlemen
who own the community’s wealth and consume its
net product in the pursuit of gentility, on the one
hand, and an unblest mass of the populace who do the
community’s work on a meager livelihood tapering
down toward the subsistence minimum, on the other
hand. Evidently, this prospective posture of
affairs may seem “fraught with danger to the
common weal,” as a public spirited citizen might
phrase it. Or, as it would be expressed in less
eloquent words, it appears to comprise elements that
should make for a change. At the same time it
should be recalled, and the statement will command
assent on slight reflection, that there is no avoiding
substantially such a posture of affairs under the promised
regime of peace and security, provided only that the
price-system stands over intact, and the current rights
of property continue to be held inviolate. If
the known principles of competitive gain and competitive
spending should need enforcement to that effect by
an illustrative instance, the familiar history of
the Victorian peace is sufficient to quiet all doubts.
Of course, the resulting articulation
of classes in the community will not be expected to
fall into such simple lines of sheer contrast as this
scheme would indicate. The class of gentlefolk,
the legally constituted wasters, as they would be
rated from the economic point of view, can not be
expected personally to take care of so large a consumption
of superfluities as this posture of affairs requires
at their hands. They would, as the Victorian
peace teaches, necessarily have the assistance of
a trained corps of experts in unproductive consumption,
the first and most immediate of whom would be those
whom the genial phrasing of Adam Smith designates
“menial servants.” Beyond these would
come the purveyors of superfluities, properly speaking,
and the large, indeed redundant, class of tradespeople
of high and low degree, dependent in fact
but with an illusion of semi-dependence; and farther
out again the legal and other professional classes
of the order of stewards, whose duty it will be to
administer the sources of income and receive, apportion
and disburse the revenues so devoted to a traceless
extinguishment.
There would, in other words, be something
of a “substantial middle class,” dependent
on the wealthy and on their expenditure of wealth,
but presumably imbued with the Victorian middle-class
illusion that they are of some account in their own
right. Under the due legal forms and sanctions
this, somewhat voluminous, middle-class population
would engage in the traffic which is their perquisite,
and would continue to believe, in some passable fashion,
that they touch the substance of things at something
nearer than the second remove. They would in great
part appear to be people of “independent means,”
and more particularly would they continue in the hope
of so appearing and of some time making good the appearance.
Hence their fancied, and therefore their sentimental,
interest would fall out on the side of the established
law and order; and they would accordingly be an element
of stability in the commonwealth, and would throw
in their weight, and their voice, to safeguard that
private property and that fabric of prices and credit
through which the “income stream” flows
to the owners of preponderant invested wealth.
Judged on the state of the situation
as it runs in our time, and allowing for the heightened
efficiency of large-scale investment and consolidated
management under the prospective conditions of added
pecuniary security, it is to be expected that the middle-class
population with “independent means” should
come in for a somewhat meager livelihood, provided
that they work faithfully at their business of managing
pecuniary traffic to the advantage of their pecuniary
betters, meager, that is to say, when allowance
is made for the conventionally large expenditure on
reputable appearances which is necessarily to be included
in their standard of living. It lies in the nature
of this system of large-scale investment and enterprise
that the (pecuniarily) minor agencies engaged on a
footing of ostensible independence will come in for
only such a share in the aggregate gains of the community
as it is expedient for the greater business interests
to allow them as an incentive to go on with their work
as purveyors of traffic to these greater business
interests.
The current, and still more this prospective,
case of the quasi-self-directing middle class may
fairly be illustrated by the case of the American
farmers, of the past and present. The American
farmer rejoices to be called “The Independent
Farmer.” He once was independent, in a
meager and toil-worn fashion, in the days before the
price-system had brought him and all his works into
the compass of the market; but that was some time
ago. He now works for the market, ordinarily at
something like what is called a “living wage,”
provided he has “independent means” enough
to enable him by steady application to earn a living
wage; and of course, the market being controlled by
the paramount investment interests in the background,
his work, in effect, inures to their benefit; except
so much as it may seem necessary to allow him as incentive
to go on. Also of course, these paramount investment
interests are in turn controlled in all their manoeuvres
by the impersonal exigencies of the price-system,
which permits no vagaries in violation of the rule
that all traffic must show a balance of profit in terms
of price.
