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18 UNDERSTANDING PROUT – VOLUME 1 In debates about equality, the theme of selfishness versus altruism obviously plays an important role. But perhaps surprisingly, nature versus nurture is also invoked. Those on the Left, in keeping with the socialist tradition, give much more importance to nurture (the family and social environment) and they frame policy debates in terms of adjusting family and social circumstances using government intervention to create an equality of opportunity or outcomes. Those on the Right, usually identifying themselves as conservatives, are more inclined to favour policies that reward those already endowed with talent and advantage. To the extent that talent is endowed by nature, conservatives by implication give more importance to nature. (Fascists take this dogma to the extreme.) Conservatives also reason that it is wasteful giving resources to those without the talent to use them efficiently and note that inefficiency is a moral issue. When it is pointed out that such people are usually the poor, conservatives reply that rewarding the rich benefits the poor by a trickle-down effect – which elicits from those on the Left the accusation of hypocrisy and selfishness.72 Sarkar on Marx Sarkar praised Marx as “a good man” with “strong feelings for suffering humanity”. Marx’s writings, he added, “reflected his concern for the downtrodden humanity”.73 He appreciated the dynamism of the communist movement and in an obvious reference to the gradualism of the Fabian socialists whose logo is a tortoise,74 he asks, “what is the use of tortoise-like progress such as this?”75 Sarkar condoned Marx’s rejection of religion because how is it possible to break the structure of the capitalist age without freeing people from “the intoxicating effect of the opium of religion”.76 He recognized that Marx’s rejection of religion was not a rejection of morality. A group of exploiters loudly object to a remark that was made by the great Karl Marx concerning religion. It should be remembered that Karl Marx never opposed spirituality, morality and proper conduct. What he said was directed against the religion of his time, because he perceived, understood and realized that religion had psychologically paralysed the people and reduced them to impotence by persuading them to surrender to a group of sinners.77 However on the issue of materialistic philosophies, Sarkar is extremely critical and Marx does not escape mention: There are certain defective philosophies which think that the material world is everything. When matter becomes everything, then matter becomes the goal of life. And consequently, human existence, human consciousness, the subjective portion of the human mind, everything will become like earth and stone. That is why such a philosophy is detrimental to human development. Karl Marx preached that defective philosophy. THE BIOPSYCHOLOGY OF COOPERATION 19 You should keep your mind free from the bindings and fetters of such a defective philosophy because it is anti-human, morally anti-human. It is most detrimental to human existence and human development.78 The difficulty for those wishing to put Marxism into practice was that it had no adequate theory of human psychology and spirituality. Even before all the basic material requirements are satisfied, the human mind wants to express subtler sensibilities. It might be drawn to the realms of music, sculpture, architecture or indeed the entire universe of ideas. Or it might get the urge to undertake some noble task or to explore the world of spirituality. This is not comfortable territory for those caught in the dogma of materialism. Sarkar notes the frustration experienced by those who attempted to implement the Marxist doctrine. Leaders like Lenin and Mao took up the task of materializing his [Marx’s] ideas in the society. They were not bad people, but as they tried to materialize the theory of Marx they encountered many practical difficulties. Realizing that the theory was defective, they became frustrated and started committing many atrocities. Stalin was a demon who killed millions of people. This all occurred because of the inherent defects of Marxism.79 For Sarkar, the apparently rapid demise of communism in the USSR and Eastern Europe came as no surprise – the Marxist view of the human being was fatally flawed and any attempt to establish a socio-economic system on that view was bound to fail. Sarkar subscribes to a theory of history in which the clash of civilizations plays an important role (although certainly not the only role). The ideologies which underpin civilizations compete with one another for the hearts and minds of people. The struggle for survival exposes the weaknesses of an ideology and stronger ideologies will defeat the weaker. In order to survive, an ideology must provide sustenance to subtler aspirations of human mind and soul. And so it was that capitalism defeated communism, because as Sarkar puts it: whenever there is clash between self-centred and matter-centred theories, the self-centred philosophy [capitalism] will win. The matter-centred theory [communism] will never win. It comes as it goes after creating enormous devastation, and it dies a black death.80 But the success of capitalism has brought its own defects into stark relief and it is to these that we now turn. Self-Centred Philosophy The theory and the practice of capitalism have come under attack by socialists, feminists and environmentalists for well over a hundred years. Yet despite the battery of arguments brought against it, the system rolls on81 – a society that promotes self-interest is not easily checked by intellectual argument. 