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Frustrating Michael Moore

The filmmaker needs to discover truly radical political economy.

By Sheldon Richman
Published: 16 October 2009
Frustrating Michael Moore

If Michael Moore would study a little political economy he might turn into a potent champion of individual liberty.

As we see in Moore’s new movie, Capitalism: A Love Story, Moore is offended by some truly offensive things: banks engaging in wild speculation without concern for the risk, taxpayer bailouts for banks and other businesses, cozy relations between Wall Street and Washington, politicians getting favors from companies that want benefits from government, and big institutions pushing less powerful individuals around. True, he’s offended by some inoffensive things as well, such as the cut in the 90 percent top income-tax rate nearly 30 years ago. But by and large, what he rails against should be railed against.

(Update: Moore gets the tax-rate story wrong, and I let it get by me. The 91 percent top marginal rate fell to 77 in 1964 and 70 in 1965; this was the Kennedy tax cut — I wonder why Moore didn’t say that Democrats John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson were the rate cutters. Under Republican Ronald Reagan, whom Moore wishes to demonize for cutting taxes for the rich, the rate dropped to 50 and eventually to 28 percent. HT: Gary Chartier.)

Had he called his movie State Capitalism: A Love Story, I might be applauding (with some reservations). But he’s targeting the more ambiguous “capitalism,” which he uses interchangeably with “the free market.” He can be forgiven for this, however. Most people would say that the current U.S. economic system is capitalist. Moore has probably heard that all his life. He’d hear if he watched a Fox financial program. Would Ben Stein or Lawrence Kudlow disagree? Moore has also heard Republican politicians, George W. Bush, for example, praise the existing system, with all its deep government interventions, as capitalist. He did this even as he and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, former chief of Wall Street behemoth Goldman Sachs, stampeded Congress into passing the $700 billion TARP bailout last year. Moore takes such people at their word: The free market is capitalism, and capitalism is what we have today.

Can we blame him for thinking this way?

Yes, it’s sloppy thinking, and had he been more curious and read beyond the confines of “Progressive” literature, he could have gotten the straight story. But many knowledgeable advocates of the free market contribute to the confusion by exhibiting what Kevin Carson calls “vulgar libertarianism,” or what Roderick Long describes as “the tendency to treat the case for the free market as though it justified various unlovely features of actually existing corporatist society.” How often have you heard a free-market advocate condemn pro-business intervention in one breath, then defend existing dominant corporations in the next — as though they did not arise in the interventionist environment just condemned? Pro-market is not the same as pro-business. If some market advocates don’t understand that, why should Moore? Vulgar libertarianism is a disconnect that makes the free-market philosophy look like a corporate apologetic. It’s done incalculable damage to the cause of freedom, in part by alienating potential allies. Who knows, maybe even Michael Moore.

Aversion to Profit

This may go a long way in explaining Moore’s aversion to profit — at least other people’s. He associates profit with business, which he associates with (state) capitalism. So for him, profit per se is suspect. But he should see a problem here. Does he think he’s exploiting moviegoers when his production company ends up with a profit? Do the co-ops and worker-owned firms he loves exploit their customers when they sell their products for more than their money costs? When two people barter, are they mutually exploiting each other because each gets more value than he gives up? To consistently oppose profit, one would have to oppose all human action, since every action aims at a surplus of subjective benefit over subjective opportunity cost.

Cornered like this, Moore might say he’s only the against excessive profits that capitalist market power permits. But now we’re back where we started. To the extent that intervention hampers competition by erecting barriers to entry — which is the usual effect, intended or not — protected firms are free to charge higher prices and reap more profits than would have been the case in an open market. Corporate power and privilege derive from political power and can’t exist without it. In contrast to existing capitalism, the truly free market would have no legal barriers to competitive entry, assuring that prices and returns are economically justified and not the fruits of privilege. Strictly speaking, entrepreneurial profit in a true market gets competed away because the very process of capturing them reveals valuable information to others and invites imitation. It takes innovation and efficiency — that is, superior service to consumers — to create new profits. Only the State permits business to make profits by withholding benefits from consumers.

But Moore doesn’t know this. What he “knows” is that the choice is between the current corrupt system — and it is corrupt — and some vaguely defined scheme of control by benevolent politicians, which he calls socialism and democracy.