The Independent Farmer still continues
to believe that in some occult sense he still is independent
in what he will do and what not; or perhaps rather
that he can by shrewd management retain or regain a
tolerable measure of such independence, after the fashion
of what is held to have been the posture of affairs
in the days before the coming of corporation finance;
or at least he believes that he ought to have, or
to regain or reclaim, some appreciable measure of such
independence; which ought then, by help of the “independent
means” which he still treasures, to procure
him an honest and assured livelihood in return for
an honest year’s work. Latterly he, that
is the common run of the farmers, has been taking
note of the fact that he is, as he apprehends it,
at a disadvantage in the market; and he is now taking
recourse to concerted action for the purpose of what
might be called “rigging the market” to
his own advantage. In this he overlooks the impregnable
position which the party of the second part, the great
investment interests, occupy; in fact, he is counting
without his host. Hitherto he has not been convinced
of his own helplessness. And with a fine fancy
he still imagines that his own interest is on the
side of the propertied and privileged classes; so
that the farmer constituency is the chief pillar of
conservative law and order, particularly in all that
touches the inviolable rights of property and at every
juncture where a division comes on between those who
live by investment and those who live by work.
In pecuniary effect, the ordinary American farmer,
who legally owns a moderate farm of the common sort,
belongs among those who work for a livelihood; such
a livelihood as the investment interests find it worth
while to allow him under the rule of what the traffic
will bear; but in point of sentiment and class consciousness
he clings to a belated stand on the side of those
who draw a profit from his work.
So it is also with the menial servants
and the middle-class people of “independent
means,” who are, however, in a position to see
more clearly their dependence on the owners of predominant
wealth. And such, with a further accentuation
of the anomaly, may reasonably be expected to be the
further run of these relations under the promised regime
of peace and security. The class of well-kept
gentlefolk will scarcely be called on to stand alone,
in case of a division between those who live by investment
and those who live by work; inasmuch as, for the calculable
future, it should seem a reasonable expectation that
this very considerable fringe of dependents and pseudo-independents
will abide by their time-tried principles of right
and honest living, through good days and evil, and
cast in their lot unreservedly with that reputable
body to whom the control of trade and industry by investment
assigns the usufruct of the community’s productive
powers.
Something has already been said of
the prospective breeding of pedigreed gentlefolk under
the projected regime of peace. Pedigree, for the
purpose in hand, is a pecuniary attribute and is, of
course, a product of funded wealth, more or less ancient.
Virtually ancient pedigree can be procured by well-advised
expenditure on the conspicuous amenities; that is
to say pedigree effectually competent as a background
of current gentility. Gentlefolk of such syncopated
pedigree may have to walk circumspectly, of course;
but their being in this manner put on their good behavior
should tend to heighten their effectual serviceability
as gentlefolk, by inducing a single-mindedness of
gentility beyond what can fairly be expected of those
who are already secure in their tenure.
Except conventionally, there is no
hereditary difference between the standard gentlefolk
and, say, their “menial servants,” or the
general population of the farms and the industrial
towns. This is a well-established commonplace
among ethnological students; which has, of course,
nothing to say with respect to the conventionally distinct
lines of descent of the “Best Families.”
These Best Families are nowise distinguishable from
the common run in point of hereditary traits; the
difference that makes the gentleman and the gentlewoman
being wholly a matter of habituation during the individual’s
life-time. It is something of a distasteful necessity
to call attention to this total absence of native
difference between the well-born and the common, but
it is a necessity of the argument in hand, and the
recalling of it may, therefore, be overlooked for
once in a way. There is no harm and no annoyance
intended. The point of it all is that, on the
premises which this state of the case affords, the
body of gentlefolk created by such an accumulation
of invested wealth will have no less of an effectual
cultural value than they would have had if their virtually
ancient pedigree had been actual.
At this point, again, the experience
of the Victorian peace and the functioning of its
gentlefolk come in to indicate what may fairly be
hoped for in this way under this prospective regime
of peace at large. But with the difference that
the scale of things is to be larger, the pace swifter,
and the volume and dispersion of this prospective leisure
class somewhat wider. The work of this leisure
class and there is neither paradox nor
inconsistency in the phrase should be patterned
on the lines worked out by their prototypes of the
Victorian time, but with some appreciable accentuation
in the direction of what chiefly characterised the
leisure class of that era of tranquility. The
characteristic feature to which attention naturally
turns at this suggestion is the tranquility that has
marked that body of gentlefolk and their code of clean
and honest living. Another word than “tranquility”
might be hit upon to designate this characteristic
animus, but any other word that should at all adequately
serve the turn would carry a less felicitous suggestion
of those upper-class virtues that have constituted
the substantial worth of the Victorian gentleman.
