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Liberty Fund is translating the Collected Works of Frédéric Bastiat in 6 volumes, drawn mainly from the 7 volume Guillaumin edition pubished in the 1860s.. As a foretaste of what is to come, here is a new translation of Bastiat's classic essay on "The State" from September 1848 after France had endured over 6 months of Revolution. It contains Bastiat's brilliant defintiion of the state:
THE STATE is the great fiction by which EVERYONE endeavors
to live at the expense of EVERYONE ELSE.
The State[1]
I would like someone to sponsor a prize, not
of five hundred francs but of a million, with crowns, crosses and ribbons for
whoever can provide a good, simple and understandable definition of the words:
THE STATE.
What a huge service he would be doing to
society!
THE STATE! What is this? Where is it? What
does it do? What ought it to be doing?
All that we know about it is that it is a
mysterious being, and definitely the one that is most solicited, most
tormented, the busiest, the one to whom the most advice is given, the most
accused, the most invoked and the most provoked that there is in the world.
For, Sir, I do not have the honor of knowing
you, but I will bet ten to one that for the last six months you have been constructing
utopias, and if you have been doing so, I will bet ten to one that you are
making the STATE responsible for making them happen.
And you, Madam, I am certain that in your
heart of hearts you would like to cure all the ills of suffering humanity and that you would not be in the slightest
put out if the STATE just wanted to help in this.
But alas! The unfortunate being, like
Figaro, does not know whom to listen to nor which way to turn. The hundred
thousand voices of the press and the tribune are all calling out to it at once:
- “Organize work and
the workers.
- Root out selfishness.
- Repress the insolence and tyranny of capital.
- Carry out experiments on manure and eggs.
- Criss-cross the country with railways.
- Irrigate the plains.
- Re-forest the mountains.
- Set up model farms.
- Set up harmonious workshops.
- Colonize Algeria.
- Provide children with milk.
- Educate the young.
- Succor the elderly.
- Send the inhabitants of towns to the country.
- Bear hard on the profits of all industries.
- Lend money, interest free, to those who want
it.
- Liberate Italy, Poland and Hungary.
- Breed and improve saddle horses.
- Encourage art and train musicians and dancers
for us.
- Prohibit trade and at the same time create a
merchant navy.
- Discover truth and toss into our heads a
grain of reason. The mission of the State is to enlighten, develop, expand,
fortify, spiritualize and sanctify the souls of peoples.”[2]
“Oh, Sirs, have a little patience,” the State
replies, pitifully.
“I will try to satisfy you, but I need some
resources to do this. I have prepared some projects relating to five or six
bright, new taxes that are the most benign the world has ever seen. You will
see how pleased you will be to pay them.”
At that, a great cry arises: “Just a minute!
Where is the merit in doing something with resources? It would not be worth
calling yourself THE STATE. Far from imposing new taxes on us, we demand that
you remove the old ones. You must abolish:
- The tax on salt;
- The tax on wines and spirits;
- Postage tax;
- City tolls;
- Trading taxes;
- Mandatory community service[3].”
In the middle of this tumult, and after the
country has changed its STATE two or three times because it has failed to
satisfy all these demands, I wanted to point out that
they were contradictory. Good heavens, what was I thinking of? Could I not
keep this unfortunate remark to myself?
Here I am, discredited forever, and it is now
generally accepted that I am a man without heart or feelings of pity, a dry
philosopher, an individualist, a bourgeois and, to sum it up in a single word,
an economist of the English or American school.
Oh, excuse me, you sublime writers whom
nothing stops, not even contradictions. I am doubtless mistaken, and I most
willingly retract my statements. I do not ask for more, you may be sure, than
that you have genuinely discovered, independently from us, a bountiful and
inexhaustible being that calls itself THE STATE, which has bread for every
mouth, work for every arm, capital for all businesses, credit for all projects,
oil for all wounds, balm for all suffering, advice for all perplexities,
solutions for all doubts, truths for all intelligent minds, distractions for
all forms of boredom, milk for children, wine for the elderly, a being that
meets all our needs, anticipates all our desires, satisfies all our curiosity,
corrects all our errors, all our faults and relieves us all henceforth of the
need for foresight, prudence, judgment, wisdom, experience, order, economy,
temperance and activity.