In his movie Moore expresses affection for socialism, but he’s not clear what he means. He never advocates collectivization of the means of production or the abolition of markets. Instead he suggests that socialism means workers having a say in how the companies they work for are run. But why assume that’s anti-free market? He praises worker-owned companies and notes that hundreds of them exist in the United States today. He might be surprised to learn that these things are entirely compatible with the free market. In fact, it’s a perfectly libertarian intuition to abhor being subject to the arbitrary whim of anyone — yes, even a private employer. If government regulatory and tax obstacles to new competition and self-employment did not exist, workers would have their maximum bargaining power and widest array of alternatives. I imagine we’d see more departures from the traditional firm. People used to get their “social insurance” from mutual aid societies. Maybe in a true free market, we’d see a bigger role for the employment counterpart to these public, yet not governmental, organizations.

What would Moore think about a system in which no one could collude with politicians to legally plunder the rest of us for their own benefit and everyone was free to enter into any cooperative arrangements to produce and offer goods to others in voluntary exchange? Michael, that’s the free market!

FDR’s Second Bill of Rights

Of course, Moore naively looks to government to provide things. His movie laments that FDR died before he could see his Second Bill of Rights enacted. Roosevelt wanted government to guarantee everyone a good education, job, home, health care, and so on. Has Moore ever wondered where government would get the resources for this? He can’t really believe that somewhere there’s a massive pot of collective wealth waiting to be distributed. He must realize that the tax system would provide the money. But how can he not know that if government appears to penalize wealth creation with confiscation, less wealth will be created?

Moore is unaware that he commits the “Nirvana fallacy.” This is the erroneous idea that our choice is between the admittedly imperfect world we’re bound to live in if government leaves us alone and an imagined utopia in which benevolent and all-wise rulers oversee and regulate everything. Of course that is not the choice. Moore’s preferred system, whatever he calls it, would be run by individuals whose insight into the public interest would be no sharper and whose motives no purer than other people’s. However, since they would wield political power — which is the legal authority to compel obedience– they would be far more dangerous than anyone in a free market could ever be. He knows how corrupt politicians are. Why does he think different people would run things in his utopia? Does he really want them in charge of everyone’s job, education, health care, housing, pension, and the rest? It’s hard to understand why he isn’t uncomfortable with the idea of the people being tenants and employees of the State.

Whether he realizes it or not, Moore favors a system in which an elite necessarily would make critical decisions for the rest of us. He’d be incredulous to hear that, but if he ever comes to understand it, libertarians might end up with an unlikely ally.

25 Comments »

  1. Great column! I posted about it here, too.
    http://bit.ly/jT2oP

  2. [...] Sheldon Richman on Michael Moore’s Love Story By Daniel J. Smith http://fee.org/articles/tgif/frustrating-michael-moore/ [...]

  3. Excellent article. Mr. Moore, after conceeding that the problems we have are not result of true capitalism, fails to maintain an accurate understanding for capitalism. In fact, it appears his only attempt is merely to further smeer capitalisms name in hopes for more (and obviously progressively more) of the same “democratic-socialism”.

    Less from Moore: A Love Affair with Misunderstanding
    http://economicsfreedommatters.blogspot.com/2009/10/less-from-moore-love-affair-with.html

  4. Sheldon, thank you. This is the best review of Michael Moore’s movie I have read. It fits very nicely with your other excellent article about the myth of the unregulated free market here:

    http://fee.org/articles/tgif/regulation-red-herring/

    That is, we do not choose between a regulated or an unregulated market. The choice is to decide who regulates it, centralized government, or decentralized private individuals.

  5. Wonderful, Sheldon!

    Unfortunately, what I think Moore pines for, what he means by “socialism,” is a kind of New Deal social democracy based on the most bloated and bureaucratic mass-production model out of the mid-20th century. “There is no God but Chandler, and Galbraith is his prophet.” Moore has repeatedly expressed nostalgia for the “consensus capitalism” of the mid-20th century (including the “good war” that made it possible by destroying most plant and equipment outside the U.S.). I think if we could just go back to a world where GM employed half the people in the country, and they all got union wages, the prospect of a “Brazil”-like world managed by giant bureaucracies would make Moore happy as a pig in… well, you get the idea.

    Moore tips his hat to the Green and New Agey stuff, talking about switching Detroit from producing cars to producing buses and high-speed trains. But there’s no combination of such products that could continue, after a few years, to utilize the same capacity and employ as many people as it took to produce 18 million cars a year. From what I can see, Moore has absolutely no sympathy to anything lean or decentralized–just a greenwashed version of Alfred Sloan and George Meany.