The conscious worth of these gentlefolk has been a
beautifully complete achievement. It has been
an achievement of “faith without works,”
of course; but, needless to say, that is as it should
be, also of course. The place of gentlefolk in
the economy of Nature is tracelessly to consume the
community’s net product, and in doing so to set
a standard of decent expenditure for the others emulatively
to work up to as near as may be. It is scarcely
conceivable that this could have been done in a more
unobtrusively efficient manner, or with a more austerely
virtuous conviction of well-doing, than by the gentlefolk
bred of the Victorian peace. So also, in turn,
it is not to be believed that the prospective breed
of gentlefolk derivable from the net product of the
pacific nations under the promised regime of peace
at large will prove in any degree less effective for
the like ends. More will be required of them
in the way of a traceless consumption of superfluities
and an unexampled expensive standard of living.
But this situation that so faces them may be construed
as a larger opportunity, quite as well as a more difficult
task.
A theoretical exposition of the place
and cultural value of a leisure class in modern life
would scarcely be in place here; and it has also been
set out in some detail elsewhere. For the purpose
in hand it may be sufficient to recall that the canons
of taste and the standards of valuation worked out
and inculcated by leisure-class life have in all ages
run, with unbroken consistency, to pecuniary waste
and personal futility. In its economic bearing,
and particularly in its immediate bearing on the material
well-being of the community at large, the leadership
of the leisure class can scarcely be called by a less
derogatory epithet than “untoward.”
But that is not the whole of the case, and the other
side should be heard. The leisure-class life of
tranquility, running detached as it does above the
turmoil out of which the material of their sustenance
is derived, enables a growth of all those virtues
that mark, or make, the gentleman; and that affect
the life of the underlying community throughout, pervasively,
by imitation; leading to a standardisation of the
everyday proprieties on a presumably, higher level
of urbanity and integrity than might be expected to
result in the absence of this prescriptive model.
Integer vitae scelerisque purus,
the gentleman of assured station turns a placid countenance
to all those petty vexations of breadwinning
that touch him not. Serenely and with an impassive
fortitude he faces those common vicissitudes of life
that are impotent to make or mar his material fortunes
and that can neither impair his creature comforts nor
put a slur on his good repute. So that without
afterthought he deals fairly in all everyday conjunctures
of give and take; for they are at the most inconsequential
episodes to him, although the like might spell irremediable
disaster to his impecunious counterfoil among the common
men who have the community’s work to do.
In short, he is a gentleman, in the best acceptation
of the word, unavoidably, by force of circumstance.
As such his example is of invaluable consequence to
the underlying community of common folk, in that it
keeps before their eyes an object lesson in habitual
fortitude and visible integrity such as could scarcely
have been created except under such shelter from those
disturbances that would go to mar habitual fortitude
and integrity. There can be little doubt but
the high example of the Victorian gentlefolk has had
much to do with stabilising the animus of the British
common man on lines of integrity and fair play.
What else and more in the way of habitual preconceptions
he may, by competitive imitation, owe to the same
high source is not immediately in question here.
Recalling once more that the canon
of life whereby folk are gentlefolk sums itself up
in the requirements of pecuniary waste and personal
futility, and that these requirements are indefinitely
extensible, at the same time that the management of
the community’s industry by investment for a
profit enables the owners of invested wealth to divert
to their own use the community’s net product,
wherewith to meet these requirements, it follows that
the community at large which provides this output
of product will be allowed so much as is required by
their necessary standard of living, with
an unstable margin of error in the adjustment.
This margin of error should tend continually to grow
narrower as the businesslike management of industry
grows more efficient with experience; but it will
also continually be disturbed in the contrary sense
by innovations of a technological nature that require
continual readjustment. This margin is probably
not to be got rid of, though it may be expected to
become less considerable under more settled conditions.
It should also not be overlooked that
the standard of living here spoken of as necessarily
to be allowed the working population by no means coincides
with the “physical subsistence minimum,”
from which in fact it always departs by something
appreciable. The necessary standard of living
of the working community is in fact made up of two
distinguishable factors: the subsistence minimum,
and the requirements of decorously wasteful consumption the
“decencies of life.” These decencies
are no less requisite than the physical necessaries,
in point of workday urgency, and their amount is a
matter of use and wont. This composite standard
of living is a practical minimum, below which consumption
will not fall, except by a fluctuating margin of error;
the effect being the same, in point of necessary consumption,
as if it were all of the nature of a physical subsistence
minimum.
