R
Ridgerunner
Guest
Augustine and Aquinas defined “justice in trade” as one man giving to another that which he values less for that which he values more.
So, if I want milk, and if it costs $4.00 (or whatever) and I give $4.00 for it, I am giving that which I value less for that which i value more, at least in the moment. Since that $4.00 represents a few minutes (to some seconds, to some hours) of my time, I am valuing the milk more than I am my time I spent in earning the $4.00. The milk seller values the $4.00 more than he values the milk, or he wouldn’t sell it for $4.00.
“Free enterprise” is a circumstance in which I can achieve “justice in trade”. I’m free to buy or not buy, sell or not sell, the milk.
As surprising as it may be to some, the horrid workplaces in Bangladesh or Calcutta actually represent an effort on the part of the people there to better their lives. They come from the countryside where things are even worse. They think they can achieve improvements in their lives (and probably can, on their scale) by giving time they value less for money they value more. They will then give the money they value less for the rice or their daughter’s dowry, or an ox to draw a cart, or whatever, that they value more.
That doesn’t mean we should all cheer for factories in Bangladesh or Calcutta, but we need to at least understand that the way we value something is not the same as another man might do. It takes a lot of effort and struggle for a country to “capitalize” itself, and it takes surplus earnings, even if they’re meager, and time, to do it.
Now, when a government, a mafia, a mullah or someone else with power dictates to me that I shall trade “X” for “Y”, even if I don’t value “Y” more than “X”, or if the authoritarian decrees arbitrarily that “Y” is going to cost “X+Z” instead of just the “Y” it would cost if trade was free, that’s “Injustice” in trade.
Imbalances caused by fiat are destructive to an economy because it skews the values and destroys the voluntariness. As they used to say in the Soviet Union: “As long as they pretend to pay us, we’ll pretend to work.”
So, if I want milk, and if it costs $4.00 (or whatever) and I give $4.00 for it, I am giving that which I value less for that which i value more, at least in the moment. Since that $4.00 represents a few minutes (to some seconds, to some hours) of my time, I am valuing the milk more than I am my time I spent in earning the $4.00. The milk seller values the $4.00 more than he values the milk, or he wouldn’t sell it for $4.00.
“Free enterprise” is a circumstance in which I can achieve “justice in trade”. I’m free to buy or not buy, sell or not sell, the milk.
As surprising as it may be to some, the horrid workplaces in Bangladesh or Calcutta actually represent an effort on the part of the people there to better their lives. They come from the countryside where things are even worse. They think they can achieve improvements in their lives (and probably can, on their scale) by giving time they value less for money they value more. They will then give the money they value less for the rice or their daughter’s dowry, or an ox to draw a cart, or whatever, that they value more.
That doesn’t mean we should all cheer for factories in Bangladesh or Calcutta, but we need to at least understand that the way we value something is not the same as another man might do. It takes a lot of effort and struggle for a country to “capitalize” itself, and it takes surplus earnings, even if they’re meager, and time, to do it.
Now, when a government, a mafia, a mullah or someone else with power dictates to me that I shall trade “X” for “Y”, even if I don’t value “Y” more than “X”, or if the authoritarian decrees arbitrarily that “Y” is going to cost “X+Z” instead of just the “Y” it would cost if trade was free, that’s “Injustice” in trade.
Imbalances caused by fiat are destructive to an economy because it skews the values and destroys the voluntariness. As they used to say in the Soviet Union: “As long as they pretend to pay us, we’ll pretend to work.”