Market value isn't an indication of what is deserved.
Agreed 100%.
In fact, one of my earlier posts actually touched up on this issue.
When you're in a system filled with people predominantly concerned with "profit gain," when most of them tend to value practical goods over the others (like philosophy, poetry, and art) -- as the practical goods tend to be most profitable --you'll end up with "demand" largely centered around particular goods over others.
Thus, when a particular good or service is "valued" through the market above another, we tend to say that it's somehow "deserving." Yet this is clearly bogus. Market value does not determine what is
deserved, per se; market value only determines what people incidentally happen to
value (i.e.
desire or
wish to spend their money on).
Someone could spend their whole life struggling to write the perfect play, symphony, or philosophical theory, only to find very few people value such things. In such a hypothetical scenario, would we say, "The person is getting what they deserve?" Clearly not. They spent years engaging in creative labor only to find that the market does not value such services. Conversely, suppose someone spends their off-time writing some workout tips for fun and then happens to publish the material just out of curiosity. Then, to this person's surprise, they find everyone's been looking for some new workout tips to stay in shape. Would this person deserve the potential profits they gain from a few workout tips they wrote for fun in their free time? It's hard to see how we can call this "deserving" in comparison to someone who spends years slaving away over some other good/service.
Moreover, it's very clear that what the "market values" tends to vary from culture to culture. Particular cultures value particular traits/characteristics, just as different families prefer certain friends, just as particular communities reward and punish particular behavior. We all know this; cultural anthropology has taught us enough to know these differences. And thus, when someone "makes it big" in one culture, can we really so easily presume that it's due to the person's "hard work" and they deserve it? Or, is it the very value-system of the particular potential consumers who merely happen to determine whose services are profitable and whose are not?
Thus, a problem:
1. Can a free market ever produce prices based on truly "deserving" values? In other words, can prices ever reflect a more philosophical understanding of one good's value in comparison to another, in terms of effort and work rather than what people "just so happen" to desire/value?
2. If capitalism is inherently limited in this fashion (such that market prices cannot naturally determine what goods are "deserving" according to any particular price), is there any way we might be able to actually allocate resources in some alternative fashion, such that the random whims of any consumer's values are avoided? Is there another "system" we might be able to use instead?
And here we go again... I once heard someone say that Your time and effort and labor, and all that, is worth exactly as much as you are willing to receive in return for it. This means that if you build a chair, and you put all the time and effort into building it, and you sell it for a price, you are saying when you sell it "this is what it's combined worth is to me, after all the labor and materials go into it."
This system for valuing your own worth only works when you are working for yourself. Correction, it doesn't really work even then, because you can still be forced into a corner by customers lacking the demand for your "high" priced item.
If you are working in the system, also primarily being employed by others, it doesn't matter what it's worth to you, because when you say the labor i'm putting into this is worth $100, but they'll only pay you $80, then your choices become $80, or $0 (or something less than $80). It's true that perhaps you need to reevaluate how much the time to make a chair is worth, you say, "well considering they will only pay me $80 a chair, rather than $100, maybe $80 for this chair really is the value in the current market."
Basically, the current system breeds a kind of unhappiness and resentment because people are selling themselves for less than they think they are worth. This is done by repeatedly telling them "you're not worth as much as you think you are." So we start to believe it. Then we see people living in the 1% and think "why are they worth so much? what did they do that they are worth so much more than I am?"
SORRY, VERY UNFINISHED THOUGHT, but I'm going outside for a bit, will finish later.
Exactly. We are often subjected to the natural whims of other people's values.
Let's imagine a system where people's natural social prejudices/preferences/values
determind who gets a job and who does not, and how much any particular person gets paid for any particular job. Let's also suppose the population is primarily Asian, with a few minorities thrown in, such as Anglos and Hispanic. Now let's also suppose the Asians are the "dominant group/ethnicity" holding all the power, while the Anglos and Hispanics are "subordinate group/ethnicity." The Asians believe the Anglos and Hispanics are "inferior" ethnicities and treat them as such (such that Anglos and Hispanics can only hold inferior jobs where they are paid much less than the Asians). They have to scrape poop, handle babies, do dishes and other home chores, and personally fan a giant feather in front of their Asian masters all day.
Would anyone say this system is "fair"? More importantly, would anyone say this system is "just"? If not, why not? Is it that people are
naturally subjected to the natural whims of other people's values?
If I can produce chairs but not oranges, yet someone else can produce oranges but not chairs, and the entire population of the system in which I operate prefers oranges to chairs, can I make a living? Should I merely produce an alternative good? What if I am best at producing chairs, and not so good at producing oranges? In fact, let's suppose making oranges is, rather than like second-nature, a somewhat grueling task that I find entirely foreign to my natural strengths? Is not my ability to produce a particular good rendered null, if indeed the trend of the times is such that people do not desire it? Is my ability to produce a good any less significant than the other guy's ability? Is an orange worth more than a chair? Why? Just because the population desires oranges over chairs? Doesn't that seem a little arbitrary???
What truly determines if one person's abilities are considered "deserving" of a particular amount of "compensation" ultimately lies in the very random values people happen to hold.
Case in point: I buy philosophy books. I enjoy listening to audio tapes about philosophy. I enjoy poetry and have a fair amount of poetry books. I also enjoy art, appreciate art, have art books, and would buy paintings had I the money to collect nice pieces. Suppose society were filled predominantly with people like me, and instead, those people who truly preferred practical goods were in the minority. Suppose practical goods weren't valued as highly as they are in today's world. Would my philosophical inclination hinder or help me? Clearly, I'd likely find many ways to prosper and flourish in a system in which my natural talents/inclinations were highly valued. One can also easily imagine that in such a hypothetical system, those people who were made for practical jobs would likely be pissed off as hell, because it'd be very hard for them to find work in order to make a living, and their creative limitations would likely render them impoverished, in a creative society's wage-slave dilemma.
So clearly, there is something a bit odd about going about the meeting of all our needs through mere market values/prices, when indeed they merely allow the natural values people hold (which are clearly not in equilibrium) to determine the quality and status of people's very lives. And despite the fact that modern people are shouting for joy about the free market, I - in response to this reality - imagine alternative systems in which alternative mechanics, less arbitrary and dependent upon the random whims of the people, truly determine prices and allocate work/labor on a much more rational basis, where some form of logical judgment/deliberation or even "formula" calculates (even if in a sense) the most reasonable and fair distribution in order to allow people to produce enough goods in the most efficient manner (i.e., according to their strengths) while also benefiting relatively equally from the fruits of such labor (except where there is clearly good reason against it).
I do not think this is impossible, just not yet discovered. In order to escape from the nasty ills of a market-determined price/value system, we must start thinking of alternatives.
Alternatively, the free market may be the best system possible. In such a case, there are other options. One is clearly to redistribute income, at the very least (among other options). Any other thoughts?
Hell, there are no rules here - we're trying to accomplish something. Thomas A. Edison
New things are only created without unnecessary boundaries.
Innovate!