Abstract
Immanuel Kant’s political philosophy has enjoyed renewed attention as an
egalitarian alternative to contemporary inequality since it seems to uncompromisingly
reassert the primacy of the state over the economy, enabling it to
defend the modern welfare state against encroaching neoliberal markets.
However, I argue that, when understood as a free-standing approach to
politics, Kant’s doctrine of right shares essential features with the prevailing
theories that legitimate really existing economic inequality. Like Friedrich
Hayek and Milton Friedman, Kant understands the state’s function as essentially
coercive and, in justifying state coercion, he adopts a narrow conception
of political freedom that formally preserves the right to choose while denying
that the range of choices one actually has can be a matter of justice. As
a result, Kant cannot identify various forms of social pressure as potential
injustices even as he recognizes their power to create and sustain troubling
inequalities. For both Kant and the neoliberals, the result is that economic
relations almost never count as unjust forms of coercion, no matter how
unequal they are. Views that identify coercion as the trigger for duties of
justice are thus particularly ill-suited to orient us to contemporary inequality.