  6. Mr. Richman this is one of your best pieces, not because of your subject matter. Michael Moore is an easy target. What makes this piece so wonderful is how you bring out the essence of the benefits of free markets. I have heard people debate whether Barack Obama is a fascist or a socialist. A more important topic would be to discuss what a free market society actually means. The American public now takes public education, public transportation, regulations, etc., without a whimper, not realizing that the greatest freedom of all is the freedom of choice, the freedom to make the decisions that affect our own lives.

  7. Kevin, I suspect you’re right. He says early in the movie that things were great in the 1950s, and notes that they were because the American firms’ competition were all destroyed in WWII. For him things went sour when the top income tax rate was lowered from 90 percent in the Reagan years.

    So Moore is a radical in no respect whatsoever. He’s just a good old big-government, big-business, big-union “liberal.” Hubert Humphrey would have been proud.

  8. [...] Foundation for Economic Education » Frustrating Michael Moore.  Another great analysis comparing the true free market to this corrupt mess we are engaged in currently. [...]

  9. “…a system in which no one could collude with politicians to legally plunder the rest of us for their own benefit and everyone was free to enter into any cooperative arrangements to produce and offer goods to others in voluntary exchange … that’s the free market!”

    This is a wonderful turn of phrase. When stated like this it’s easier to explain how more regulation may in fact be in order – provided it is directed at reigning in the politicians power to collude and plunder.

  10. Perhaps I should have said “…legally plunder us for their own benefit or any other reason…”

  11. I’ve added this update to the text (see links there):

    Moore gets the tax-rate story wrong, and I let it get by me. The 91 percent rate fell to 77 in 1964 and 70 in 1965; this was the Kennedy tax cut — I wonder why Moore didn’t say that Democrats John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson were the rate cutters. Under Republican Ronald Reagan, whom Moore wishes to demonize for cutting taxes for the rich, the rate dropped to 50 and eventually to 28 percent. HT: Gary Chartier.

  12. Dear Brothers and Sisters, Sons and Daughters of Liberty,

    There are only two types of human beings.

    One type just wants everyone to leave everyone else alone and these humans are students and advocates of the Philosophically Mature Non-Aggression Principle.

    The other type refuses to leave others alone and these humans are the Mobocracy Looter Minions with their hords of bureaucrats, jackboots, and mercenaries that perpetuate the perpetration of the loot and booty gravy-train. Rob-peter-to-buy-paul’s-vote bread and circuses of the doomed Amerikan Empire.

    You are either the one…or the other.

    The John Galt Solution of Starving The Monkeys is the only solution. Stop funding and forging your own chains and shackles. What are you leaving for your children and grandchildren and prodigy!?!

    The Mobocracy Looter Minions must be allowed to consume everything around them, then each other, and finally themselves. There is no other way. Ayn Rand wrote about it over fifty years ago and it rings as soundly today as it did then.

    Get your copy of Starving The Monkeys by Tom Baugh today, before the book is banned and the author is hunted down and Vince Fostered!

    Sincerely,
    John and Dagny Galt
    Atlas Shrugged, Owner’s Manual For The Universe!(tm)

    http://www.starvingthemonkeys.com/

    http://voluntaryist.com/fundamentals/introduction.php

    .

  13. Sheldon is absolutely right, had the title of the movie correctly identified the issue, it would be a movie to applaud. Sheldon’s title “State Capitalism: A love affair” or “Socialism: A love affair” would be a lot more appropriate. Although, in strict terms what we have now in US is not Socialism but Fascism — (mostly)Privately owned means of production highly regulated by the state, when Socialism is — state owned means of production.

  14. Ah, I haven’t seen the movie! So he actually (at least implicitly) applauds the firebombing of German and Japanese cities for making his childhood idyll possible?

  15. [...] Richman – Frustrating Michael Moore: The filmmaker needs to discover truly radical political economy. Michael Moore – Congratulations President Obama on the Nobel Peace Prize — Now Please [...]

  16. You must understand Mr. Richman that Moore doesn’t target liberatarianism (he obviously doesn’t even know what it is exactly), but Conservatives, because he perceives Conservatives to be the defender of free markets. And by electing them the defender of free markets and libertarianism, libertarians have lost a lot of high ground and muddled the concept even more.

    In Europe there are multiple parties, but even there conservatives are not seen as the prime defender of free markets and thus the concept remains cleaner (though radical free markets are a no go in Europe).

