Ultimately, Sterba’s argument leads to the support of
some manner of redistributionist welfare system. Such a
system may indeed be justified in an unfree or semi-free
society, where artificial political privileges result in
a non-meritocratic distribution of wealth – and where,
for instance, inefficient and customer-unfriendly firms
can achieve market dominance or incompetent individuals
can come to control vast resources. The overall level of
wealth in such societies is lower compared to a
libertarian society, and there may be many “worthy poor”
in such societies, who are poor for none of their fault
and despite earnest efforts at improving their position.
Indeed, the United States at present, with its massive
levels of involuntary unemployment resulting from an
economic bubble inflated by the Federal Reserve, could
be considered to exist in such conditions. Thinkers such
as Sheldon Richman have argued that, in such situations,
welfare systems can be seen as secondary or “band-aid”
interventions to mask or mitigate some of the harmful
effects of the primary interventions (e.g., corporate
subsidies, barriers to entry into markets, and laws that
limit innovation and progress). While the secondary
interventions bring their own unintended negative
consequences, a national government that only practiced
the primary interventions (which benefit and enrich a
favored and politically connected elite) would be much
worse in its effects. But the only aspects of the secondary
interventions that might be justified are those
aspects that would undo some of the harms of the primary
interventions and more closely approximate a
meritocratic, individualistic, market-driven outcome.
I contrast “band-aid” welfare measures in a mixed
economy – which could be justified – with redistribution
of wealth by a government in an otherwise libertarian
society – which would not be justified. Such
redistribution of wealth would infringe on the justly
earned property of numerous individuals, simply because
they belong to some arbitrarily designated category
(e.g., “the rich” – as defined by some artificial
threshold). In a libertarian society, occasional
emergencies might arise whereby one or a few people
might legitimately avail themselves of the property of
another, but only if they compensate the owner fairly
afterward. But, by definition, such emergency treatment
cannot apply across the board and as a systematic,
ongoing matter. Furthermore, unlike the emergency
treatment I described, a welfare system by definition
redistributes wealth from some people to others, and
does not compensate the people whose wealth has been
redistributed. In a fully libertarian society, where all
wealth is acquired based on the principles of merit and
consent, such redistribution would be unjustified and
harmful. It would, further, be unnecessary, as
practically all people would be massively more
prosperous than the majority of people are in today’s
Western societies.
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