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Achieving a Voluntary Society with Private Communities

Achieving a Voluntary Society with Private Communities. Fred E. Foldvary Santa Clara University ffoldvary@scu.edu. What is “private”?. * The private sector: not government. * Includes private Communities * Government sector: coercive * Private: voluntary, free choice. What is freedom?.

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Achieving a Voluntary Society with Private Communities

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  1. Achieving a Voluntary Society with Private Communities Fred E. Foldvary Santa Clara University ffoldvary@scu.edu

  2. What is “private”? * The private sector: not government. * Includes private Communities * Government sector: coercive * Private: voluntary, free choice.

  3. What is freedom? • Free market = voluntary action. • An ethic provides the meaning. • Must be a universal ethic. • Derived from human nature: • Equality and independence.

  4. The Soul of Liberty The universal ethic of freedom and human rights.

  5. The universal ethic • 1. Benefit: welcomed by the recipient. • 2. Benefits are morally good. • 3. Harm: invasion into other’s domain. • 4. All acts, and only those acts, that coercively harm others are evil. • 5. All other acts are morally neutral.

  6. The pure free market • includes self-governance; • better coordinates, innovates, liberates; • is inherently ethical, because it is defined by the same ethic as that by which justice is judged.

  7. “public” • Latin “publicus,” the people. • The “public sector,” government, as in “public school” or “public library.” • “Public school” originally a school intended for the benefit of the public. • In the US it came to mean a school run by government.

  8. “private” • “Private goods,” individually used. • Public goods = collective goods. • The “private sector,” non-governmental. • Collective: non-rival • Excludable and non-excludable. • Club goods: excludable

  9. Private communities • proprietary communities: hotels, ships, shopping centers, office buildings, marinas, land trusts. • apartments owned by landlords? • duplex? condominiums? co-ops? • homeowners’ associations?

  10. Condominium governance vs. municipal government • Homeowners’ Association, condominiums, housing co-ops • Explicit contracts • Boards are legally equal with members.

  11. Residential associations • Clubs that provide collective goods • to their members • with rules, CC&Rs: conditions, covenants, and restrictions. • Covenant: contract to do or not do.

  12. Government uses force • Government is imposed. • Governors are tyrants. • Therefore it needs to be limited. • But voluntary governance can do whatever is voluntary.

  13. Spencer MacCallum: The same agency that performs public services also performs disservices, cannibalizing society with taxation: schizophrenia. Government confiscates property to protect property!

  14. Government versus Private Enterprise • Solution: private communities • Governance: rules and enforcement. • State: government and territory. • Club: voluntary, contractual, can be but need not be territorial.

  15. Governments vs. voluntary governance Government: • No real, explicit, agreement. • Sovereign immunity = inequality. Voluntary governance: • Explicit contracts, real agreement. • All are legal equals.

  16. Everything can be private • Civic associations can federate. • Multi level to the continental level. • Top level can provide for defense. • Most folks are in the network or confederation.

  17. Territorial goods • The goods impact territory. • Most users are within the boundary. • The collective goods generate rent. • Local users are not free riders. • Who is the free rider?

  18. The public finances of private communities • Private communities collect rent. • Build if public goods generate more rent than cost. • Public goods self-financing. • The use of rent is efficient.

  19. Financing private communities • The rent reflects the demand for the territorial good. • The optimal amount is where MR = MC (marginal rent = marginal cost)

  20. Paying for public goods • Example: hotels. Elevator has zero marginal user cost. • Hotel provides transit at zero charge. • The room pays for the collective goods. • Likewise condominiums, homeowner associations, cooperatives.

  21. Private streets and transit * Cars pay congestion, pollution charges. * Private jitneys have curb rights. * Public transit is free if generates rent and is not crowded. * No fuel taxes. * No carpool lanes.

  22. Replace zoning and regulations • Covenants and easements. • Association deeds and bylaws. • Proprietary governance. • Transition: allow secession and tax substitution.

  23. Public Goods and Private Communities, 1994 • .

  24. Public Goods and Private Communities • There is market success providing public goods, in theory and in practice. • Demand is revealed by rent. • No free riders: users pay rent. • Proprietary communities and residential associations.

  25. Voluntary-community thought • Thomas Spence, 1775, leaseholds. • Ebenezer Howard, 1902, garden cities. • Spencer Heath, Citadel, Market and Altar, 1957. • Spencer MacCallum, Art of Community, 1970. Grandson of Heath. • The Voluntary City, 2002

  26. Market success • The doctrine of “market failure” overlooks: • Private communities and governance • The motivation of sympathy • Space and rent

  27. Questions? www.foldvary.net/works/libertopia.ppt

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