Loosely speaking, the arrangement
should leave nothing appreciable over, after the requirements
of genteel waste and of the workday standard of consumption
have been met. From which in turn it should follow
that the rest of what is comprised under the general
caption of “culture” will find a place
only in the interstices of leisure-class expenditure
and only at the hands of aberrant members of the class
of the gently-bred. The working population should
have no effectual margin of time, energy or means
for other pursuits than the day’s work in the
service of the price-system; so that aberrant individuals
in this class, who might by native propensity incline,
e.g., to pursue the sciences or the fine arts,
should have (virtually) no chance to make good.
It would be a virtual suppression of such native gifts
among the common folk, not a definitive and all-inclusive
suppression. The state of the case under the
Victorian peace may, again, be taken in illustration
of the point; although under the presumably more effectual
control to be looked for in the pacific future the
margin might reasonably be expected to run somewhat
narrower, so that this virtual suppression of cultural
talent among the common men should come nearer a complete
suppression.
The working of that free initiative
that makes the advance of civilisation, and also the
greater part of its conservation, would in effect
be allowed only in the erratic members of the kept
classes; where at the same time it would have to work
against the side-draught of conventional usage, which
discountenances any pursuit that is not visibly futile
according to some accepted manner of futility.
Now under the prospective perfect working of the price-system,
bearers of the banners of civilisation could effectually
be drawn only from the kept classes, the gentlefolk
who alone would have the disposal of such free income
as is required for work that has no pecuniary value.
And numerically the gentlefolk are an inconsiderable
fraction of the population. The supply of competently
gifted bearers of the community’s culture would
accordingly be limited to such as could be drawn by
self-selection from among this inconsiderable proportion
of the community at large.
It may be recalled that in point of
heredity, and therefore in point of native fitness
for the maintenance and advance of civilisation, there
is no difference between the gentlefolk and the populace
at large; or at least there is no difference of such
a nature as to count in abatement of the proposition
set down above. Some slight, but after all inconsequential,
difference there may be, but such difference as there
is, if any, rather counts against the gentlefolk as
keepers of the cultural advance. The gentlefolk
are derived from business; the gentleman represents
a filial generation of the businessman; and if the
class typically is gifted with any peculiar hereditary
traits, therefore, they should presumably be such
as typically mark the successful businessman astute,
prehensile, unscrupulous. For a generation or
two, perhaps to the scriptural third and fourth generation,
it is possible that a diluted rapacity and cunning
may continue to mark the businessman’s well-born
descendants; but these are not serviceable traits
for the conservation and advancement of the community’s
cultural heritage. So that no consideration of
special hereditary fitness in the well-born need be
entertained in this connection.
As to the limitation imposed by the
price-system on the supply of candidates suited by
native gift for the human work of civilisation; it
would no doubt, be putting the figure extravagantly
high to say that the gentlefolk, properly speaking,
comprise as much as ten percent of the total population;
perhaps something less than one-half of that percentage
would still seem a gross overstatement. But, to
cover loose ends and vagrant cases, the gentlefolk
may for the purpose be credited with so high a percentage
of the total population. If ten percent be allowed,
as an outside figure, it follows that the community’s
scientists, artists, scholars, and the like individuals
given over to the workday pursuits of the human spirit,
are by conventional restriction to be drawn from one-tenth
of the current supply of persons suited by native
gift for these pursuits. Or as it may also be
expressed, in so far as the projected scheme takes
effect it should result in the suppression of nine
(or more) out of every ten persons available for the
constructive work of civilisation. The cultural
consequences to be looked for, therefore, should be
quite markedly of the conservative order.
Of course, in actual effect, the retardation
or repression of civilisation by this means, as calculated
on these premises, should reasonably be expected to
count up to something appreciably more than nine-tenths
of the gains that might presumably be achieved in the
conceivable absence of the price-system and the regime
of investment. All work of this kind has much
of the character of teamwork; so that the efforts
of isolated individuals count for little, and a few
working in more or less of concert and understanding
will count for proportionally much less than many
working in concert. The endeavours of the individuals
engaged count cumulatively, to such effect that doubling
their forces will more than double the aggregate efficiency;
and conversely, reducing the number will reduce the
effectiveness of their work by something more than
the simple numerical proportion. Indeed, an undue
reduction of numbers in such a case may lead to the
total defeat of the few that are left, and the best
endeavours of a dwindling remnant may be wholly nugatory.
