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The Failure of Utilitarian Ethics in Political Economy
I. Introduction
A normative argument must have a normative premise whether it is
explicitly stated or not. As Gordon Clark pointed out in one of his philosophic
essays, it is simply not possible to logically arrive at the conclusion that
people ought to behave in some specified way simply because someone prefers it
that way.[1]
The most popular ethical philosophy to employ with respect to issues of ethical
behavior at the current time appears to be utilitarianism. Yet, most people use
this approach almost by default and rarely, if ever, explicitly acknowledge that
such a point of reference is inherent in the arguments that they make. The
result is that public policy debates are often carried on without ever
acknowledging the inherent flaws in the underlying ethical theory that resides
behind the scene.
Indeed, the widespread confusion over this point is one of the primary
reasons why western market economies have continued to drift towards the ready
acceptance of socialist policies. Edmund Opitz has rightly observed that
utilitarianism with its “greatest happiness principle” completely neglects
the spiritual dimension of human life. Rather, it simply “asserts that men are
bound together in societies solely on the basis of a rational calculation of the
private advantage to be gained by social cooperation under the division of
labor.”[2]
But, as Opitz shows, this perspective gives rise to a serious problem. Since
theft is the first labor saving device, the utilitarian principle will tend to
lead to the collective use of government power so as to redistribute income in
order to gain the “greatest happiness” in society. Regrettably, the rent
seeking behavior that is spawned as a result of this mind set will prove
detrimental to the economy. Nevertheless, this kind of action will be justified
as that which is most socially expedient in order to reach the assumed ethical
end. “Utilitarianism, in short, has no logical stopping place short of
collectivism.”[3]
If morality is ultimately had by making the individual’s happiness subservient
to the organic whole of society, which is what Bentham’s utilitarianism
asserts, then the human rights of the individual may be violated. That means
property rights may be violated if it is assumed to promote the utilitarian end.
However, property rights are essential in securing a free market order. As a
result, utilitarianism can then be used to justify some heinous government
actions. For instance, the murder of millions of human beings can be justified
in the minds of reformers if it is thought to move us closer to paradise on
earth. This is precisely the view that was taken by communist revolutionaries as
they implemented their grand schemes of remaking society. All of this is not to
say that matters of utility are unimportant in policy decisions, but merely to
assert that utilitarian ethics will have the tendency of promoting collectivist
policies. This will tend to hold true in most cases except when such
collectivism has so thoroughly destroyed the economic enterprise as in the case
of the former Soviet Union. In those cases, the very real need of material
advancement will lead to reform in the other direction.
Therein lies the problem. Is the end that utilitarianism aims for truly
ethical? It certainly contradicts the traditional moral philosophies. Both the
older natural law philosophies as well as those founded upon religious
traditions take issue with the use of force so as to gain one’s material
wherewithal. If it can be shown that utilitarianism suffers logically from
several fatal flaws, then the rational thing that one ought to do is to reject
it as a basis for making ethical judgments in policy debates in favor of a more
substantive moral philosophy of life. This is the purpose of this paper. Namely,
to point out the numerous shortcomings of utilitarianism. In addition, it will
be worthwhile to examine a common policy issue in order to demonstrate the
difference that it makes when traditional moral philosophies are employed as the
foundation upon which one either approves of or disapproves of a particular
government action. In this case, an examination of the debate over the delivery
of public goods will prove useful.
II The Inherent Flaws of Utilitarianism
As is well known, Jeremy Bentham is credited as the person responsible
for developing and initially promoting utilitarianism. Bentham’s philosophy
employs the notions of utility and hedonism in such a way as to provide a new
foundation for making ethical judgments. Of course the ideas of utility and of
hedonism were already present long before Bentham lived on this earth. To be
sure, the concept of utility will always be fundamental to any consistent study
of economics. Yet, his assertion that ethical behavior essentially culminates in
the promotion of “the greatest happiness for the greatest number” of people
in society was new and it departed radically from traditional ethical
philosophies. As Frederick Copleston has written, “Bentham did not invent the
principle of utility: what he did was to expound and apply it explicitly and
universally as the basic principle of both morals and legislation.”[4] In this regard, Bentham was acting as a social
reformer who sought to change the world. He vigorously attacked traditional
morality and rejected notions of both the natural law and of natural human
rights.
Instead of approaching ethical philosophy in its traditional way, Bentham
rested his theory solely upon the concept of psychological hedonism. That is, he
used the observation from utility analysis that people seek pleasure and avoid
pain as the basis upon which to devise a new moral standard of behavior. In
essence, Bentham sought to make evil synonymous with pain and to make virtue
synonymous with pleasure. This was his main point of departure from traditional
ethics. Traditional moral philosophies tend to assert that virtuous actions will
ultimately result in pleasure while evil actions will ultimately result in pain.
