
JUSTICE FOR SUM
"Economic Justice,"
By Stephen Nathanson,
Prentice Hall, 1997, 144 pages, $19.33
By George Scialabba
Everyone loves a good argument; and as we know from the dialogues
of Plato, few questions are more likely to get an argument going than "What
is justice?" In the most recent entry in Prentice Hall's venerable
Foundations of Philosophy series, Northeastern philosophy professor Stephen
Nathanson addresses the economic aspects of this perennial question. "Economic
Justice" should generate many lively arguments-and not only, one hopes,
among its primary student audience. It's a book that every reflective citizen
can profit by.
To whittle this immense subject down to size, Nathanson concentrates
on three economic systems-libertarian or laissez-faire capitalism, statist
socialism, and the welfare state-evaluating them by three criteria: productivity,
liberty, and desert (that is, what is deserved, as in "just deserts").
About each system he asks: How well-off does it make people? What is its
impact on people's liberty? And, does it reward people in accord with what
they deserve?
Productivity is capitalism's strong suit, and Nathanson gives
it full credit-as did Marx and Engels, who wrote in "The Communist
Manifesto" that "the bourgeoisie, during its rule of scarcely
a hundred years, has created more massive and colossal productive forces
than all preceding generations together." But producing wealth is
not the same as producing well-being. The latter depends at least as much
on distributing wealth in ways that maximize its happiness-producing effects
(or, as economists would say, its "marginal utility"). Severe
economic inequality has been the rule rather than the exception in capitalist
societies. Is this a necessary or merely an accidental consequence of the
operation of unregulated markets? And if it is a necessary consequence,
can it be justified by capitalism's overall high output?
Nathanson's treatment of this central political issue is
penetrating and judicious. First of all, he acknowledges, inequality is
not inherently unjust. What is immoral is not that some people have too
much but that other people have too little; the one is not always the cause
of the other. So a first approximation of economic justice would seem to
be: a decent minimum for everyone, and then let government "laisser
faire"-mind its own business.
Of course, it's not quite that simple. As Nathanson points
out, the distinctively dynamic character of capitalism-in a word, investment-means
that inequalities are cumulative. "The rich get richer and the poor
get poorer"; "them as has, gets"; "you have to spend
money to make money": these are not merely folksy sayings but inescapable
deductions. As a result, even a decent minimum for everyone will require
continuing redistributive efforts by government.
A final point about inequality that Nathanson does well to
stress is its effect on liberty. Defenders of capitalism point out that
so far, all democratic societies have been market-oriented. But it's also
true that in a market-oriented society, political influence is, to some
extent, available for purchase like any other commodity. Lobbying, campaign
contributions, and media exposure require money, time, and skills that
ordinary people don't have and that rich people and corporations can buy.
This is undemocratic. Continuing government efforts will be needed to prevent
economic inequality from turning into political inequality.
But, some readers will ask, doesn't justice simply mean that
people ought to get what they deserve? And don't people who work harder
or have more valuable skills deserve to get more than others? Nathanson
distinguishes between personal desert, which is due our individual efforts
and achievements, and human desert, which is due us simply by virtue of
our humanity. In theory, capitalism rewards personal desert, though as
Nathanson points out, many people, especially in other countries, work
long hours and receive very little, while others receive a great deal through
inheritance or investment income, without themselves working. And, of course,
rich and poor children don't personally deserve their very different life
chances. The notion of human desert implies that everyone deserves enough
resources to support a minimally decent life. Once this principle is granted,
we can haggle over what is "minimally decent" and how much is
enough. What we can no longer do is let the devil take the hindmost-the
laissez-faire solution.
Nathanson calls his preferred solution the "comprehensive
welfare state." It would rely on the market and would therefore allow
considerable inequality; but it would raise enough money through taxation
to guarantee every citizen sufficient resources to live a life free from
insecurity and acute deprivation, and it would try determinedly to curb
the power of money in politics. This may not sound like a radical ideal,
but although a few European countries approximate it, the United States
still has a long way to go before reaching it.
I could say more in praise of "Economic Justice,"
but I don't want to leave the impression that it's flawless. It is a convincing
book, but not quite a compelling one. It ought to be livelier-not only
because today's undergraduates, raised on television, are scarcely able
to sit still for philosophical argument, but also because the case for
economic justice must appeal to the heart as well as the head. After all,
as Shelley wrote in "A Defence of Poetry," "the great instrument
of moral good is the imagination"-and that means stories. For the
benefit of future editions of this excellent little book, I offer Stephen
Nathanson an example from-of all places-television.
In one memorable episode of "Star Trek: The Next Generation,"
the Enterprise encounters a derelict starship full of twentieth-century
humans in suspended animation. One of them is a dogmatic libertarian capitalist.
As soon as he is revived, he demands that the Enterprise turn around immediately
and return him to Earth, where his large fortune (compounded annually for
400 years) awaits him. Captain Picard demurs, explaining gently that wealth
and poverty, luxury and want, became obsolete on Earth long ago.
It is Picard's tone that speaks across the centuries to us
viewers-the same tone that an educated twentieth-century person would use
in explaining to a visitor from an earlier era why, for example, we no
longer burn widows or expose babies on mountaintops or torture captives
or enslave other peoples. We have outgrown all that, we would explain patiently
to our visitor; we can no longer, in good conscience, inflict or ignore
suffering on such a scale. And the still more grown-up humanity of the
future, Picard seems to be saying, will consider the accumulation of vast
wealth and power by some, while the lives of many others are stunted, to
be equally benighted. I suspect that a great many Star Trek viewers were
converted that evening to a belief in the comprehensive welfare state.
George Scialabba, a book critic, lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

"Ruth Crawford Seeger:
A Composer's Search for American Music"
By Judith Tick
Oxford University Press, 1997
A Northeastern music professor and a leading authority on
the history of women in music, Tick examines the life of Ruth Crawford
Seeger, who is frequently considered both the most significant female composer
in this century and a central figure in the American folk music revival.
Crawford Seeger, who died in 1953 at age fifty-two, was an activist, teacher,
wife, and mother who nearly gave up writing music as the demands of family,
politics, and the folk song movement intervened, as Tick's biography vividly
describes.
"The Power of Product Platforms:
Building Value and Cost Leadership"
By Marc Meyer and Alvin Lehnerd
The Free Press, 1997
Meyer, an associate professor of general management at Northeastern,
and Lehnerd, a business lecturer at N.U., offer their strategy for how
companies can stay competitive by aggressively managing product development
and innovation. The authors argue that companies must base their success
not on any single product but on a continuous stream of products that share
common components and technology. Meyer and Lehnerd offer specifics on
how to create such "product platforms" in a broad range of industries,
including manufacturing, software, and Internet providers.