Interventionism: An Economic Analysis by Ludwig von Mises

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VI.
WAR ECONOMY
1.
War and the Market Economy
DEMOCRACY
IS THE COROLLARY of the market economy in domestic affairs; peace is
its corollary in foreign policy. The market economy means peaceful
cooperation and peaceful exchange of goods and services. It cannot
persist when wholesale killing is the order of the day.
The incompatibility of war with the market economy and civilization has
not been fully recognized because the progressing development of the
market economy has altered the original character of war itself. It has
gradually turned the total war of ancient times into the soldiers’ war
of modern times.
Total war is a horde on the move to fight and to loot. The whole tribe,
the whole people moves; no one-not even a woman or a child—remains at
home unless he has to fulfill duties there essential for the war. The
mobilization is total and the people are always ready to go to war.
Everyone is a warrior or serves the warriors. Army and nation, army and
state, are identical. No difference is made between combatants and
noncombatants. The war aim is to annihilate the entire enemy nation.
Total war is not terminated by a peace treaty but by a total victory
and a total defeat. The defeated—men, women, children—are exterminated;
it means clemency if they are merely reduced to slavery. Only the
victorious nation survives.
In the soldiers’ war, on the other hand, the army does the fighting
while the citizens who are not in the armed services pursue their
normal lives. The citizens pay the costs of warfare; they pay for the
maintenance and equipment of the army, but otherwise they remain
outside of the war events themselves. It may happen that the war
actions raze their houses,
devastate their land, and destroy their other property; but this, too,
is part of the war costs which they have to bear. It may also happen
that they are looted and incidentally killed by the warriors—even by
those of their “own” army. But these are events which are not inherent
in warfare as such; they hinder rather than help the operations of the
army leaders and are not tolerated if those in command have full
control over their troops. The warring state which has formed,
equipped, and maintained the army considers looting by the soldiers an
offense; they were hired to fight, not to loot on their own. The state
wants to keep civil life as usual because it wants to preserve the
taxpaying ability of its citizens; conquered territories are regarded
as its own domain. The system of the market economy is to be maintained
during the war to serve the requirements of warfare.
The evolution which led from the total war to the soldiers’ war should
have completely eliminated wars. It was an evolution whose final aim
could only be eternal peace between the civilized nations. The liberals
of the nineteenth century were fully aware of this fact. They
considered war a remnant of a dark age which was doomed, just as were
institutions of days gone by—slavery, tyranny, intolerance,
superstition. They firmly believed that the future would be blessed by
eternal peace.
Things have taken a different course. The development which was to
bring the pacification of the world has gone into reverse. This
complete reversal cannot be understood as an isolated fact. We witness
today the rise of an ideology which consciously negates everything that
has come to be considered as culture. The “bourgeois” values are to be
revalued. The institutions of the “bourgeoisie” are to be replaced by
those of the proletariat. And, in like vein, the “bourgeois” ideal of
eternal peace is to be displaced by the glorification of force. The
French political thinker Georges Sorel, apostle of trade unions and
violence, was the godfather of both Bolshevism and Fascism.
It makes little difference that the nationalists want war between
nations and that the Marxists want war between classes, i.e., civil
war. What is decisive is the fact that both preach the war of
annihilation, total war. It is also important if the various
anti-democratic groups work in cooperation, as at present, or if they
happen to be fighting each other. In either event, they are virtually
always allied when it comes to attacking Western civilization.
2.
Total War and War Socialism
Were we to consider as states the hordes of barbarians who descended
upon the Roman
Empire
from the east, we would have to say that they formed total states. The
horde was dominated by the political principle which the Nazis now call
the Führer principle. Only the will of Attila or Alaric
counted. The individual Huns or Goths had no rights and no sphere of
private existence. All men, women, and children were simply units in
their ruler’s army or in its supply service; they had to obey
unconditionally.
It would be an error to assume that these hordes were socialistically
organized. Socialism is a system of social production which is based on
public ownership of the means of production. These hordes did not have
socialist production. Insofar as they did not live on looting the
conquered but had to provide for their needs by their own work, the
individual families produced with their own resources and on their own
account. The ruler did not concern himself with such matters; the
individual men and women were on their own. There was no planning and
no socialism. The distribution of loot is not socialism.