But in traditional morality these things are never paired together as if they
were one and the same thing. Rather, they exist together as causal pairs. The
work of Jonathan Edwards provides an excellent example of this approach.
Throughout his philosophical and theological writings, Edwards argued that a
person ought to set his highest affections on God alone. In fact, Edwards argued
that the benevolent love of God was the only true virtue. From this position, he
proceeded to argue that such affection would move the person to live a moral
life in conformity to the commandments of God given in the Bible. In turn,
living such a life would result in the greatest possible eternal reward and
would result, therefore, in the greatest possible utility for the person. This
traditional approach to moral philosophy is readily espoused throughout the
Bible as well. For instance, in his discussion of Moses’ faith in Christ, the
writer of Hebrews says:
By faith Moses, when he became of age, refused to be
called the son of Pharaoh’s daughter, choosing rather to suffer affliction
with the people of God than to enjoy the passing pleasures of sin, esteeming the
reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures in Egypt; for he looked to
the reward.[5]
The point of the passage indicates that virtuous behavior
is sometimes costly and painful in the short term, but exceedingly beneficial in
the long term. In fact, the traditional notion of wisdom is that the wise man is
the one who prudently endures some immediate pain for a greater good. The main
point of this is that Jonathan Edwards and the biblical writers never confused a
person’s pleasure with virtuous behavior itself, but rather saw it as a
by-product of a life well-lived. Nevertheless, Bentham simply asserted that they
are one and the same thing, and on this basis attempted to construct a new kind
of moral guide. However, his effort suffers from several underlying flaws which
render it useless in serving as an ultimate compass of what people ought to do.
A. The Problem of Making Interpersonal Comparisons
Among the many difficulties encountered in Bentham’s approach, the
first is that it is impossible to make interpersonal comparisons. It is a
well-known fact that different people have different tastes. In addition, there
are differences in personalities and talents that different people possess and
these differences give rise to differences in their goals and ambitions. All
these variations in turn give rise to a fundamental fact of human existence.
Namely, that it is impossible for us to know or measure the extent of either
pleasure or pain for any specific person in any particular situation. Such
measures are beyond the capacity of our ability to know. While human beings can
most certainly empathize with someone who is experiencing extreme hardship or
enjoying great success, such efforts are only accomplished by projecting one’s
own inward feelings to someone else’s circumstance. One person simply cannot
accurately know the depth of another person’s pain nor the height of his joy.
While Bentham at least recognized this problem, it did not discourage him
from his ultimate pursuit. Instead, he continued to promote his new ethical
philosophy and argued that it was the only way that we could go. Therefore, he
pressed for a way to measure happiness. While he was never able to arrive at
such a measure, he remained confident that one would soon be developed and even
used the term utils as the units in which it would be measured. Economists have
long since given up on the search for a cardinal measure of utility. Strangely
enough however, welfare economists continue to act as if we can actually
accomplish the impossible task by attempting to measure deadweight losses within
the context of modern price theory. It is the rise in the prominence of welfare
analysis that has given utilitarianism a standing in modern policy debates.
However, such efforts cannot escape the reality that such measures cannot be
made. With no adequate way to measure utility in order to make the necessary
interpersonal comparisons, all such policy arguments are reduced to contests
where each side claims that the rewards to be received by them would greatly
outweigh whatever pain might be incurred by those who are forced to bear the
costs.
B. An Inadequate Conception of Human Nature
Another problem with utilitarianism is that it has a very narrow
conception of what it means to be a human being. Within Bentham’s view, human
beings are essentially understood to be passive creatures who respond to the
environment in a purely mechanical fashion. As such, there are no “bad”
motives, only “bad” calculations. In these terms, no person is responsible
for his or her own behavior. In effect, the idea being promoted is that human
action is essentially the same as that of a machine in operation. This notion
reduces a human thought to nothing more than a series of bio-chemical reactions.
Yet, if this is true, then there is no meaning to human thought or human action
and all human reason is reduced to the point of being meaningless.[6]
Beyond this problem, it also seems a little absurd to argue that since
all human beings seek pleasure and avoid pain, that we can conclude that such a
fact ought then be used as the foundation upon which an ethical theory ought to
be constructed. As Opitz points out,
Words like pleasure happiness, or satisfaction are what
might be called “container words.” They are words needing a content, like
the word “assistant.” When someone tells you he is an assistant, you are
told nothing about his actual job. All you know is that he is not an executive.
To make it specific, the job of being an assistant needs some entity to hook up
with. Similarly, happiness or pleasure. There is no such entity as pleasure or
happiness; these are mental states which may be associated with many different
things.[7]
Since this is true, pleasure cannot be the goal of human
action in and of itself. It is simply the by-product of human action which is
actually aimed at the attainment of some specific goal or end. To be sure,
people rarely seek to refine their tastes by considering such qualitative issues
until they are well fed, clothed, and housed, but that fact does not mean that
such issues are unimportant. Even that great proponent of utilitarianism, J. S.
