Don't Blame Adam Smith for 21st-Century Conduct
Davis Blair posts in “Techaisle” HERE
“In this WSJ article,
the Congress is investigating the meteoric rise of Huawei, China’s major
telecommunications equipment provider and accusing it of using technology theft
and government handouts as the path to its’ incredible growth. The article
insinuates that IBM is a major cause of this situation because they have shared
advanced technology and management best practice approaches as a shortcut, and
summing it up with:
“U.S. government
concerns culminated this week in a report by the House intelligence committee
that labeled the company a security threat and warned U.S. telecom companies
against doing business with it.”
“Consumption is the
sole end and purpose of all production; and the interest of the producer ought
to be attended to, only so far as it may be necessary for promoting that of the
consumer.”
-Adam Smith, The Wealth Of
Nations, Book IV Chapter VIII, v. ii, p. 660, para. 49.
Again, from the
Father of Capitalist thought:
“It is not from the benevolence of the butcher,
the brewer, or the baker, that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to
their own interest. We address ourselves, not to their humanity but to their
self-love, and never talk to them of our necessities but of their advantages.”
-Adam Smith, The Wealth Of Nations, Book I,
Chapter II, pp. 26-7, para 12.
In other words,
China is going to do what is good for China and America is going to do what is
good for America. Don’t be surprised when the pupil tries to snatch the pebble
from the master’s hand.”
Comment
Davis Blair’s post contains two direct quotations from Adam Smith’s
Wealth Of Nations and neither quotation is appropriate to the context in which
Davis Blair uses them.
His post is about two producers, IBM and its customer, Huawei, both exceptionally large corporations in
the multi-million dollar turnover range.
By no stretch of the
imagination can Huawei be considered as a consumer within Adam Smith’s
paragraph where he attacks 18th-century governments for responding
to the needs of producers for anti-combination laws applying to their employees
but not themselves, such a tariff protection, prohibitions, and laws against
workers collectively seeking wage rises.
Huawei employs thousands of workers; it is not an employee itself.
The second quotation
is about the daily transactions between shopkeepers and their customers and
part of a discussion about bargaining.
It too is widely misunderstood.
It is not about self-interested “selfishness” but about the bargaining
process by which each party mediates their self-interest/self love to arrive at
a mutually satisfactory price for one party obtaining their dinner and the
other parties selling their ingredients at the mutually acceptable price. If
either party tries to cajole the other to pay their opening price and makes no
move to adjust their demands towards a mutually acceptable price, the
shopkeepers would not sell their produce and the shoppers would not buy the
produce.
Adam Smith was not “the
Father of Capitalist thought”. He
was a moral philosopher who described society as he saw it and the people
within it who behaved in certain ways. He never knew the word “capitalism” (it was not
invented until 1854).
Davis Blair ought not to blame Adam Smith for the trade relations
between IBM and Huawei.
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