And why would I not desire this? May God
forgive me, but the more I reflect on this, the more the convenience of the
thing appeals to me, and I too am anxious to have access to this inexhaustible
source of wealth and enlightenment, this universal doctor and infallible
counselor that you are calling THE STATE.
This being so, I ask you to show it to me and
define it to me, and this is why I am proposing the establishment of a prize
for the first person who discovers this phoenix. For in the end, people will
agree with me that this precious discovery has not yet been made since up to
now, all that has come forward under the name of THE STATE has been overturned
instantly by the people, precisely because it does not fulfill the somewhat
contradictory conditions of the program.
Does this need to be said? I fear that we
are, in this respect, the dupes of one of the strangest illusions ever to have
taken hold of the human mind.
Man rejects Pain and Suffering. And yet he is condemned by nature to the Suffering privation
brings if he does not embark upon the Pain of
Work. All he has, therefore, is a choice between these two evils. How can he
avoid both? Up to now, he has only found and will only ever find one means,
that is, to enjoy the work of others, to act in such
a way that Pain and Satisfaction do not accrue to each person in accordance
with natural proportions, but that all pain accrues to some and all
satisfaction to the others. From this we get slavery or even spoliation, in
whatever form it takes: wars, imposture, violence, restrictions, fraud, etc.,
all monstrous forms of abuse but in line with the thought that has given rise
to them. We should hate and combat oppressors but we cannot say that they are
absurd.
Slavery is receding, thank Heaven, and on the
other hand, our aptitude for defending our property means that direct and crude Spoliation is not easy to do. However, one
thing has remained. It is this unfortunate primitive tendency within all men
to divide into two our complex human lot, shifting Pain onto others and keeping
Satisfaction for themselves. It remains to be seen in what new form this sorry
tendency will manifest itself.
Oppressors no longer act directly on the
oppressed using their own forces. No, our conscience has become too scrupulous
for that. There are still tyrants and victims certainly, but between them has
placed itself the intermediary that is the State, that is to say, the law
itself. What is more calculated to silence our scruples and, perhaps more
appealing, to overcome our resistance? For this reason, we all make calls upon
the State on one ground or pretext or another. We tell it “I do not consider
that there is a satisfactory relation between the goods I enjoy and my work. I
would like to take a little from the property of others to establish the
balance I desire. But this is dangerous. Can you not make my task easier?
Could you not provide me with a good position? Or else hinder the production
of my competitors? Or else make me an interest free loan of the capital you
have taken from its owners? Or raise my children at public expense? Or award
me subsidies by way of subornation? Or ensure my well-being when I reach the
age of fifty? By these means I will achieve my aim with a perfectly clear
conscience, since the law itself will have acted on my behalf and I will
achieve all the advantages of spoliation without ever having incurred either
its risks or opprobrium!
As it is certain, on the one hand, that we
all address more or less similar requests to the State and, on the other, it is
plain that the State cannot procure satisfaction for some without adding to the
work of the others, while waiting for a new definition of the State, I think I
am authorized to give my own here. Who knows whether it will not carry off the
prize? Here it is:
THE STATE is the great fiction by which EVERYONE endeavors
to live at the expense of EVERYONE ELSE.
For today, as in the past, each person more
or less wants to profit from the work of others. We do not dare display this
sentiment; we even hide it from ourselves, and then what do we do? We design
an intermediary, we address ourselves to THE STATE, and each class in turn
comes forward to say to it “You who can take things straightforwardly and honestly,
take something from the general public and we will share it.” Alas! The State
has a very ready tendency to follow this diabolical advice as it is made up of
ministers and civil servants, in short, men, who like all men are filled with
the desire and are always quick to seize the opportunity to see their wealth
and influence increase. The State is therefore quick to understand the profit
it can make from the role that the general public has entrusted to it. It will
be the arbiter and master of every destiny. It will take a great deal;
therefore a great deal will remain to it. It will increase the number of its
agents and widen the circle of its attributions. It will end by achieving
crushing proportions.