20 UNDERSTANDING PROUT – VOLUME 1 Capitalism offers choice and exciting consumer goods in great abundance. No matter that few of us can afford this abundance without going into debt. It has taken the combination of an impending environmental catastrophe and a global financial crisis to force people to question the wisdom of capitalism. Even Time magazine, citing eight reasons for the Global Financial Crisis, criticized the “the myth of the rational market” and “under-regulated” financial institutions.82 This part begins with a brief introduction to the theoretical foundations of contemporary capitalism. We then focus on the assumptions that the theory makes about human economic behaviour and we find them to be highly unrealistic. We next consider the emphasis on finance in contemporary capitalism and conclude with a discussion of ethics in capitalism. Here we must make a distinction between theory and practice and note that an unsatisfactory theory of ethics leads to an objectionable practice. A note on terminology. The terms neoliberalism and economic rationalism are used to describe the modern practice of capitalism. Neoliberalism refers to the policy agenda of deregulation, privatization and free trade. It is the 20th century manifestation of 19th century laissez-faire. Economic rationalism refers to the policy agenda that places economic efficiency (narrowly measured) above other policy outcomes, such as full employment or environmental protection. Neoclassical economic theory is used as the justification for both policy agendas. This essay preserves the distinction between neoclassical theory and neoliberal practice. Neoclassical Economics In an analysis of capitalism from the perspective of a scientist, mathematician and environmentalist, Geoff Davies targets three defects of contemporary capitalism: 1) its theoretical foundation known as neoclassical economics; 2) its accounting system, in which all value (economic, environmental, social, cultural and ethical) is reduced to dollar figures; and 3) its monetary system, in which privately owned banks create money (an essential public service) as an interest bearing debt to the themselves. Only the first of these concerns us here. Neoclassical economics is essentially a mathematical edifice. It begins with a set of assumptions and builds on these a mathematical description of prices, investment, wages, interest rates and national economies. The following critique draws heavily on Geoff Davies and economist Susan Richardson. The final conclusion is simple – the assumptions of neoclassical theory are profoundly flawed and therefore the conclusions drawn from a mathematical elaboration of them, no matter how elegant, are also flawed. For the purposes of this essay we note four assumptions of neoclassical theory: • That every agent is actuated only by self-interest. THE BIOPSYCHOLOGY OF COOPERATION 21 • That numerous agents motivated by self-interest produce an outcome which affords the greatest utility for the greatest number. • That free markets are the most efficient means to allocate resources. • That free markets come to a stable equilibrium. The term agent refers, in neoclassical theory, to an abstract human being, family or firm. An agent is devoid of any behaviour other than to make economic decisions and is devoid of any motivation other than to maximize its self-interest. We identify this agent as Homo economicus and his/her characteristics are explored below. We should note a corollary to the first assumption – that Homo economicus is a valid model of human behaviour for the purposes of studying and managing a real economic system. The second assumption, often referred to as the invisible hand, was made famous by the 18th century father of economics, Adam Smith. We shall return to the concept later, but suffice to note here that, if the concept has any validity at all, then it has been badly abused. The third assumption requires that prices in a free market adequately reflect productive efficiency for the given level of demand. This assumption is severely compromised, however, because many of the factors which impinge on efficiency (for example, environmental pollution) escape accounting by the free market mechanism. These are referred to as external costs because they are external to the market. Concerning the last assumption, neoclassical theory is not able to account for real world events, such as the growth and collapse of speculative bubbles, despite these being the apparent cause of the current Global Financial Crisis. According to Davies, a neoclassical economy never strays too far from a stable equilibrium, because its mathematical architecture constrains it from doing so.83 Consequently government treasuries around the world found their financial models quite unable to cope with the Global Financial Crisis of 2008- 2009. Their models described an unreal world. As a result of constant repetition to generations of students, the four assumptions of neoclassical economics have acquired the status of axioms – they have become self-evidently true and therefore beyond question. Again, it is not the purpose of this essay to offer a detailed critique of capitalism, which has been done by many others. Our primary purpose is quite modest – to illustrate the inadequateness of Homo economicus as a model of human economic behaviour so as to shine the spot light on a more appropriate model. Homo economicus