Anarcho-Capitalists Aren’t Really Capitalists

Anarcho-capitalism is simply the idea that without the state, capitalist socio-economic organisation will become free of the antecedents of state patronage and regulation, which according to them hamper entrepreneurial activity and put businesses in a quagmire of legislative regulation they can’t possibly navigate. As a market anarchist I have sympathies with many ancap arguments and ideas, including those mentioned. Things like polycentric legal systems and competitive defence companies are both intriguing and a good answer to the statist question of legal order under anarchy. However, precisely because of their credentials as anarchists, and thus their rejection of state interference, they cannot in any way describe themselves as capitalists.

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Social Investment and Deep Democracy

Its generally put to anarchists that without the state, the necessary social investment in health, education and other needs would wither away. Thus we need coercive taxation to maintain the benefits of modern society. Now, the issues of the knowledge problem and inherent state inefficiencies that plague these areas has already been done excellently by many anarchist thinkers. However, the regulations and inefficiencies of these services aren’t going away anytime soon. Political parties and state bureaucracies rely on them to provide funding and justify existence respectively. What does exist instead are elements of a resurgent, libertarian-esque left who have come to see the state for what it truly is, an organisation inherent to and in hoc with capitalism. Socialist parties and groups are recognising that the state is more interested in cutting such services, destroying social investment and eliminating real democracy. In their place, there is an increasing belief in decentralism and the production of deep democracy.

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While We Watch Their Streets Burn: A Reflection on the 2011 UK Riots Nearly 5 Years On

The response to the riots fit into an unfortunate paradigm of ignoring structural and underlying causes. These are easy explanations that characterise the outbreaks as race riots or as pure criminality. Issues such as entrenched poverty, ghettoisation and marginalisation from economic and political spheres are left by the wayside. But to understand the 2011 riots we need to have “more complex and differentiated pictures…if we wish accurately to capture their social predicament and elucidate their collective fate”[1]. So in understanding the outbreaks, we have to initially understand that they weren’t race riots, but rather unrest created by large societal and consumer inequalities. Racialised issues such as stop and search and the killing of Mark Duggan were certainly catalysts, but the multiplicity of reactions and events, such as attacking police stations and large corporate retailers, suggests class-based elements and wider socio-political malaise.

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What’s Wrong With the Minimum Wage?

The minimum wage is held up as an example of a social reform that has maintained the legitimacy of wage labour while not allowing the excesses of capitalism to extract all of worker’s surplus value. This is just not the case. By putting an arbitrary price on labour, the state maintains a form of exploitation. Groups of labourers find it more difficult to organise into collectivised worker-owners who can exploit their innate human capital due to unitary employment laws that effectively engender the concept of a wage, and thus the worker-boss paradigm.

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The Entrepreneur In Society

Its generally conceived that the entrepreneur is the lone economic wolf in the economy, bringing together the morass of labour, capital and resources and placing it under his/her will. This picture of rugged individualism usually serves little purpose than to justify large expansions of wealth by corporate CEOs and ignores the actual picture of entrepreneurs, that of hard-working, small-scale individuals within networks and communities where wealth and knowledge are shared. To take the entrepreneur outside of the societal context, where they gain their education and skills, is to simply assert the false idea that entrepreneurs are the Ubermensch, the lone individual walking on the tide of the masses. However, the reality is that the ability to be an entrepreneur is limited due to capital constraints and entry barriers, which limit entrepreneurialism to those who have capital[1], which usually means control of the economy by venture capitalists or the established rich, and thus the expropriation of wealth away from both the individual and the community.

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Sneering Libertarians and the Labour Theory of Value

Being a major area of Austrian economics, the idea of subjective value is regularly used by libertarians to disprove labour theory of value and subsequently believe they’ve refuted anti-capitalist arguments[1]. Frankly it’s all fanciful word games. Little evidence is really produced out of this, outside a thin justification for modern capitalist economies (which is ironic coming from supposed anarchist capitalists). However, the LTV crowd don’t exactly help their cause, holding to Marxian arguments that provide little evidence themselves. Rather, subjective theory of value is simply a lens to understand multiplicitous decisions in heterogeneous circumstances, thus subsuming different forms of valuation made by autonomous individuals and institutions. Further, empirical evidence shows continued increases in profits and capital gains and the continued stagnation of wages (particularly in the United States). In the end, taking subjective theory of value to its ultimate conclusion, we see the ability for price arrangements to develop in a multitude of different institutional settings, including planned economic relations, moral economies and markets.

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Some Thoughts on Jeremy Corbyn

It has been the convention of libertarians to disparage Corbyn as a socialist zealot who hasn’t grown out of the debates of the 70s and 80s. Certainly there are areas of economics where he falls flat on his face, particular his love of the state and its capability to redistribute wealth. However, libertarians shouldn’t just dismiss him out of hand. His ideas on People’s QE, nationalised energy and rail markets and foreign policy are both interesting and admirable. At the very least, they provide something of a debate on these issues which have been pushed to the wayside since the days of Thatcher and the beginning of neoliberal capitalism. It creates questions where there was once consensus which can only be a good thing. Continue reading

The Ancient Future: Anarcho-Feudalism!

Sturgeon gives us an interesting picture of how to reconceptualise anarchy within ancient social and spiritual bonds. His analysis of pre-Norman England is certainly enlightening, as it shows the voluntary aspects of that society, with its social hierarchies and social connection to the land. In many ways it falls in with other aspects of voluntary feudalism, such as the early clan system of Scotland and the tuatha of Ireland. However, we should not fall into the trap of pure historical romanticism. We have to understand that these voluntary, quasi-anarchist systems were on the peripheries of life at that time. Like all stages of history, there is a consistent tension between the modes of centralisation and decentralisation. So far the latter has lost. What Sturgeon shows though is that by understanding these historical systems (that only ended due to centralised forms of power conquering them) we can understand ways of constructing intentional communities of anarchy, where relations are voluntary and bound in common conceptions of community, economy and law. (by the blog author)


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The Tragedy of the EU Referendum

As someone who would describe themselves as a Eurosceptic, I do find this current debacle over the EU rather pathetic and tragic. The campaigns have made it all about reclaiming sovereignty, bringing back powers and so on. Yet from where I’m standing, looking at the webs of regulations and entry barriers in the economy, and the continuing political centralisation at all levels, I’m stood here wondering what leaving the EU would actually change about that. Continue reading

No Method In Their Madness

Why don’t we ban cars? I mean, they’re effective death traps, create far too much pollution and can be driven by inexperienced people. There are said over a million uninsured drivers in the UK, so there are many cars that aren’t regulated at all. And it’s obvious that control measures, such as speed cameras and traffic lights, don’t work as deaths on the road still occur. Nowadays we have good public transport, such as buses and trains, that can get you anywhere you like and aren’t much more expensive than a car and are driven by responsible, government-trained drivers. Continue reading