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March 5, 2004
Inheritance,
Capitalism, Freedom & Responsibility
by Tibor R. Machan, Ph.D.
Few
things invigorate critics of free market capitalism
as much as inherited wealth. Quite a few defenders
of this system tend to stress its supposed reward
of hard work, ingenuity, industriousness, thrift
and diligence -- all virtues one can hardly argue
with and which, if one practices them, seem to
justify holding on to the often resulting wealth.
So, critics focus on inheritance, a species of good
luck, which those who benefit from it cannot easily
be said to deserve.
And it is true enough -- notoriously many
beneficiaries of inherited wealth seem to be quite
undeserving. They often waste their inheritance
away rather rapidly; if not, they do nothing much
creative or productive with it; often they spend it
on projects that actually turn out to be out and
out hostile to the very system that made making the
wealth possible in the first place (just take
notice of the many rich kids of industrialists who
decided to fund collectivist think tanks,
magazines, and activism). So, if this result can be
associated with free market capitalism, how could
any right-minded person defend the
system?
The guilt by association ploy does seem to work
because even among the most sophisticated critics
of capitalism (say, the late Harvard political
philosopher John Rawls) the ultimate ammunition is
the view that even those who practice diligence,
thrift, industry and other virtues merely inherited
their traits of character and thus do not deserve
the rewards, after all, contrary to what common
sense would suggest.
Now there is a very serious confusion afoot in
all this and once noted it should disabuse critics
of the idea that inherited wealth and its misuses
amount to any liability for freedom and
capitalism.
To begin with, we do in fact inherit many of our
assets and do not earn them -- our good looks and
health, if we have them; our talents; even much of
what constitutes our personality, something that
often helps us make our way to a certain measure of
success in our lives. Our initial opportunities,
too, are undeserved -- thus the chimera of equal
opportunity. And in each of these cases we can both
build on what we have inherited or waste it away
good and hard. However, none of that makes these
assets anyone else's to take away from one! That
would be a kind of enslavement, actually, or at
least expropriation.
The point is that we all come into life with
some assets and some liabilities. Whether we do or
do not have these is something over which we have
no control. However, once we find ourselves with
them, they are up to us to deal with, and deal with
responsibly.
Inherited wealth is among such assets, yes, and
how we make use of it will be our test of character
(which, contrary to what some claim, is not
inherited but the result of cultivation, attention,
self-discipline and thus very much the source of
just deserts). So are innate talent, and beauty and
good health, as well as their opposites.
Now, where the free society, with its
corresponding legal order of private property
rights and free market economy, comes into the
picture is in enabling us to handle these to the
best of our ability and willingness. It is only in
a free society that the moral fiber of human beings
can be effectuated, made to count for something. It
is only those who aren't subject to the will of
others except as they choose to be who can be moral
agents.
So, yes, your parents left you with something
very valuable -- an estate, a farm or firm, or a
bunch of stocks and bonds, or cash. But whether you
do right or wrong by these is in your hands in a
bona fide free society. And that is true even if
you were just born pretty or witty or otherwise
appealing to the rest of us so we will throw money
at you to gain your services on magazine covers or
in comedy clubs. There is, in other words, no end
of uneven starts in life -- that's why it is
utterly silly to complain that life's unfair. That
is just the way it is, much like the
weather.
Luck, in the way of good looks, talents,
inheritance and the rest, or misfortune, for that
matter, is a factor with which life confronts us
and we then are tested by how we handle it all. One
may hope that those who botch up their good fortune
will learn and, if not, will suffer properly. Or
those who weather their misfortune and prevail will
have their deserved pride. It would be wrong,
however, to sic the government on those who were
chosen either by their ancestors or genes or some
other factors not under their control to benefit at
the starting point.
One more point about inheritance. Unlike good
looks and health, inheritance often comes with
conditions. You get to enjoy your parents' or
benefactors' estate or bequeathal, provided you
carry out some of their wishes -- support wild life
preservation, a zoo, the local little league or a
political cause. One sign of lack of good grace is
when those who inherit wealth with such initial
strings accept them only to renounce them later,
when the benefactor is no longer alive, if these do
not suit them well. The beneficiaries, however, who
try to weasel out of the commitment and try to
treat the inheritance as if they had earned it on
their own, free and clear, are acting shamefully.
That again is a character tester -- and again one
can only hope that others will make careful note of
it and the deed will go un-rewarded in the end, and
that the legal system gives full protection to the
initial conditions agreed upon.
Actually, to some extent all unearned assets
come with certain provisos. Someone with a great
voice might like to have inherited the physique of
an athlete, instead. Alas, they must contend with a
chance at a singing career not at running track or
playing tennis. And those with such a fate may wish
to fight it, too. Alas, they will usually fail --
had they only been content with what they were born
with, their happiness, besides their good fortune,
might also have been enhanced.
Machan
Archive
Tibor Machan holds the Freedom Communications
Professorship of Free Enterprise and Business
Ethics at the Argyros School of Business &
Economics, Chapman University, CA. A Research
Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford
University, he is author of 20+ books, most
recently, Putting
Humans First: Why We Are Nature's Favorite.
More
Books by Dr. Machan in The Academy
Bookstore
Dr. Machan can be reached at: machan@chapman.edu
and machatr@home.com
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