Adam Smith (1776, Book 4, Chapter 2) argued that::
(....every individual generally, indeed, neither intends to promote
the public interest, nor knows how much he is promoting it. ...) By
pursuing his own interest he frequently promotes that of the society
more effectually than when he really intends to promote it. I have
never known much good done by those who affected to trade for the public good."
It seems that unless one specifies the conditions under which
self-interest is pursued, Smith's statement may be without useful
meaning. We may think of three different scenarios under which the
pursuit of self-interest would respectively (1) destroy social
welfare, (2) leave it unaffected, and (3) promote social welfare.
Case 1: When Pursuit of self-interest ensures destruction of social welfare:
In a natural ecology, the natural law of subsistence allows the
strong to kill and eat the weak. Surely the tiger pursues its
self-interest to kill and eat the fawn. Does it promote social
welfare (in a society where the prey and predator are all members?).
Humans are the most accomplished hunting animal, and until quite
recently, they were the deadliest economic cannibals (who ate the
wealth of the members of the species, though not much of their
physical flesh). No, this pursuit did not promote social welfare at all.
Read between the lines: Economists should not forget that a very long
and persistent and arduous struggle against plunder was necessary to
establish the institutional prohibition on plunder along with the
institutional mandate to pay. Until quite recently, most humans were
slaves, serfs, servants, and subjects of the strong, and the human
population stagnated, and most people lived in utter misery. Why? If
Alexander pursues self-interest and destroys the kingships of Darius
and <?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns =
"urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" />Purus and others, the
vanquished are finished. Adam Smith closed the door to institutional
economics by pretending that unregulated pursuit of self-interest
would promote social welfare. No. it would not. Take away the
regulations that mandate that the buyer must pay the seller (and make
the plunderer free to plunder the producer with impunity) and show
how it promotes welfare.
Read even more between the lines: Smith believed that humans had a
'natural propensity to 'truck, barter and exchange'. No sir, humans
had and still have a natural propensity to plunder the unguarded and
the weak. Historically, exchange came after a long and hard
resistance. Take away property rights, disband the police and shut
down the courts and wait to see who has the natural propensity to exchange.
Case 2: Subsistence by isolated individuals leaves social welfare
unaffected: Suppose that the individuals are all isolated. Then the
prosperity of one does not in any way help the other. Nor is the loss
of productivity of one in any way harmful to anybody else. If Crusoe
lives in an island all by himself, how does he help anybody else?
Case 3: Gains from Trade is the only possible manner of promoting
gains for society, under institutional mandate to pay and
institutional prohibition on plunder:
If there is commerce, then all participants voluntarily take part in
it because each is able to gain something. The necessary condition
for promotion of social welfare is the social organization of
commerce such that one who is relatively more efficient in producing
something is able to offer the advantages to others.
Reading between the lines: Adam Smith is missing the issue of people
paying for what they get. The producer/seller has no reason to intend
any benefit for the buyer/consumer. The intention of the buyer is
relevant here: he is the one who pays for what he gets, and
definitely intends to get the benefit. The benefit is not unintended.
The key issue is that the condition that permits the gains from trade
(so that the buyer can buy something at a cost much lower than he had
to incur if he had to produce it): the condition of anomaly of
endowment and difference in tastes. In short, the two conditions
that must prevail to allow promotion of social welfare through the
pursuit of self-interest are (1) the existence of anomaly of
endowment (that one is more efficient in production of x than
somebody else) and (2) that society has instituted rules of exchange
(to make sure the seller has a protected right to receive a payment
and the buyer is compelled to pay the seller).
Mohammad Gani
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