There is needed a sense of community and solidarity,
without which the assurance necessary to the work is
bound to falter and dwindle out; and there is also
needed a degree of popular countenance, not to be
had by isolated individuals engaged in an unconventional
pursuit of things that are neither to be classed as
spendthrift decorum nor as merchantable goods.
In this connection an isolated one does not count
for one, and more than the critical minimum will count
for several per capita. It is a case where the
“minimal dose” is wholly inoperative.
There is not a little reason to believe
that consequent upon the installation of the projected
regime of peace at large and secure investment the
critical point in the repression of talent will very
shortly be reached and passed, so that the principle
of the “minimal dose” will come to apply.
The point may readily be illustrated by the case of
many British and American towns and neighbourhoods
during the past few decades; where the dominant price-system
and its commercial standards of truth and beauty have
over-ruled all inclination to cultural sanity and
put it definitively in abeyance. The cultural,
or perhaps the conventional, residue left over in
these cases where civilisation has gone stale through
inefficiency of the minimal dose is not properly to
be found fault with; it is of a blameless character,
conventionally; nor is there any intention here to
cast aspersion on the desolate. The like effects
of the like causes are to be seen in the American
colleges and universities, where business principles
have supplanted the pursuit of learning, and where
the commercialisation of aims, ideals, tastes, occupations
and personnel is following much the same lines that
have led so many of the country towns effectually
outside the cultural pale. The American university
or college is coming to be an outlier of the price-system,
in point of aims, standards and personnel; hitherto
the tradition of learning as a trait of civilisation,
as distinct from business, has not been fully displaced,
although it is now coming to face the passage of the
minimal dose. The like, in a degree, is apparently
true latterly for many English, and still more evidently
for many German schools.
In these various instances of what
may be called dry-rot or local blight on the civilised
world’s culture the decline appears to be due
not to a positive infection of a malignant sort, so
much as to a failure of the active cultural ferment,
which has fallen below the critical point of efficacy;
perhaps through an unintended refusal of a livelihood
to persons given over to cultivating the elements
of civilisation; perhaps through the conventional
disallowance of the pursuit of any other ends than
competitive gain and competitive spending. Evidently
it is something much more comprehensive in this nature
that is reasonably to be looked for under the prospective
regime of peace, in case the price-system gains that
farther impetus and warrant which it should come in
for if the rights of ownership and investment stand
over intact, and so come to enjoy the benefit of a
further improved state of the industrial arts and
a further enlarged scale of operation and enhanced
rate of turnover.
To turn back to the point from which
this excursion branched off. It has been presumed
all the while that the technological equipment, or
the state of the industrial arts, must continue to
advance under the conditions offered by this regime
of peace at large. But the last few paragraphs
will doubtless suggest that such a single-minded addiction
to competitive gain and competitive spending as the
stabilised and amplified price-system would enjoin,
must lead to an effectual retardation, perhaps to
a decline, of those material sciences on which modern
technology draws; and that the state of the industrial
arts should therefore cease to advance, if only the
scheme of investment and businesslike sabotage can
be made sufficiently secure. That such may be
the outcome is a contingency which the argument will
have to meet and to allow for; but it is after all
a contingency that need not be expected to derange
the sequence of events, except in the way of retardation.
Even without further advance in technological expedients
or in the relevant material sciences, there will still
necessarily ensue an effectual advance in the industrial
arts, in the sense that further organisation and enlargement
of the material equipment and industrial processes
on lines already securely known and not to be forgotten
must bring an effectually enhanced efficiency of the
industrial process as a whole.
In illustration, it is scarcely to
be assumed even as a tentative hypothesis that the
system of transport and communication will not undergo
extension and improvement on the lines already familiar,
even in the absence of new technological contrivances.
At the same time a continued increase of population
is to be counted on; which has, for the purpose in
hand, much the same effect as an advance in the industrial
arts. Human contact and mutual understanding will
necessarily grow wider and closer, and will have its
effect on the habits of thought prevalent in the communities
that are to live under the promised regime of peace.
