The Capitalist Manifesto: The
Historic, Economic, and Philosophic Case for Laissez-Faire
by Andrew Bernstein
University Press of America • 2005 • 500 pages •
$19.95
Andrew Bernstein is best known as one of the most
passionate, interesting, and knowledgeable lecturers
associated with the Ayn Rand Institute. He is also the
author of Cliff’s Notes for Ayn Rand’s Anthem,
The Fountainhead, and Atlas Shrugged and the
writer of the fine Objectivist-oriented novel, Heart of a
Pagan. His provocative new book, The Capitalist
Manifesto, is written for rational individuals
everywhere and is a tribute to men of the mind and to
capitalism—the social system of freedom, morality,
individual rights, the human mind, creativity, wealth,
peace, and progress.
The theme of Bernstein’s powerful work is that capitalism is
the system of the mind. Part I of his book performs a
practical task by focusing on the nature and history of
capitalism. Part II provides rational, philosophical, moral,
and economic explanations for capitalism’s superiority. Part
III then refutes moral arguments against capitalism and
applies its principles to solving specific issues and
problems in society.
The author examines the rise of capitalism in its full
historical context. He explains that capitalism was the
outgrowth of European and American Enlightenments and that
the political, technological, and industrial revolutions of
the late eighteenth century involved the application of
pro-reason Enlightenment principles. The only nation founded
on Enlightenment themes and principles, the United States,
became the center of technological and industrial
progress. During the eighteenth century in Western culture,
there was an emphasis upon reason, science, progress, and
the rights of men. Enlightenment thinkers, such as Newton
and Locke, espoused secular rationalism, metaphysical
rationalism, the inherent orderliness of nature, humanism,
and the lawfulness of human nature and the rest of nature.
Bernstein, a self-proclaimed hero-worshipper, discusses the
heroes of the Enlightenment as well as those of late
nineteenth century America, which he labels “The Inventive
Period.” In this work the author clearly expresses his
admiration for the “capitalist heroes of history,”
including, but not limited to: Franklin, Jefferson, Smith,
Whitney, Carnegie, Rockefeller, Watt, Morse, Vanderbilt,
Hill, Morgan, Harriman, Edison, Jenner, Bell, Singer, Field,
Westinghouse, Eastman, Duryea, the Wright brothers, and
Goddard.
Bernstein thoroughly chronicles pre-capitalist systems of
political economy. Before the industrial revolution, there
was widespread famine, filth, plague, and destitution;
living standards in Europe were as low or lower than in the
poorest regions of the Third World today. He documents how
tyranny suppressed minds and rights and undermined man’s
means to make technological and industrial advances. The
author also illustrates how the capitalist revolution of the
late eighteenth century was based on its inherited
scientific advances of the Age of Reason.
The book discusses how the British industrial revolution in
the late eighteenth century was an integral part of the
Scottish Enlightenment. Bernstein explains that the supposed
Golden Age of workers in pre-capitalist Europe is simply a
myth and that capitalism and the industrial revolution
greatly raised living standards (e.g., sanitation and
hygiene) and life expectancies. The author provides much
factual evidence to establish capitalism’s historical
achievements compared with those of its predecessors with
respect to the enormous practical benefits it brings to
man’s life. According to Bernstein, in two centuries
capitalism has brought greater improvement in the material
conditions of men’s lives than have the statist regimes of
all preceding centuries combined. He illustrates that
capitalism generates freedom and prosperity wherever it has
been implemented.
The author discusses the enormous productivity of the
so-called “Robber Barons”—the productive geniuses who were
enormous benefactors of the human race. The Robber Barons,
for the most part, were market entrepreneurs (rather than
political entrepreneurs) who succeeded by pleasing
customers, rather than through government subsidies and
legislation. The Robber Barons enriched more than they
robbed and employed thousands, which gave stability to
American families. They also developed innovations that
benefited all Americans. In conjunction with this, Bernstein
explains that anti-capitalist historians such as Hofstadter
and Josephson ignored the role of the mind in the production
of the wealth achieved under capitalism.
Bernstein’s magnum opus thoroughly documents how
capitalism eradicated impoverishment and created prosperity.
It explains how poor immigrants used their rationality and
free will to choose to emigrate to America, and how the poor
in America employed their rational consciousness to “vote”
to work in factories rather than to toil in the farms and
fields.
Part II of The Capitalist Manifesto explains that
capitalism embodies the rational principles upon which human
survival and prosperity depend, and that capitalism is the
only moral political-economic system. The philosophical and
moral theories presented in this section are grounded fully
in the work of Ayn Rand. In addition, the economic
principles discussed are congruent with the works of
Austrian economists such as Ludwig von Mises and
Austrian-Objectivists like George Reisman. For me, this
section on deeper philosophical and conceptual issues was
the most stimulating and interesting part of the book.
Bernstein correctly argues that rational egoism is a
requirement of human life and is the moral code underpinning
capitalism. Capitalism liberates the creative human mind,
which serves as man’s survival instrument. The author
explains that morality arises only because of the objective
factual requirements of human survival and flourishing on
earth, and that what is good is what promotes man’s life.
The author explains that the mind’s fullest functioning
requires the legal protection of individual rights. Each
human being has the fundamental right to act on his own
thinking, and thus requires protection from the initiation
of force or fraud. Capitalism requires a government that
protects rights and that does not itself violate its
citizens’ rights and freedom. Bernstein observes that the
U.S. Constitution is flawed because it allows the government
to initiate force against American citizens.
Egoism is the pursuit of an individual’s rational
self-interest. Bernstein explains clearly why a man should
be the beneficiary of his own actions. He validates egoism
as a universal principle and as the only proper moral
code. He defends capitalism as the logical
political-economic consequence of an egoistic approach to
ethics and as the embodiment of rational philosophical
principles.