But what we should clearly note is the
astonishing blindness of the general public in all this. When happy soldiers
reduced the conquered to slavery they were barbaric, but they were not absurd.
Their aim, like ours, was to live at someone else’s expense, but they did not
fail to do so like us. What ought we to think of a people who do not appear to
have any idea that reciprocal pillage is no less pillage because it is
reciprocal, that it is no less criminal because it is executed legally and in
an orderly fashion, that it adds nothing to public well-being and that, on the
contrary, it reduces well-being by everything that this spendthrift of an
intermediary that we call the STATE costs us?
And we have placed this great illusion at the
forefront of the Constitution to edify the people. These are the opening words
of the preamble:
“France has set itself up as a Republic in
order to … call all its citizens to an increasingly higher level of morality,
enlightenment and well-being.”
Thus, it is France, an abstraction, that calls
French citizens, real persons, to morality, well-being, etc. Is it not
wholeheartedly going along with this strange illusion that leads us to expect
everything from some energy other than our own? Does it not give rise to the
idea that there is, at hand and outside the French people, a being that is
virtuous, enlightened and rich that can and ought to pour benefits over them?
Is it not to presume, quite gratuitously of course, that there is between
France and the French, between the simple, abbreviated, abstract name of all
these unique individuals and these individuals
themselves, a relationship of father and child, tutor and pupil, teacher and
schoolchild? I am fully aware that it is sometimes metaphorically said that
the Fatherland is a tender mother. However, to catch a constitutional
proposition in flagrant inanity, you need to show only that it can be inverted,
not without inconvenience but even advantageously. Would accuracy have
suffered if the preamble had said:
“The French people have set themselves up as
a Republic in order to call France to an increasingly higher level of morality,
enlightenment and well-being?”
Well, what is the value of an axiom in which
the subject and attribute can change places without causing trouble? Everyone
understands that you can say: Mothers suckle their children. But it would be
ridiculous to say: Children suckle their mothers.
The Americans had another concept of the
relationship between citizens and the State when they placed at the head of
their Constitution these simple words:
“We the People of the United States, in Order
to form a more perfect Union, establish justice,
insure domestic tranquility, provide for the
common defense, promote the general welfare, and
secure the blessings of liberty
to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain, etc.”
Here we have no illusionary creations, no
abstraction from which its citizens ask everything. They do not expect
anything other than from themselves and their own energy.
If I have taken the liberty of criticizing
the opening words of our Constitution, it is because it is not a question, as
one might believe, of wholly metaphysical subtlety. I claim that this
personification of the STATE has been in the past and will be in the future a
rich source of calamities and revolutions.
Here is the Public on one side and the State
on the other, considered to be two distinct beings, the latter obliged to spread over the former and
the former having the right to claim from the latter a flood of human happiness. What is bound to happen?
In fact, the State is not and cannot be
one-handed. It has two hands, one to receive and the other to give; in other
words, the rough hand and the gentle hand. The activity of the second is of
necessity subordinate to the activity of the first. Strictly speaking, The
State is able to take and not give back. This has been seen and is explained
by the porous and absorbent nature of its hands, which always retain part and
sometimes all of what they touch. But what has never been seen, will never be
seen and cannot even be conceived is that the State will give to the general
public more than it has taken from them. It is therefore a sublime folly for
us to adopt toward it the humble attitude of beggars. It is radically
impossible for it to confer a particular advantage on some of the individuals
who make up the community without inflicting greater damage on the community as a whole.
It therefore finds itself, because of our
demands, in an obvious vicious circle.
If it refuses the services being demanded of
it, it is accused of impotence, lack of willpower and incapacity. If it tries
to bring it about, it is reduced to inflicting redoubled taxes on the people,
doing more harm than good and attracting to itself general dislike from the
other direction.
Thus there are two hopes in the general
public and two promises in the government: a host of benefits and no taxes. Hopes and
promises which, as they are contradictory, can never be achieved.
Is this not then the cause of all our
revolutions? For between the State, which is hugely generous with impossible
promises, and the general public, which has conceived unattainable hopes, have
come two classes of men, those with ambition and those with Utopian dreams.