Mill, came to understand this point. As a result, he too began to recognize that
happiness was not something that could be had directly and tried to introduce
qualitative factors into his utilitarianism.
Regrettably, Mill did not press the implication of this insight to its
final conclusion. If he had, he would have abandoned his utilitarianism in favor
of some other ethical philosophy. The reason why this is so is that an effort to
include qualitative factors into one’s ethical thinking necessarily requires
an appeal to some ideal. That is, Mill must have in mind some concept or idea of
what human beings ought to be, rather than what they in fact are, if he is going
to include qualitative factors in his analysis. When this is done, one is forced
back into the mode of the traditional ethical philosophies that existed prior to
the utilitarian project. If one has an ideal of what men should be, then that
ideal establishes a standard of moral behavior apart from the pursuit of
pleasure itself. As Copleston comments on the matter:
Hence there must be a standard of excellence; and this is not fully
worked out. The relevant point in the present context, however, is not Mill’s
failure to elaborate a theory of human nature. Rather is it the fact that he
grafts on to Benthamism a moral theory which has little or nothing to do with
balancing of pleasures and pains according to the hedonistic calculus of Bentham,
and that he does not see the necessity of subjecting his original starting-point
to a thorough criticism and revision.[8]
C.
The Fallacy of Composition
A final problem with utilitarianism that ought to be mentioned is that it
is subject to being criticized because of a potential fallacy of composition.
The common good is not necessarily the sum of the interests of individuals. In
their book, A History of Economic Theory and Method, Ekelund and Hebert
provide a well-conceived example to demonstrate this problem. They write:
It is presumably in the general interest of American
society to have every automobile in the United States equipped with all possible
safety devices. However, a majority of individual car buyers may not be willing
to pay the cost of such equipment in the form of higher auto prices. In this
case, the collective interest does not coincide with the sum of the individual
interests. The result is a legislative and economic dilemma.[9]
Indeed, individuals prone to political action, and held under the sway of
utilitarian ethics, will likely be willing to decide in favor of the supposed
collective interest over and against that of the individual. But then, what
happens to individual human rights? Are they not sacrificed and set aside as
unimportant? In fact, this is precisely what has happened. In democratic
countries the destruction of human liberty that has taken place in the past
hundred years has occurred primarily for this reason. In addition, such thinking
largely served as the justification for the mass murders of millions of innocent
people in communist countries where the leaders sought to establish the “workers’
paradise.” To put the matter simply, utilitarianism offers no cohesive way to
discern between the various factions competing against one another in political
debates and thus fails to provide an adequate guide for ethical human action.
The failure of utilitarianism at this point is extremely important for a whole
host of policy issues. Among them, the issue of the government’s provision of
public goods is worth our consideration.
III.
Public Goods as Seen Through the Lens of Traditional Morality
It is common practice in teaching the principles of economics today to
teach students that one area of market failure occurs when externalities exist.
As such, the concept of externalities is presented as the notion that some human
action spills over into benefits provided for, or costs imposed upon, third
parties. This treatment portrays such spillovers, whether they are positive or
negative, as if they were symmetric in nature. That is, a positive externality
is merely the flip side of a coin in relation to a negative externality. On this
basis, it is then argued that the existence of such externalities leads to an
outcome that is less than optimal and that there is, therefore, grounds for
government intervention. However, this judgment is fundamentally tied to
utilitarianism as will be shown.
Murray Rothbard provided an excellent critique of the mainstream
argument, which favors government action to extend positive externalities and
provide public goods, in his book, Man, Economy, and State.[10] In
his critique, Rothbard points out that the notion of what is optimal in the
sense argued by economists at this juncture is value laden. That is, the
underlying ethical philosophy that undergirds this conception of what is optimal
is utilitarianism. In fact, all welfare economics as it is currently conducted
has as a basic assumption, whether it is explicitly stated or not, that the
standard of ethical judgments ought to be a hedonistic calculus. In particular,
with respect to the argument for government intervention in cases of positive
externalities it is argued that such a situation is sub-optimal because a
greater level of utility could have been had if these externalities had been
extended. This is exactly the kind of hedonistic calculus that Bentham had in
mind. But, as has already been shown, such an effort begs numerous questions
regarding its legitimacy.