Market economy and total war are incompatible. In the soldiers’ war
only the soldiers fight; for the great majority war is only a passing
suffering of evil, not an active pursuit. While the armies are
combating each other, the citizens, farmers, and workers try to carry
on their normal activities.
The first step which led from the soldiers’ war back to total war was
the introduction of compulsory military service. It gradually did away
with the difference between soldiers and citizens. The war was no
longer to be only a matter of mercenaries; it was to include everyone
who had the necessary physical ability. The slogan “a nation in arms”
at first expressed only a program which could not be realized
completely for financial reasons. Only part of the able-bodied male
population received military training and were placed in the army
services. But once this road is entered upon it is not possible to stop
at halfway measures. Eventually the mobilization of the army was bound
to absorb even the men indispensable to production at home who had the
responsibility of feeding and equipping the combatants. It was found
necessary to differentiate between essential and nonessential
occupations. The men in occupations essential for supplying the army
had to be exempted from induction into the combat troops. For this
reason disposition of the available manpower was placed in the hands of
the military leaders. Compulsory military service proposes putting
everyone in the army who is able-bodied; only the ailing, the
physically unfit, the old, the women, and the children are exempted.
But when it is realized that a part of the able-bodied must be used on
the industrial front for work which may be performed by the old and the
young, the less fit and the women, then there is no reason to
differentiate in compulsory service between the able-bodied and the
physically unfit. Compulsory military service thus leads to compulsory
labor service of all citizens who are able to work, male and female.
The supreme commander exercises power over the entire nation, he
replaces the work of the able-bodied by the work of less fit draftees,
and places as many able-bodied at the front as he can spare at home
without endangering the supplies of the army. The supreme commander
then decides what is to be produced and how. He also decides how the
products are to be used. Mobilization has become total; the nation and
the state have been transformed into an army; war socialism has
replaced the market economy
It is irrelevant in this connection whether or not the former
entrepreneurs are given a privileged position in this system of war
socialism. They may be called managers and have higher positions in the
factories, all of which now serve the army. They may receive larger
rations than those who formerly were only clerks or laborers. But they
are no longer entrepreneurs. They are shop managers who are being told
what and how to produce, where and at what prices to purchase the means
of production, and to whom and at what prices to sell the products.
If peace is regarded as a mere truce during which the nation has to arm
itself for the coming war, it is necessary in peacetime to put
production on a war footing just as much as to prepare and organize the
army. It would be illogical then to delay the total mobilization until
the outbreak of hostilities. The only difference between war and peace
in this respect is that in time of peace a number of men, who during
the war will be used in the front line, are still employed on the home
front. The transition from peace conditions to war conditions is then
merely the moving of those men from the home front into the army.
It is apparent that in the final analysis war and the market economy
are incompatible. The market economy could only develop because
industrialism had pushed militarism into the background and because it
made the total war “degenerate” into the soldiers’ war.
We do not need to discuss the question whether socialism necessarily
leads to total war. For the subject matter with which we are here
concerned such an analysis is not required. It may suffice to state
that the aggressors cannot wage total war without introducing socialism.
3.
Market Economy and National Defense
Today the world is divided into two camps. The totalitarian hordes are
attacking the nations which seek to maintain the market economy and
democracy; they are bent on destroying the “decadent” Western
civilization, and to replace it by a new order.
It is believed that this aggression forces the attacked to adjust their
social system to the requirements of this total war, that is to give up
the market economy for socialism, and democracy for dictatorship.
Despairingly one group says: “War inevitably leads to socialism and
dictatorship. While we are attempting to defend democracy and to repel
the attack of the enemy, we ourselves are accepting his economic order
and political system.” In the United
States
this argument is the main support for isolation. The isolationists
believe that freedom can only be preserved by nonparticipation in the
war.
Exultingly the “progressives” express the same opinion. They welcome
the struggle against Hitler because they are convinced that the war
must bring socialism. They want American participation in the war to
defeat Hitler and to introduce his system in the United
States.
Is this necessarily true? Must a nation defending itself against the
aggression of totalitarian countries itself become totalitarian? Is a
state, which enjoyed democracy and the social system of a market
economy, unable to fight a totalitarian and socialist enemy
successfully?