The system of transport and communication having to
handle a more voluminous and exacting traffic, in
the service of a larger and more compact population,
will have to be organised and administered on mechanically
drawn schedules of time, place, volume, velocity, and
price, of a still more exacting accuracy than hitherto.
The like will necessarily apply throughout the industrial
occupations that employ extensive plant or processes,
or that articulate with industrial processes of that
nature; which will necessarily comprise a larger proportion
of the industrial process at large than hitherto.
As has already been remarked more
than once in the course of the argument, a population
that lives and does its work, and such play as is
allowed it, in and by an exactingly articulate mechanical
system of this kind will necessarily be an “intelligent”
people, in the colloquial sense of the word; that
is to say it will necessarily be a people that uses
printed matter freely and that has some familiarity
with the elements of those material sciences that
underlie this mechanically organised system of appliances
and processes. Such a population lives by and
within the framework of the mechanistic logic, and
is in a fair way to lose faith in any proposition
that can not be stated convincingly in terms of this
mechanistic logic. Superstitions are liable to
lapse by neglect or disuse in such a community; that
is to say propositions of a non-mechanistic complexion
are liable to insensible disestablishment in such
a case; “superstition” in these premises
coming to signify whatever is not of this mechanistic,
or “materialistic” character. An exception
to this broad characterisation of non-mechanistic propositions
as “superstition” would be matters that
are of the nature of an immediate deliverance of the
senses or of the aesthetic sensibilities.
By a simile it might be said that
what so falls under the caption of “superstition”
in such a case is subject to decay by inanition.
It should not be difficult to conceive the general
course of such a decay of superstitions under this
unremitting discipline of mechanistic habits of life.
The recent past offers an illustration, in the unemotional
progress of decay that has overtaken religious beliefs
in the more civilised countries, and more particularly
among the intellectually trained workmen of the mechanical
industries. The elimination of such non-mechanistic
propositions of the faith has been visibly going on,
but it has not worked out on any uniform plan, nor
has it overtaken any large or compact body of people
consistently or abruptly, being of the nature of obsolescence
rather than of set repudiation. But in a slack
and unreflecting fashion the divestment has gone on
until the aggregate effect is unmistakable.
A similar divestment of superstitions
is reasonably to be looked for also in that domain
of preconceptions that lies between the supernatural
and the mechanistic. Chief among these time-warped
preconceptions or superstitions that
so stand over out of the alien past among these democratic
peoples is the institution of property. As is
true of preconceptions touching the supernatural verities,
so here too the article of use and wont in question
will not bear formulation in mechanistic terms and
is not congruous with that mechanistic logic that
is incontinently bending the habits of thought of the
common man more and more consistently to its own bent.
There is, of course, the difference that while no
class apart from the servants of the church have
a material interest in the continued integrity of the
articles of the supernatural faith, there is a strong
and stubborn material interest bound up with the maintenance
of this article of the pecuniary faith; and the class
in whom this material interest vests are also, in
effect, invested with the coercive powers of the law.
The law, and the popular preconceptions
that give the law its binding force, go to uphold
the established usage and the established prerogatives
on this head; and the disestablishment of the rights
of property and investment therefore is not a simple
matter of obsolescence through neglect. It may
confidently be counted on that all the apparatus of
the law and all the coercive agencies of law and order,
will be brought in requisition to uphold the ancient
rights of ownership, whenever any move is made toward
their disallowance or restriction. But then,
on the other hand, the movement to disallow or diminish
the prerogatives of ownership is also not to take
the innocuous shape of unstudied neglect. So
soon, or rather so far, as the common man comes to
realise that these rights of ownership and investment
uniformly work to his material detriment, at the same
time that he has lost the “will to believe”
in any argument that does not run in terms of the mechanistic
logic, it is reasonable to expect that he will take
a stand on this matter; and it is more than likely
that the stand taken will be of an uncompromising
kind, presumably something in the nature
of the stand once taken by recalcitrant Englishmen
in protest against the irresponsible rule of the Stuart
sovereign. It is also not likely that the beneficiaries
under these proprietary rights will yield their ground
at all amicably; all the more since they are patently
within their authentic rights in insisting on full
discretion in the disposal of their own possessions;
very much as Charles I or James II once were within
their prescriptive right, which had little
to say in the outcome.