Bernstein maintains that individual rights and capitalism
are necessary for man’s life-gaining quest for values. He
thoroughly discusses the nature of value and the standard by
which values are judged. He explains that the concept of
value is based on metaphysical facts of reality and
identifies the relationship between values and the nature of
human beings. The ultimate value is an individual’s life and
the standard of value is man’s survival qua man. The
author identifies man’s mind as the primary means to gain
values, to promote one’s life, and to seek one’s
happiness. He also describes virtues as a means by which a
man achieves values. It follows that productiveness is one
of the moral virtues.
When men are free they can use their minds to attain their
goals and further their lives. Bernstein explains that
reason does not function automatically and that
irrationality is evasion, or the refusal to think. To use
one’s mind as a tool of survival involves the choice to
focus on reality. Focus involves a man’s decision to
activate his mind and to be alert for opportunities to form
his ideas, values, and principles.
The author describes altruism, the surrendering of values,
as a code of self-sacrifice. Rejecting altruism, he explains
that each human being should pursue and gain the values his
life and happiness require. He thus rejects Kant’s ethics of
duty, which maintains that each person has unchosen
obligations to others and thus should perform selfless
service to them. Kant’s moral philosophy deprives
self-interest of any and all honor. The rejection of
self-interest is also a rejection of all human values,
because to pursue one’s self-interest means to pursue values
and goals. Kant’s vision of morality thus consists of total,
abject selflessness.
Bernstein illustrates that capitalism is the only system
that helps the poor, is the cure for racism and bigotry, and
is the solution for problems in education and healthcare. He
also explains that slavery is founded on the initiation of
brute force and that abolition involves free capitalist
nations struggling against statist regions that reject
individual rights. In addition, the author evaluates the
economic performance of capitalist nations such as America,
South Korea, Hong Kong, and Taiwan versus that of socialist
regions like Soviet Russia, Cuba, Socialist Scandinavia,
North Korea, and China. Real-world performance indicates
that the non-capitalist nations of the world are not only
repressed but have much lower living standards. Bernstein
observes that, when the mind is suppressed,
industrialization and technological development are
stifled. Furthermore, it is statism that gives rise to evils
such as war, imperialism, and slavery.
The author describes how capitalism liberates both the
producers who set the economic terms and the customers who
apprehend the value of products. Economic calculation
provides a standard of action for planning under capitalism
because of the existence of market prices that result from
the thinking and actions of countless people. He explains
how capitalism applies a vastly greater and incalculable
amount of knowledge and mind power to solving problems of
production and distribution than does socialism. The author
states that the problem of socialism is that it requires
economic planning without the benefit of an intellectual
division of labor.
The book details how economic ills commonly ascribed to
capitalism such as monopolies, unemployment, inflation, and
economic downturns are actually caused by statism. Coercive
monopolies stem from the government making laws debarring
entry into a field. Unemployment results from minimum wage
laws and the granting of coercive power to unions. Inflation
is a product of government expanding the money supply which
leads to debasement of the monetary standard. Depression and
recession are brought about by regulations and interventions
that strangle the economy.
Statist regimes are at chronic war with their own citizens
and invariably hate America, the world’s freest
nation. Bernstein observes that statism needs war and
survives by looting, whereas a free country requires peace
and survives by production. He states that world peace
requires the establishment of global capitalism (i.e.,
international free trade). Capitalist nations would protect
their citizens’ freedom of speech, freedom of the press, and
economic freedoms such as the right to own property, to
start their own businesses, and to seek
profits. Pre-capitalist and non-capitalist systems are
politically oppressive and economically destitute and their
citizens have few or no rights.
The charges that capitalism is responsible for imperialism
and slavery are false. According to Bernstein, a government
that fails to recognize the rights of its own citizens
exists under no moral constraints with respect to
foreigners. Individuals of any nationality are its potential
victims. Imperialism is simply warfare to conquer a
territory. Like war and imperialism, slavery is founded on
the initiation of force. Slavery relies on force and thus
undermines the role of the mind in man’s life.
Bernstein’s masterpiece provides a systematic treatment of
capitalism as developed over centuries through a number of
disciplines including philosophy, economics, political
science, law, history, and so on. The Capitalist
Manifesto is interesting, jargon free, clearly written,
and accessible to a wide range of readers. It argues
convincingly that wealth comes only from adherence to the
rational principles of the free enterprise system. The book
is a fine statement of the moral and economic arguments for
capitalism. This tour de force presentation
thoroughly and eloquently addresses virtually every question
or criticism anyone has ever made about the morality or
practicality of capitalism.
This solid work is a real contribution to understanding the
philosophical, moral, and economic underpinnings of
capitalism. Its underlying theme is that the mind is man’s
tool of survival and that the mind requires
freedom. Bernstein’s well-written book persuasively argues
that capitalism rests on a sound moral foundation. By doing
that, it serves an essential function.
Although this book is written for the educated generalist or
layperson and the college student, it should be read by
everyone—especially by journalists and
politicians. Hopefully, it will be adopted as a textbook
both here and abroad with foreign editions and
translations. Bernstein’s seminal work is a triumph in the
crusade for freedom and individual rights. We certainly need
more books like this.
Dr. Edward W. Younkins is Professor of Accountancy at
Wheeling Jesuit University. He is the author of
Capitalism and Commerce: Conceptual Foundations of Free
Enterprise [Lexington Books, 2002]. Many of Dr.
Younkins's essays can be found on line at his personal web
page at
www.quebecoislibre.org. You can contact Dr. Younkins
at younkins@wju.edu.
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