It is widely believed that the experience of the present war proves
that the socialist production is in a better position to supply arms
and other war material than is a market economy. The German army has an
enormous superiority in every type of equipment that a fighting army
requires. The armies of France
and of the British
Empire,
which had at their disposal the resources of the whole world, entered
the conflict poorly armed and equipped and they have been unable to
overcome this inferiority. These facts are undeniable, but we have to
interpret them correctly.
Even at the time when the Nazis came to power the German Reich was by
far better prepared for a new war than the English and French experts
assumed. Since 1933 the Reich has concentrated all its efforts on
preparation for war. Hitler has transformed the Reich into an armed
camp. War production was expanded to the limit. The production of goods
for private consumption was cut to the minimum. Hitler openly prepared
for a war of annihilation against France
and England.
The English and the French stood by as if it did not concern them at
all.
During those critical years which preceded the outbreak of the second
World War, there were in Europe
outside of the totalitarian countries only two parties: the
anti-communists and the anti-fascists. These are not names which were
given to them by others or by their opponents; the parties themselves
adopted these designations.
The anti-fascists—in England
primarily the Labour Party, in France
mainly the front populaire—used
strong language against the
Nazis. But they opposed every improvement in the armament of their own
countries; in every proposal to expand the armed forces they suspected
fascism. They were relying on the Soviet army, of whose strength,
superior equipment, and invincibility they were convinced. What seemed
to them necessary was an alliance with the Soviets. In order to win
Stalin’s favor, they argued, it was necessary to pursue an internal
policy leaning towards Communism.
The anti-communists—the English Conservatives and the French
“Right”—saw in Hitler the Siegfried who would destroy the dragon
Communism. Consequently, they took a sympathetic view of Nazism. They
branded as a “Jewish” lie the assertion that Hitler was planning war to
annihilate France
and the British
Empire
and aspiring to a complete domination of Europe.
The result of this policy was that England
and France
tumbled into the war unprepared. But still it was not too late to make
good these omissions. The eight months that elapsed between the
outbreak of the war and the German offensive of May 1940 would have
sufficed to secure the equipment for the Allied forces which would have
enabled them successfully to defend the French eastern frontier. They
could have and should have utilized the powers of their industries.
That they failed to do so cannot be blamed on capitalism.
One of the most popular anti-capitalist legends wants us to believe
that the machinations of the munitions industry have brought about the
resurgence of the war spirit. Modern imperialism and total war
supposedly are the results of the war propaganda carried on by writers
hired by the munitions makers. The first World War is thought to have
started because Krupp, Schneider-Creuzot, DuPont, and J.P. Morgan
wanted big profits. In order to avoid the recurrence of such a
catastrophe, it is believed necessary to prevent the munitions industry
from making profits.
On the basis of such reasoning the Blum
government nationalized the French armament industry. When the war
broke out and it became imperative to place the productive power of all
French plants into the service of the rearmament effort, the French
authorities considered it more important to block war profits than to
win the war. From September 1939 until June 1940, France
in actuality did not fight the war against the Nazis, but in fact it
fought a war against war profiteering. In this one respect, they were
successful.
In England,
too, the government was concerned primarily with preventing war
profiteering, rather than with the procurement of the best possible
equipment for the armed forces. For example, the 100 percent war
profits tax might be cited. Even more disastrous for the Allies was the
fact that in the United
States,
too, steps were taken to block war profits and still stronger measures
of this sort were announced. This was the reason why American industry
had contributed but a small part of what assistance it might have given
to England
and France.
The anti-capitalist says, “This is precisely the point. Business is
unpatriotic. The rest of us are told to leave our families and to give
up our jobs; we are placed in the army and have to risk our lives. The
capitalists, however, demand their profits even in time of war. They
ought to be forced to work unselfishly for the country, if we are
forced to fight for it.” Such arguments shift the problem into the
sphere of ethics. This, however, is not a matter of ethics but of
expediency.