Their role is clearly laid out by the situation. It is enough for these
courtiers of popularity to shout into the people’s ears: “The authorities are
misleading you, if we were in their place, we would shower you with benefits
and relieve you of taxes.”
And the people believe this, and the people hope,
and the people stage a revolution.
No sooner are their friends in power than
they are required to fulfill these promises. “So give me work, bread,
assistance, credit, education and colonies”, say the people, “and
notwithstanding this, deliver me from the clutches of the tax authorities as
you promised.”
The new State is no less embarrassed that
the former State since, when it comes to the impossible, promises may well be
made but not kept. It tries to play for time, which it needs to bring its huge
projects to fruition. First of all, it tries a few things timidly; on the one
hand it expands primary education a little, secondly, it makes slight
modifications to the tax on wines and spirits (1830). But the contradiction
still stands squarely before it; if it wants to be philanthropic it is obliged
to maintain taxes, and if it renounces taxation it is also obliged to renounce
philanthropy.
These two promises always, and of necessity,
block each other. Making use of borrowing, in
other words consuming the future, is really a current means of reconciling
them; efforts are made to do a little good in the present at the expense of a
great deal of evil in the future. However, this procedure evokes the specter
of bankruptcy, which chases credit away. What is to be done then? The new
State in this case takes its medicine bravely. It calls together forces to
keep itself in power, it stifles public opinion, it has recourse to arbitrary
decisions, it calls down ridicule on its former maxims and it declares that
administration can be carried out only at the cost of being unpopular. In
short, it proclaims itself to be governmental.
And it is at this point that other courtiers
of popularity lie in wait. They exploit the same illusion, go down the same
road, obtain the same success and within a short time are engulfed in the same
abyss.
This is the situation we reached in February.
At that time, the illusion that is the subject of this article had penetrated
even further into the minds of the people, together with socialist doctrines.
More than ever, the people expected the State, in its Republican robes,
to open wide the tap of bounty and close that of taxation. “We have often been
misled”, said the people, “but we ourselves will see to it that we are not misled
once again.”
What could the provisional government do?
Alas, only what has been always been done in a like situation: make promises
and play for time. The government did not hesitate to do this, and to give
their promises more solemnity they set them in decrees. “An increase in
well-being, a reduction of work, assistance, credit, free education, farming
colonies, land clearance and at the same time a reduction in the tax on salt,
on wine and spirits, on postage, on meat, all this will be granted … when the
National Assembly meets.”
The National Assembly met, and since two
contradictory things cannot be achieved, its task, its sad task was to withdraw as gently as possible and one after the
other all the decrees of the provisional government.
However, in order not to make the
disappointment too cruel, a few compromises simply had to be undertaken. A few
commitments have been maintained, and others have been started in small degree.
The current government is therefore endeavoring to dream up new taxes.
At this point, I will move forward in thought
to a few months in the future and ask myself, with iron in my soul, what will
happen when a new breed of agents goes into the countryside to raise the new
taxes on inheritance, on income and on farming profits. May the Heavens give
the lie to my presentiments, but I can still see a role in this for the
courtiers of popularity.
Read the latest Manifesto of the Montagnards[4],
the one they issued regarding the presidential elections. It is a bit long,
but in the end, it can be briefly summarized thus: The State must give a
great deal to its citizens and take very little from them. This is always
the same tactic, or if you prefer, the same error.
The State owes “free instruction and
education to all its citizens.”
It owes:
“General and vocational education that is as
appropriate as possible to the needs, vocations and capacities of each
citizen.”
It must:
“Teach him his duties toward God, men and
himself; develop his sensibilities, aptitudes and faculties and in short, give
him the knowledge needed for his work, the enlightenment needed for his
interests and a knowledge of his rights.”
It must:
“Make available to everybody literature and the arts, the heritage of thought, the
treasures of the mind and all the intellectual enjoyment that elevates and
strengthens the soul.”
It must:
“Put right any accident, fire, flood, etc.
(this et cetera says far more than its small size would suggest)
experienced by a citizen.”
It must:
Intervene in business and labor relations and
make itself the regulator of credit.”
It owes:
“Well founded encouragement and effective
protection to farmers.”
It must:
“Buy back the railways, canals and mines,”
and doubtless also run them with its legendary capacity for industry.