Neoclassical economic theory makes three assumptions concerning the behaviour of Homo economicus: 22 UNDERSTANDING PROUT – VOLUME 1 • That economic agents are well informed about the markets in which they participate. • That economic agents are rational, that is, they are able to reason accurately with the information available. • That economic agents are self-optimizing – that is, their only goal is to optimize their gain or pleasure. We should be clear about what is, and what is not, being claimed. Neoclassical theory does not claim that human beings are purely economic beings. Nor does it claim that their environment is purely economic. But it does claim that, for the purposes of simplification and in order to get a grasp on matters of particular interest to economists, one is justified in separating human beings and their world into two parts – that part which pertains to economics and that which does not. About the non-economic part, economists are agnostic – it is simply not relevant. Here we find that neoclassical economics is attempting to emulate the physical sciences, such as physics and chemistry, where the accepted methodology is to experiment with isolated systems and to simplify the description of those systems using mathematical models. For the physical sciences, this has been a successful methodology. Its adoption by economists has proved otherwise. Feminists were the first to draw attention to the problem of applying ‘hard science’ methodology to economics. What started as a set of simplifying axioms or assumptions eventually became a set of dogmatic assertions about the way people actually are. Economist Susan Richardson puts it thus: The deductive character of masculine economics means that a whole elaborate edifice has been constructed on the foundation of a few assumptions about the way people behave in their economic life. Initially the assumptions and the deductions from them were adopted to see whether self-interested behaviour could, under certain conditions, lead to socially desirable results. It was, in effect, a formal logical test of [Adam] Smith’s propositions about the efficacy of the invisible hand. But it became more than that. Masculine economics slipped from the insight that under certain tightly defined conditions, selfish, individual behaviour and egocentric behaviour could produce economically efficient outcomes, to the assumption that people, in their economic behaviour, are indeed, individual and egocentric. These foundation assumptions of economics have rarely been explicitly tested to see whether they have much intersection with the way in which people actually feel and act in their economic lives.84 Richardson finds the principle that every agent is actuated only by self-interest to be depressing because we know it not to be true and yet its acceptance hides other more noble possibilities. This proposition can be (and has been) made to be tautological – any action which is taken is preferred by the author to the alternatives which THE BIOPSYCHOLOGY OF COOPERATION 23 are available to her, so it is self-interested. I find this depressing. It robs humanity of the possibility of noble behaviour. It means that we cannot distinguish morally or in other ways between private and greedy person, the passionate believer in a cause, the person who devotes her life to the well-being of others. All are equally said to be acting in their own selfinterest. The proposition that all economic action is selfish diminishes humanity in a second way. It has been applied by economists, to the effect that if the slightest whiff of self-interest can be detected in an action then that selfinterest is assumed to be the whole of the motivation. In fact, motivations are multiple and complex. Altruism, duty, love, compassion and fellow feeling are among them.85 In the end, argues Richardson, the assumptions of neoclassical economics become self-fulfilling prophesies. The assumption that people are entirely selfish in their economic behaviour also rules out systematic inquiry into the extent to which selfish or other motivations are affected by context and the behaviour of others. If a person behaves altruistically and gets selfishness in return, then she will feel not moral but a mug. This issue is important to the crucial question – does a system which runs on and assumes selfishness increase the total quantum of selfish behaviour, because this is the norm and is rewarded, or does it diminish it because it economises on altruism, saving altruism for circumstances where selfishness is hostile to human well-being? Man-made economics does not explore these questions.86 Let Tim Hazeldine, Professor of economics at Auckland University, have the last word. “Homo economicus is a selfish shit. There is no place for honour, decency, empathy and altruism.”87 Since Richardson wrote more than a decade ago, considerable scientific research has gone into understanding the way in which people make economic decisions and the factors which influence them. The research is important for two reasons. First, its insights inform the work of advertisers and marketing departments. Second, and more importantly for our purposes, the entire edifice of neoclassical theory depends on the validity of its assumptions about human behaviour. The results, described briefly in the following pages, turn out to be fascinating and often humorous, but damning for neoclassical theory. Now let us briefly review each of the assumptions concerning Homo economicus. People are not always well informed Advertisers do not