Those who detest war on moral grounds because they consider the killing
and maiming of people as inhumane, should attempt to replace the
ideology, which leads to war, by an ideology which would secure
permanent peace. However, if a peaceful nation is attacked and has to
defend itself, only one thing counts: the defense must be organized as
quickly and as efficiently as possible; the soldiers must be given the
best weapons and equipment. This can only be accomplished if the
working of the market economy is not interfered with. The munitions
industry, which made large profits, equipped and provisioned the armies
so well in the past that they were able to win. It was due to the
experiences in actual combat in the nineteenth century that the
production of armament directly by the governments was largely
discontinued. At no other time has the efficiency and productive
capacity of the entrepreneurs been proved more effectively than during
the first World War. It is only envy and unthinking resentment that
cause people to fight against the profits of the entrepreneurs, whose
efficiency makes possible the winning of the war.
When the capitalist nations in time of war give up the industrial
superiority which their economic system provides them, their power to
resist and their chances to win are considerably reduced. That some
incidental consequences of warfare are regarded as unjust can readily
be understood. The fact that entrepreneurs get rich on armament
production is but one of many unsatisfactory and unjust conditions
which war creates. But the soldiers risk their lives and health. That
they die unknown and without reward in the front line, while the army
leaders and staff remain safe and secure to win glory and to further
their careers, is “unjust” too. The demand to eliminate war profits is
not any more reasonable than the demand that the army leaders, their
staff, the surgeons, and the men on the home front should do their work
under the privations and dangers to which the fighting soldier is
exposed. It is not the war profits of the entrepreneurs that are
objectionable. War itself is objectionable!
These views on war profits also disclose many errors about the nature
of the market economy. All those enterprises, which in peacetime
already had all the necessary equipment to produce armaments and other
war supplies, work from the first day of the war on government orders.
But even working at full capacity, these plants can only produce a
small part of the war needs. It is a question, therefore, of devoting
plants to war production which previously did not produce armaments,
and of actually building new factories. Both require considerable new
investments. Whether or not these investments will pay, depends not
only on the prices realized on the first contracts but also on those
contracts fulfilled during the war. Should the war end before these
investments can be fully written off out of gross earnings, the owners
will not only fail to realize profits, but they will even suffer
capital losses. The popular argument in favor of a profitless armaments
industry overlooks among other things the fact that the enterprises,
which have to embark on production in a field hitherto underdeveloped
by them, must obtain the capital needed from banks or in the capital
market. They cannot secure it if its intended use raises no expectation
of profits but only the risk of losses. How can a conscientious
entrepreneur persuade a banker or a capitalist to lend him money if he
himself cannot see any prospect of a profitable return on his
investment? In the market economy, where the debtor has the
responsibility for the repayment of the loan, there is no room for
transactions which do not compensate for the risk of loss by
the prospect of a gain. It is
only the expectation of profit which enables an entrepreneur to promise
payment of interest and repayment of principal. By eliminating the hope
of profit one makes impossible the functioning of the entire system of
entrepreneurship.
What is demanded of industry then is this. Give up the line in which
you producers have worked successfully up to now. Do not think of the
loss of your regular customers and of the depreciation of your idle
equipment. Invest new capital in a line with which you are not
familiar. But bear in mind, we shall pay prices which will not make it
possible for you to charge off the new investment in a short time.
Should you nevertheless make profits, we will tax them away. Besides,
we shall publicly expose you as “merchants of death.”
In war, too, there is only the choice between the market economy and
socialism. The third alternative, interventionism, is not even possible
in war. At the outbreak of the present war it may have been possible to
nationalize the whole of industry, but there is no doubt that this
would have led to a complete failure. If one did not want to adopt that
method, the market economy should have been accepted with all its
implications. Had the market method been chosen, the Hitler onslaught
would have been stopped on the eastern borders of France.
The defeat of France
and the destruction of English cities was the first price paid for the
interventionist suppression of war profits.
As long as the war was in progress, there should have been no place for
a discussion of measures against war profits. After victory was won and
a world order established in which new aggression did not have to be
feared, there still would have been ample time to confiscate war
profits. At any rate, before the war is over and the investments are
written off, it is impossible to ascertain whether an enterprise has
actually realized war profits or not.
[Léon
Blum (1872—1950) French Socialist statesman who in 1936 brought about a
coalition of Radical Socialists, Socialists, and Communists in the
Popular Front (front populaire).—Editor]
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