It must:
“Stimulate generous initiatives, encourage
them and help them with all the resources needed to make them a triumphant
success. As the regulator of credit, it will sponsor manufacturing and farming
associations liberally in order to ensure their success.”
The State has to do all this without
prejudicing the services which it currently carries out and, for example, it will
have to maintain a constantly hostile attitude toward foreigners since, as the
signatories of the program state, “bound by this sacred solidarity and by the
precedents of Republican France, we send our promises made on high and our hopes
soaring across the barriers that despotism raises between nations: the right we
wish for ourselves we also wish for all those oppressed by the yoke of tyranny.
We want our glorious army to continue to be, if necessary the army of
freedom.”
As you can see, the gentle hand of the State,
that sweet hand that gives and spreads benefits widely, will be fully occupied under
the Montagnard government. Might you perhaps be disposed to believe that this will
be just as true of the rough hand that goes rummaging and rifling in our
pockets?
Don’t you believe it! The courtiers of
popularity would not be masters of their trade if they did not have the art of
hiding an iron fist in a velvet glove.
Their reign will certainly be a cause for
celebration for taxpayers.
“Taxes must reach the superfluous, not the essentials,”
they say.
Would it not be a fine day if, in order to
shower us with benefits, the tax authorities were content to make a hole in our
superfluous assets?
That is not all. The aim of the Montagnards
is that “taxes will lose their oppressive character and become just a fraternal
act.”
Good Heavens! I was well aware that it is
fashionable to shove fraternity in everywhere, but I did not think it could be
inserted into the tax collector’s notice.
Coming down to detail, the signatories of the
program say:
“We want the taxes levied on objects of first
necessity, such as salt, wines and spirits, et cetera, to be abolished
immediately;
The land tax, city tolls and industrial
licenses to be reformed;
Justice free of charge, that is to say, a
simplification of the forms and a reduction in the fees” (this is doubtless intended
to milk the stamp duty).
Thus, land tax, city tolls, industrial
licenses, stamp duty, salt tax, tax on wine and spirits[5] and
postage would all go. These gentlemen have found the secret of giving feverish activity to the gentle hand of the State
while paralyzing its rough hand.
Well then, I ask the impartial reader, is
this not childishness and, what is more, dangerous childishness? What is to
stop the people mounting revolution after revolution once the decision has been
taken not to stop doing so until the following contradiction
has been achieved: “Give nothing to the State and receive a great deal from
it!”?
Do people believe that if the Montagnards came
to power they would not be victims of the means they employed to seize it?
Fellow citizens, since time immemorial two
political systems have confronted one another and both have good arguments to support them. According to one, the State has to
do a great deal, but it also has to take a great deal. According to the other,
its twin action should be little felt. A choice has to be made between these
two systems. But as for the third system, which takes from the two others and
which consists in demanding everything from the State while giving it nothing,
this is illusionary, absurd, puerile, contradictory and dangerous. Those who
advocate it to give themselves the pleasure of accusing all forms of government
of impotence, and of thus exposing them to your blows, those people are
flattering and deceiving you, or at the very least they are deceiving
themselves.
As for us, we consider that the State is not,
nor should it be, anything other than a common force, instituted not to be an
instrument of mutual oppression and spoliation between all of its citizens, but
on the contrary to guarantee to each person his own property and ensure the
reign of justice and security.[6]
[1] To explain the
form of this composition, we should remember that it was published in the issue
of the Journal des Débats dated 25th September 1848. (French editor’s note)
[2] This last
sentence is from Mr. de Lamartine. The author quotes it again
in the pamphlet that follows. (French editor’s note)
[3] Under the French
name "prestations", abbreviation of "prestations en
nature", able-bodied men were expected to spend two days a year
maintaining roads in and around their towns].
[4] [See
"Mountain" in the glossary. Reconstituted on November 8, 1848, La
Montagne issued a manifesto presenting the program of Ledru-Rollin, their
candidate to the presidential election.]
[5] See Glossary.
[6] See chapter XVII
of the Harmonies in Tome VI and the small work dated 1830 entitled To
the electors of the Department of the Landes in Tome I. (French
editor’s note)
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