    Moore directs his movies to an audience that is in a locked battle with Conservatives and not with libertarians. It is them that have this muddled concept of what free market means and how it works.
    There exists a You Tube video, where you can clearly see that when he discusses his position with more free market and less conservative people. He tends to agree and loses his momentum, because we are suddenly soft targets that concede to some progressive theory and lifestyles. However, this wouldn’t make for a good populist movie, if you have to agree with a group about half the time and even on important issues…

  17. Kevin, he doesn’t explicitly applaud the destruction of the industrial rivals, but he implies that “we” benefited and that once Germany and Japan rebuilt and caught up, we were in trouble.

  18. One point Milton Friedman used to make (about people like Moore) is that, if the situation was reversed, that is if instead of being a socialist in a capitalist society Moore was a capitalist in a socialist society and he wanted to make a film critical of the socialist system, it would be difficult at best for him to not only acquire financing, but to be allowed to even produce such a film without being heavily censored (and eventually jailed and maybe executed) for his actions.

  19. [...] Frustrating Michael Moore | Foundation for Economic Education "Had he called his movie State Capitalism: A Love Story, I might be applauding (with some reservations)." (tags: Michael.Moore capitalism profit statism markets movie review) [...]

  20. [...] Richman at the website of the Foundation for Economic Education sees Michael Moore excoriating elements of state capitalism in his new movie Capitalism: A Love Story and thinks he [...]

  21. It may well be that Mr. Moore gets a firsthand taste of capitalism. I noted last weekend that this film was not in the top 10 grosses for the past week, meaning it grossed under $2 million, perhaps even less.

    While his propagandamentries are undoubtedly cheap to churn out, the speciality branch of Paramount distributing his film laid on lots of TV ads at the time of the initial film launch. This is very expensive advertising even if done mostly on cable/satellite channels.

    My informal tracking of the grosses to date suggest that they may not reach much over $10 million domestic, though the film is still playing. There are DVD and foreign showings, but theater owners and the distributor would normally take most of the gate until certain targets are it. Time will tell, but it seems that trashing “capitalism” of whatever sort isn’t a boffo box office draw.

    Moore’s low rent antics can’t continue unless actual capitialsts (those who risk their own capital) get their money back plus a little vig.

    Sure, true believing statists might flock, but even they will hesitate to part with $10 to hear what they already believe, and few others care about the subject. Moore doesnt’ exactly have a reputation for unbiased reporting or even dramatic presentation. Some 250 lb+ goofball in a Tigers ball cap harassing security guards (who, unlike Moore, seem to appreciate capitalism) is hardly entertainment in this “Punked” and realtity TV saturated world. If he danced naked and set himself on fire, maybe…

    I assume Moore’s past commie loving films have been modestly profitable (so they must be “evil”, right?) but “Capitalism” might be the bridge too far. You don’t have to be a cheerleader for the AIG/Goldman Sachs banksters to want to see the Dow average back up and your 401(k) in the black.

    Moore’s ideological confusion again contaminates his theme here. Obama has coopted the Left, and real Maoists have long since turned into Armani wearing marketeers. As Sheldon and others have duely noted, it isn’t 1965 again and few intelligent observers are confused by the smoke and mirrors of state capitalist bailouts.

    Cartoon quality anticapitalism simply makes no sense, and this Porky Pig’s muddled attack on a strawman simply ain’t that funny…

  22. Muggles: Good point. There is something tedious about Moore. How many times will he stand outside a corporate building with a bullhorn and make some demand? Or put some blue-collar worker on camera and embarrass him? It ain’t funny. It ain’t analysis. The audience gets nothing for its money. I wonder how many people leave the theater wondering why they plunked down the cash. And why does Moore lure us into a situation where we have to submit to price gouging if we want popcorn and a Coke?

  23. [...] As Sheldon Richman reminds us in the Freeman, “Corporate power and privilege derive from political… Big corporations have strong political backing. Hence when corporate executives complain that short sellers are manipulating stock prices and ask that they be stopped, politicians and regulators listen and take action. [...]

  24. [...] think Flowers, like Michael Moore, doesn’t appreciate the difference between profit per se and the returns to power inherent in [...]

  25. [...] Sheldon Richman of FEE explains in his article Frustrating Michael Moore, the term capitalism (meaning free markets) is not used correctly.  What Moore is discussing is [...]

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