always tell the truth. As just one example, in October 2008 Coca-Cola in Australia employed a well-known actress to feature in a series of ads which claimed that accusations the drink was full of caffeine, rotted people’s teeth and made them fat were a “pack of lies”. The Australian 24 UNDERSTANDING PROUT – VOLUME 1 regulatory body that deals with false advertising ordered Coca-Cola to run another series of ads saying that the originals were misleading.88 The participants in a market may not be equally well informed. Insider trading deals depend entirely on having information not available to the majority of others. Indeed successful trading in many markets depends on the participants gaining an information advantage. Equality of information does not exist in the real world. People do not reason by logic alone We know that people do not purchase rationally because many still buy cigarettes, even when the packet displays images of diseased lungs. But scientifically controlled experiments illustrate the irrationality of human economic behaviour even where addiction appears not to be involved. Here are just a few of countless observations: • It is well known that placebos are often as effective as a medicine, illustrating the so-called power of the mind. But it is also observed in controlled experiments where subjects are required to purchase their medicines, that the more expensive the placebo, the more effective it is.89 • In controlled experiments where men are asked to play a simulated financial investment game on a computer, those shown pornographic images before hand make high-risk investment decisions compared to those shown neutral photos. • A study of 443 women, aged 18 to 50, found that the participants were more prone to impulse buying in the luteal phase of the menstrual cycle (10 days prior to menstruation).90 • Much research has been devoted to the best supermarket layout to maximize sales. The placement of every product is guided by research. Take just one example. Supermarkets around the world will typically guide you on a path that takes you first past the fruit and vegetable stands, leaving the sweets and dairy products till last. This is because market research has shown that people are more inclined to buy high fat, high calorie foods if they have first been given the opportunity to select healthy foods.91 The conclusion we may draw is that economic decision making is not guided by logic alone. A range of factors plays a role and in particular every ‘rational’ calculation is made in a complex physiological environment. Numerous hormones and neuro-active substances are playing a role, either consciously or unconsciously. THE BIOPSYCHOLOGY OF COOPERATION 25 People do not necessarily seek to optimize their gain Numerous experiments have revealed that human economic decision making is far more complex than accepted by the simple theory of maximizing gain. This turns out to be true even for animals. For example, if two monkeys perform the same task side by side, and one is rewarded a grape (big money) and the other a cucumber (small money), the latter will become angry or work more slowly. Yet if both receive a cucumber, both continue to work and eat happily.92 Conclusion: monkeys show an aversion to inequality. The reward does not have to be physical – it can even be the affection of laboratory staff. Humans also behave ‘irrationally’ in rejecting inequality, even if it means walking away from a deal worse off or empty-handed. This is demonstrated in experiments where two strangers (A and B) are asked to share a sum of money, all of which is first given to A as if it belongs to A. The rules stipulate that if B rejects what is offered by A, neither of them gets anything. Classical economic theory says that gain will be jointly maximized if A gives just a small portion of the money to B because B at least gets something rather than nothing and A’s displeasure at giving up something is minimized. In practice, this seldom happens. A usually offers close to half the money and B usually rejects any offering much less than half.93 This behaviour cannot be explained by a theory which says that agents should accept whatever reward they are given to maximize gain. And here lies a problem because, as already observed, the entire theoretical edifice of modern free market economics is built on supply and demand curves whose validity requires humans to optimize personal gain. The theory breaks down because it turns out that factors other than personal advantage also influence mental costbenefit calculations. We will return to these other factors below. In conclusion, the assumptions made by neoclassical theory concerning human economic decision making have been shown to be flawed. It is hard to avoid the conclusion that the entire mathematical edifice built on those assumptions is also flawed. The Culture of Neoliberalism The reduction of the world of economics and commerce to a mathematical abstraction has far-reaching consequences. When the goods we make and sell – our clothing, books and clean water – are all reduced to dollar units to facilitate accounting, it is but a short step to believing that manipulating dollar figures is the be-all and end-all of business and that the reality behind those figures is of little consequence. Psychologically, the shift is from a preoccupation with production to a preoccupation with finance. This shift in preoccupation has even been accompanied, Sarkar notes, by a change in the meaning of words. The original Sanskrit word for a business 26 UNDERSTANDING PROUT – VOLUME 1 person was vaeshya and it meant “one who earns a living through the production of goods”. The word survives in modern Indic languages but it has come to mean “one who profits by trading and broking without being directly involved in production”.94 The sophistication of financial instruments and services has increased steadily over the centuries. However, the 1980s witnessed a singular transition in the history of capitalism because, during this decade of deregulation, financial instruments became an end in themselves rather than a means to production. The transition from finance as means to finance as end in itself paralleled the transition from Keynesian welfare capitalism to neoliberalism. One of the first countries to make this transition (with much haste and social dislocation) was New Zealand.95,96 Writing from his own experience as a politician and bureaucrat administering the transition, Bruce Jesson compares workplace culture before and after: The difference between a productive culture and a finance culture is that the world of the producer is tangible whereas the world of the financier is ethereal. The old-style manager dealt with workers, customers and actual productive processes. The modern manager deals with spreadsheets and figures on a screen. The difference is expressed quite graphically in the changed attitudes of managers to workers. The old-style manager knew the workers, dealt with many of them personally and had a feeling of some responsibility for them. Laying them off was a last resort. The new finance-oriented managers have no contact with the workers and assume that there are too many of them. Laying workers off is their first option. The contrast between the culture of a production-based and public service-based economy and that of a finance-based one is crucial. Each has an ethos of its own. Production-based industries develop ways of life that are unique to them. They evolve standards of excellence and pride in their craft... People learn to cooperate in their work and form bonds of mateship... Finance has an ethos of its own too, to do with financial efficiency and competitiveness. From a financial point of view, there is nothing unique about any particular industry. Finance is fluid, mobile, moving constantly around the world. Finance recognizes no boundaries between industries – or countries – and it treats each industry the same way... At the same time, there is a fundamental contradiction in the ethos of finance. On the one hand, there is all this obsession with efficiency; yet the personal goals of the finance elite are apparently to make and spend money as conspicuously as possible. There is none of the frugality of earlier generations of capitalists, nor much apparent thought for the future. The lavish lifestyle of the elite is matched, within their own companies, by the emphasis that is placed on advertising and marketing. Industry is increasingly dominated by the sales process, with its parasitic THE BIOPSYCHOLOGY OF COOPERATION 27 caste of PR people and ad people promoting a culture of hedonism and avarice.97 Of note in Jesson’s comparison is the deteriorating relationship between managers and workers. When finance is everything, a business has no use for ethics and the culture of cooperation. Margaret Thatcher, the person who perhaps more than any other symbolizes the temporary triumph of neoliberalism, once famously remarked: “There is no such thing as society – there are only individual men and women.”98 It was a nonsense statement then, as it is now. But its significance is clear. Society is the relationships between people. If those relationships are made invisible, then the violence done to them by neoliberalism is also made invisible. The Ethics of Capitalism Debates about the ethics of capitalism usually revolve around the ethics of market outcomes because the market is supposedly the determinant of everything that matters in a capitalist society. Markets are populated by producers and consumers. In a free market, consumers are free to choose whatever affords them the greatest utility. In this way, capitalism side-steps the nature-nurture debate and instead asserts the supremacy of choice. Between producers, however, neoclassical economics promotes the virtue of competition, and here we find an echo of Darwin’s theory of natural selection and survival of the fittest. Producers compete in order to satisfy consumer choices and only those with the best business acumen survive or become rich. However what commercial competition selects is not genes but behaviour – and not moral behaviour but any behaviour that turns a profit. So we find that as the culture of neoliberalism pervades a society, business, and social ethics more generally, begin to decline. In this section, therefore, we are concerned with the ethics of capitalism, both the theory and the reality. The invisible hand The ethics of liberal capitalism were articulated by Bentham and became known as utilitarianism. According to this philosophy, the morally good is that which makes people happy and that which gives them pain is bad. Bentham made no distinction between pleasure and happiness. Of course, happiness and pain are seldom unalloyed, so one state of affairs is better than another if it involves a greater proportion of pleasure over pain. Bentham went further however and claimed that each individual pursues that which he/she believes will deliver them the greatest net happiness. We recognize here the self-optimizing goal of economic agents – which is not surprising because the utilitarians did the philosophical groundwork for neoclassical economic theory. The concept of utility underlying supply and demand curves arises from utilitarianism. 