Even apart from “time immemorial”
and the patent authenticity of the institution, there
were and are many cogent arguments to be alleged in
favor of the position for which the Stuart sovereigns
and their spokesmen contended. So there are and
will be many, perhaps more, cogent reasons to be alleged
for the maintenance of the established law and order
in respect of the rights of ownership and investment.
Not least urgent, nor least real, among these arguments
is the puzzling question of what to put in the place
of these rights and of the methods of control based
on them, very much as the analogous question puzzled
the public-spirited men of the Stuart times.
All of which goes to argue that there may be expected
to arise a conjuncture of perplexities and complications,
as well as a division of interests and claims.
To which should be added that the division is likely
to come to a head so soon as the balance of forces
between the two parties in interest becomes doubtful,
so that either party comes to surmise that the success
of its own aims may depend on its own efforts.
And as happens where two antagonistic parties are
each convinced of the justice of its cause, and in
the absence of an umpire, the logical recourse is the
wager of battle.
Granting the premises, there should
be no reasonable doubt as to this eventual cleavage
between those who own and those who do not; and of
the premises the only item that is not already an
accomplished fact is the installation of peace at
large. The rest of what goes into the argument
is the well-known modern state of the industrial arts,
and the equally well-known price-system; which, in
combination, give its character to the modern state
of business enterprise. It is only an unusually
broad instance of an institutional arrangement which
has in the course of time and changing conditions
come to work at cross purposes with that underlying
ground of institutional arrangements that takes form
in the commonplace aphorism, Live and let live.
With change setting in the direction familiar to all
men today, it is only a question of limited time when
the discrepancy will reach a critical pass, and the
installation of peace may be counted on to hasten this
course of things.
That a decision will be sought by
recourse to forcible measures, is also scarcely open
to question; since the established law and order provides
for a resort to coercion in the enforcement of these
prescriptive rights, and since both parties in interest,
in this as in other cases, are persuaded of the justice
of their claims. A decision either way is an
intolerable iniquity in the eyes of the losing side.
History teaches that in such a quarrel the recourse
has always been to force.
History teaches also, but with an
inflection of doubt, that the outworn institution
in such a conjuncture faces disestablishment.
At least, so men like to believe. What the experience
of history does not leave in doubt is the grave damage,
discomfort and shame incident to the displacement
of such an institutional discrepancy by such recourse
to force. What further appears to be clear in
the premises, at least to the point of a strong presumption,
is that in the present case the decision, or the choice,
lies between two alternatives: either the price-system
and its attendant business enterprise will yield and
pass out; or the pacific nations will conserve their
pecuniary scheme of law and order at the cost of returning
to a war footing and letting their owners preserve
the rights of ownership by force of arms.
The reflection obviously suggests
itself that this prospect of consequences to follow
from the installation of peace at large might well
be taken into account beforehand by those who are aiming
to work out an enduring peace. It has appeared
in the course of the argument that the preservation
of the present pecuniary law and order, with all its
incidents of ownership and investment, is incompatible
with an unwarlike state of peace and security.
This current scheme of investment, business, and sabotage,
should have an appreciably better chance of survival
in the long run if the present conditions of warlike
preparation and national insecurity were maintained,
or if the projected peace were left in a somewhat
problematical state, sufficiently precarious to keep
national animosities alert, and thereby to the neglect
of domestic interests, particularly of such interests
as touch the popular well-being. On the other
hand, it has also appeared that the cause of peace
and its perpetuation might be materially advanced if
precautions were taken beforehand to put out of the
way as much as may be of those discrepancies of interest
and sentiment between nations and between classes
which make for dissension and eventual hostilities.
So, if the projectors of this peace
at large are in any degree inclined to seek concessive
terms on which the peace might hopefully be made enduring,
it should evidently be part of their endeavours from
the outset to put events in train for the present
abatement and eventual abrogation of the rights of
ownership and of the price-system in which these rights
take effect. A hopeful beginning along this line
would manifestly be the neutralisation of all pecuniary
rights of citizenship, as has been indicated in an
earlier passage. On the other hand, if peace
is not desired at the cost of relinquishing the scheme
of competitive gain and competitive spending, the
promoters of peace should logically observe due precaution
and move only so far in the direction of a peaceable
settlement as would result in a sufficiently unstable
equilibrium of mutual jealousies; such as might expeditiously
be upset whenever discontent with pecuniary affairs
should come to threaten this established scheme of
pecuniary prerogatives.