Another point that Rothbard made in his critique is that positive and
negative externalities are not symmetric when viewed from a property rights
perspective that embraces a more traditional view of ethics. In fact, from this
perspective the two are radically different events. In the case of a negative
externality, the failure that has taken place is not a failure of the market,
but a failure of the governing authority to adequately protect the property
rights of all the participants of the market. In this case, issues of pollution
are the result of a violation of the property rights of some people by others in
order to garner greater benefits. Alternatively, no such violation of property
rights can be asserted in the case of positive externalities. Rather, any
attempt on the part of government to extend such benefits could only be had by
violating the underlying property rights of the person whose actions happen to
give rise to external benefits. Nevertheless, as Rothbard pointed out,
proponents of government action will invariably attempt to make their case using
two lines of attack. First, those who favor government action complain that a
person engaged in an activity that benefits others does too little of it. In
this case, the proposition put forward is that such gifts to the community are
too small.
As an illustration of the weakness of this argument, suppose on Christmas
morning a child should awake and venture into the living room of his house to
see what presents there might be for him. When he arrives there, he discovers
numerous gifts and begins to open them. The joy of the child’s parents will
naturally rise in proportion to the child’s delight in receiving the gifts
provided. However, if, after the last gift is opened, the child should begin
complaining that the bounty he received was far too little, the parents’ joy
will quickly sour. Those who argue that government should extend positive
externalities, might just as well argue that it also ought to intervene on the
behalf of spoiled children everywhere. But this intervention would be utterly
absurd. In truth, gifts are just that! They are not deserved, but are extended
to others by people of goodwill. And, even if they are extended to others as a
chance by-product of someone’s actions, it could hardly be argued that such a
gift was too little.
At this point, it might be obvious that the case for state intervention
is too weak, but that has not deterred those bent on government action. “The
second line of attack is to denounce [the recipient of the external benefits]
for accepting a benefit without paying [the provider of it] in return. The
recipient is denounced as an ingrate and a virtual thief for accepting the free
gift.”[11] Referring back to our example of Christmas
morning, it is as if the parents, after all the presents have been unwrapped,
should then extend a bill to the child for payment. Or, in an alternative
illustration based on the pro-government action argument, it would suggest that
because my neighbors enjoy the sight of my yard being well manicured, that I
should have a legitimate position on which to tax them to pay my lawn
maintenance bills. While such a case is ridiculous, nevertheless, in public
debate such arguments are readily offered as a reason why public funds should be
expended on education, health care, and a whole host of other so called public
goods.
By not realizing that positive and negative externalities are not symmetric, the entire issue of government action is skewed in favor of moving the political economy in the direction of command and control. The final result of such a movement, will tend in the direction of political totalitarianism in which any political group with enough power will seek to gain its benefits by taxing others. Alternatively, recognizing that externalities are asymmetric, will prove to be of tremendous value in sorting through all kinds of difficult cases. For example, suppose that I am the owner of ten thousand acres of land in a rural area and that ten years ago I planted trees on that land with the intention of harvesting them in twenty-five years. Suppose also that someone should buy ten acres of property directly across the road from my land and builds a house for himself on that property. Day after day, my neighbor enjoys the view of the trees on my property. However, when the logging begins, he may very well complain that I am imposing costs upon him by cutting down my trees. Is his argument correct? To be sure, my neighbor is losing something that he has come to value during the years that he has lived in his house. However, my neighbor does not have any legitimate complaint against me. My action simply means that I am no longer going to provide him with the gift of a scenic view. The fact that I had done so for fifteen years does not obligate me to continue to give this gift into perpetuity. The only way that my neighbor could have a legitimate complaint against me, is that I should actually cause damage to his own property in the process of cutting down my trees. In this case, I would need to compensate him for such costs. Whatever the case, by clarifying the issue within the framework of the more sound ethical philosophy of human rights to property, it will be far easier to sort out the underlying issues involved in such disputes. Reliance upon utilitarianism in such cases will only muddy the waters.
Endnotes
[1]
Gordon Clark, “Can Moral Education be Grounded on Naturalism?”, Essays
on Ethics and Politics, (Jefferson, MD: The Trinity Foundation, 1992),
pp. 7-8.
[2]
Edmund A. Opitz, Religion and Capitalism: Allies, Not Enemies,
(Irvington-on-Hudson, NY: The Foundation for Economic Education, 1992), pg.
131.
[3]
Ibid., pg. 132.
[4]
Frederick Copleston, A History of Philosophy, (London: Burns and
Oates Limited, 1966, vol. 8), pg. 4.
[5]
Hebrews 11: 24-26
[6]
C. S. Lewis provides a very good refutation of such arguments in his book, Miracles,
(New York: The MacMillan Company, 1947).
[7]
Op. Cit., pg. 128.
[8]
Op. Cit., pg. 32.
[9]
Robert B. Ekelund, Jr., and Robert F. Hebert, A History of Economic
Theory and Method, (New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1975, 1st
edition), pg. 114.
[10]
Murray Rothbard, Man, Economy, and State, (Princeton, NJ: D. Van
Nostrand, Inc., 1962, vol. 2), pp. 883-890.
[11]
Ibid, pg. 886.