Deirdre McCloskey wrote:
>
> I am as the British say gobsmacked.
>
> What's our next move?
>
As there have been no responses to this question as yet, let me give it
a try. I presume the question means, "What do we, as people with an
interest in economic history, do?" The answer is, "Explicate the history
of property." The reason OUP and others can get away with this is that
they are asserting a private property right, and property rights tend to
be regarded, quite properly, as more or less "sacred." So there is a
sort of "the govmint ought to leave property alone!" and "a property
owner can do whatever he likes" mentality that surrounds such questions.
However, while private property is proper to man, the particular forms
of property are always conventional. It is the community that states the
rights and obligations of any particular form of property. In a tribal
society, the "community" means whatever social arrangements govern that
village; in a nation-state, the community means, in large measure, the
government. We depend on the government to record our titles and defend
our rights, and without government (of whatever form) there can be no
private property. Therefore, "private" property is, paradoxically, a
government question and cannot exist without gov't. Indeed, property is
the most basic of all economic relationships, and everything else
depends on the particular form of property.
Property has had any number of forms throughout history. Our own forms
are of somewhat recent vintage. Property as radically private only gets
codified in English law with the Statute of Frauds in 1677. The property
rights of corporations, in their current form, only go back to 1876 and
the /Santa Fe v. Santa Clara/ case, an egregious example of legislating
from the bench.
Private property has its most secure justification where exclusive use
of property is necessary to make it useful. If everybody has a right to
use your living room, your living room will be useful to no one.
Property has its weakest justification where common usage enhances
rather than limits property. Knowledge is property of this sort; the
more that people use it the better it gets. The only justification for
"privatising" knowledge is to ensure that those who worked to produce it
get a fair reward. But surely, this is a temporary right, asserted only
for as long as is reasonable, and not perpetual.
By merely explicating the different forms and justifications for
property, we show that there are other possibilities and assert than any
particular form must have a specific justification. This, I think, is a
beginning of a response.
John M?daille
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