A Letter to the Times
Jonathan Sacks,
Chief Rabbi, in the United Kingdom, wrote an article for The Times this week
(behind a defended subscription wall) on the decline in general morality this week. A long-standing friend and colleague of
mine, whom I saw a week ago at his 90th birthday lunch, drew my attention
it. I penned a letter to The Times reprinted below:
“The Times
8 July 2012
Sir,
Jonathan Sacks
talks a lot of good moral sense. However, he has been misled about Adam
Smith and “an invisible hand”. I suspect Dr Sacks is quoting from the same
stable of unreliable modern economists who claim to be “authorities” on Adam
Smith’s Works and Philosophy and who attribute to Adam Smith sympathy for the “greed
is good” mantra.
Smith never wrote
anything about “the invisible hand” of the market leading to the “pursuit of
self-interest into collective gain”.
His singular use
of “an invisible hand” in his Wealth Of Nations (1776) was a modest observation
that some, but not all, merchants were so concerned about the security of their
capital (mentioned five times) that they avoided foreign trade and preferred to
invest domestically. The unintended consequence of their insecurity was
that they were “led” to add to domestic “revenue and employment”, which Smith
regarded as a pubic benefit.
However, to
generalise this observation (the whole is the sum of its parts) into a theory
of markets driven by a benign self-interest, grossly exaggerates Smith’s views.
He identified other merchants driven by their self-interest who lobbied for
tariffs on foreign imports, which was (and remains) against the self interests
of their customers and the public good.
There are another
70 instances self-interests having malign consequences for the public good in
Wealth Of Nations.
Yours sincerely
Gavin Kennedy,
Professor Emeritus”
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