**


*Laundry Detergent: A Socialist Failure
*Tuesday, August 16, 2011
by Patrick Barron <http://mises.org/daily/author/1498/Patrick-Barron>

In his second great book,
*Socialism*<http://mises.org/resources/2736/Socialism-An-Economic-and-Sociological-Analysis>,
Ludwig von Mises explained why socialism is not an alternative to capitalism
and is, in fact, not an alternative economic system at all.

The elimination of private property by the socialist state makes economic
calculation impossible; thus, socialism in its pure form could not solve the
ever-present problem of scarcity. The directors of a socialist state would
not know what to produce, how to produce it, how much to produce, etc. Only
free-market capitalism can solve these problems.

The main benefit of having private-property rights is being able to make
entrepreneurial decisions. Those who make good decisions prosper and are
granted control of more resources. The opposite happens with entrepreneurial
failures. So capitalist economies grow from the accumulation of capital, and
socialist economies consume capital until they collapse.


*Laundry Detergents That Don't Get Clothes Clean

*I was reminded of this basic law of economic science a few months ago when
my wife and I had dinner with Professor Yuri
Maltsev<http://mises.org/fellow.aspx?Id=11>at the home of Michael
and Dawn McKay <http://www.radiofreemarket.com/> in Fairfield, Iowa.
Needless to say, the evening was delightful. We all had just read Jeffrey
Tucker's Mises Daily article "Why Everything is
Dirtier,"<http://mises.org/daily/5267/Why-Everything-Is-Dirtier>which
is about why laundry detergent no longer gets clothes "clean and
bright."

Yuri said something that I will never forget. He informed us that when he
told his mother, who suffered for most of her life living in Soviet Russia,
about Jeffrey's article, she replied, "Ah, the first sign of socialism ­
soap that does not clean." What a marvelous insight! I subsequently
reread Jeffrey's
article <http://mises.org/daily/5267/Why-Everything-Is-Dirtier> -- which I
highly recommend to you, dear reader.

Laundry detergents no longer contain trisodium phosphate, an agent that
helps whisk the dirt away during the rinse cycle. That dinginess you see in
your clothes is the dirt that was not removed. The lack of TSP also explains
why your automatic dishwasher does not get your dishes spotless anymore.

The EPA banned the substance from commercially sold laundry products some
time ago, although the consumer still can buy it in pure form and add it to
his home laundry. A spokesman for the EPA explained that phosphates, a
natural product, harmed the environment. Why we all did not succumb to
phosphate poisoning long ago was never explained. Mother Nature had
allegedly been harmed, so the substance was banned. Getting clothes clean
was never a consideration.

(Twenty-five years ago, I consulted for the Citrus and Chemical Bank in
Central Florida. The "Citrus" designation came from the local orange groves,
and the "Chemical" designation came from the local open-face phosphate
mines. I can tell you that both oranges and humans were coexisting very
healthily along with the huge natural deposits of phosphate.)

In banning phosphates from commercial laundry detergents, the EPA did not
consider the desires of the consumers or the property rights of the
producers; thus, absent market forces and legal protections, there was no
need for economic calculation. The EPA spokesman did not care how or whether
the consumer's clothes were laundered satisfactorily.

The EPA does not own the businesses that manufacture commercial laundry
detergents; but in *Human
Action*<http://mises.org/resources/3250/human-action>Mises explained
the two forms of socialism ­ that of the Russian variety and
that of the German variety. In the Russian variety (that of Soviet
Communism), it is clear that the state owns the means of production. In the
German variety (that of Nazi Germany) businesses are still nominally owned
by private individuals, but the state makes all the important decisions ­
and even some seemingly trivial but still important ones, like what we can
or cannot use to clean our dishes or clothes.

Yuri's mother understood that a small "first step" of socialism has been
taken. Mises explained that regardless of which socialist approach is
pursued, Russian or German, the deleterious results were the same.

Socialism expands, freedom wanes; the state steps in and reduces our
choices. As a result, our quality of life is reduced -- and life becomes
more *soiled.



*Patrick Barron is a private consultant in the banking industry. He teaches
in the Graduate School of Banking at the University of Wisconsin, Madison,
and teaches Austrian economics at the University of Iowa, in Iowa City,
where he lives with his wife of 40 years.


http://mises.org/daily/5532/Laundry-Detergent-A-Socialist-Failure
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