28 UNDERSTANDING PROUT – VOLUME 1 The utilitarian ethic says that individual desires and actions are good where the outcome promotes the general happiness. But, and it is a significant ‘but’, the outcome does not have to be the intention of the original action, only its consequence.99 This takes us back to the previous century when Adam Smith first articulated the metaphor of the invisible hand.100 His assertion was that, in a free market, pursuit of self-interest (that is, profit) leads participants to achieve the material advantage of society as a whole, as though “led by an invisible hand to promote an end which was no part of his intention”. Utilitarians take this argument two steps further: first, they equate a materially optimal result (measured at the government level as per capita Gross Domestic Product or GDP) with the greatest happiness of the greatest number; second, they make an ethical jump and equate the greatest happiness of the greatest number with the public good. Conclusion: self-interested action in free markets leads to the public good. Also implicit in the above chain of reasoning is the neoclassical definition of progress – an ever increasing per capita GDP. By this definition, progress depends on free markets and the invisible hand. Neoliberals ignore Adam Smith’s own doubts about the efficacy of the invisible hand and his belief that “economics should be subordinate to and in the service of society and morals”101 rather than define those morals. Noam Chomsky argues that the invisible hand has been stretched to the point of abuse. Adam Smith believed, he says, that the invisible hand would destroy the possibility of a decent human existence “‘unless government takes pains to prevent’ this outcome, as must be assured in ‘every improved and civilized society’”.102 The 2001 Nobel Prize winning economist, Joseph E. Stiglitz, has a different objection to the invisible hand – it is invisible because it is probably not there. Adam Smith, the father of modern economics, is often cited as arguing for the “invisible hand” and free markets: firms, in the pursuit of profits, are led, as if by an invisible hand, to do what is best for the world. But unlike his followers, Adam Smith was aware of some of the limitations of free markets, and research since then has further clarified why free markets, by themselves, often do not lead to what is best. As I put it in my new book, Making Globalization Work, the reason that the invisible hand often seems invisible is that it is often not there. Whenever there are “externalities” – where the actions of an individual have impacts on others for which they do not pay or for which they are not compensated – markets will not work well. Some of the important instances have been long understood – environmental externalities. Markets, by themselves, will produce too much pollution. Markets, by themselves, will also produce too little basic research. (Remember, the government was responsible for financing most of the important scientific breakthroughs, including the internet and the first telegraph line, and most of the advances in bio-tech.) THE BIOPSYCHOLOGY OF COOPERATION 29 But recent research has shown that these externalities are pervasive, whenever there is imperfect information or imperfect risk markets – that is, always. Government plays an important role in banking and securities regulation, and a host of other areas: some regulation is required to make markets work. Government is needed, almost all would agree, at a minimum to enforce contracts and property rights. The real debate today is about finding the right balance between the market and government (and the third “sector” – non-governmental nonprofit organizations.) Both are needed. They can each complement each other. This balance will differ from time to time and place to place.103 Ethics in the era of MBAs It is not unreasonable to trace the source of the current Global Financial Crisis to a failure of ethics, which in turn can be traced to deregulation and the inadequate schooling of business students in ethics. In the early 1990’s the then Professor of Business at Monash University, Murray Cree, became interested in the ethical attitudes of his students. He conducted a survey of some 380 students from three Australian universities in the departments of business, accounting and marketing.104 Their average age was 21. Cree asked two questions: Q1: Would you be open to being involved in an insider trading scam if the payment to you was to be $500,000? Q2: Would you still be open to the proposition if you knew it would wipe out your parents’ life savings? The percent of respondents answering ‘yes’ to these questions is shown in the following table. Accounting students Marketing students Business students Q1 72% 46% 63% Q2 42% 30% 26% Approximately two thirds of students surveyed were prepared to engage in illegal and unethical practices for their own personal gain and one third would have been prepared to destroy their parents’ life savings in the process. This is a frightening result. As Cree points out, many of these same students would be today’s executives in the banking and investment sectors and would be managing large sums of money. If one is seeking the origins of the Global Financial Crisis, Cree considers the results of his investigation to be “Enough said!”
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