The truth about Upton Sinclair’s “The Jungle”
Note: Previous versions of this article were published by Downsize DC and the Zero Aggression Project.
Many people believe state regulation is needed to protect us from bad business practices. I debunked this argument in How to Think About Regulation. But the belief also rests on some false history most of us learned in State schools. Most students are taught about a famous book, The Jungle by Upton Sinclair. It supposedly shows how, once upon a time, before State regulation…
- Meat-packing plants endangered Americans with poisoned food
- The motive was profit
But here’s what most people don’t know…
- The Jungle was a novel, not a factual report
- Most of what Sinclair wrote was pure fiction, unconnected to reality
This is your chance to learn the truth.
The Jungle was intended to dramatize working conditions, NOT food safety. In fact, Sinclair’s fictional claims about food safety were limited to a mere 12 pages, but these pages got all the attention, leading Sinclair to later write . . .
“I aimed at the publics’ heart, and by accident I hit it in the stomach.” (Source: Gabriel Kolko, The Triumph of Conservatism: A Reinterpretation of American History, 1900–1916, Chicago: Quadrangle Books, 1967, p. 103.)
Sinclair’s novel caused a sensation. It led to Congressional investigations, even though many politicians were skeptical. For instance, here’s what President Theodore Roosevelt wrote about Sinclair in July 1906 (even though he shared Sinclair’s distrust of big business):
“I have an utter contempt for him. He is hysterical, unbalanced, and untruthful. Three-fourths of the things he said were absolute falsehoods. For some of the remainder there was only a basis of truth.” (Source: letter to William Allen White, July 31, 1906, from “The Letters of Theodore Roosevelt,” 8 vols, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1951–54, vol. 5, p. 340.)
Sinclair’s fictional characters talk of workers falling into vats and being turned into “Durham’s Pure Leaf Lard,” which was then sold to the public. This was supposedly made possible by the alleged “corruption of government inspectors.” (Source: The Age of the Moguls by Stewart H. Holbrook, Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1953, pp. 110–111)
Yes, you see, there were government inspectors, even back in 1905. So does it really make sense that the solution to this supposed food safety problem was . . . government inspectors?
In fact, there were hundreds of inspectors. They came from all levels of government, federal, state, and local, and had been at work for more than a decade. As for their supposed corruption (and Sinclair’s other claims), a Congressional investigation found little evidence. Instead . . .
The 1906 report of the Department of Agriculture’s Bureau of Animal Husbandry refuted Sinclair’s worst charges point-by-point. The report labeled his claims…
- “willful and deliberate misrepresentations of fact”
- “atrocious exaggeration”
- And “not at all characteristic (of the meat packing industry)”
(Source: U.S. Congress, House, Committee on Agriculture, Hearings on the So-called “Beveridge Amendment” to the Agriculture Appropriation Bill, 59th Congress, 1st Session, 1906, pp. 346–350.)
Meanwhile, as Congress went through the time-consuming process of investigating Sinclair’s fictions, the free market was regulating the meat packing industry in its own harsh way. Meat sales plummeted. As a result…
The meat-packing industry actually lobbied Congress to increase regulation!
The industry wanted The State to protect them from the consumer backlash by imposing regulations that would restore consumer confidence, even though new regulations were totally unneeded! The result was the passage of the Meat Inspection Act of 1906. But this was not a triumph for the idea of State regulation. Instead, it was a victory for cronyism and corporate welfare . . .
- Taxpayers picked up the $3 million price tag for the new regulations
- Big meat packers benefited because small packers had a more difficult time complying with the new regulations
- Upton Sinclair himself actually recognized this, and opposed the law! (Source: Upton Sinclair, “The Condemned-Meat Industry: A Reply to Mr. J. Ogden Armour,” Everybody’s Magazine, XIV, 1906, pp. 612–613.)
The myth of The Jungle has had a terrible impact on the American mind. It has led millions of people to believe that regulation by politicians and bureaucrats is superior to regulation by the free market forces of consumers, investors, lenders, insurance companies, and legal liability.
- If the meat packing industry wanted government regulation, then it should have paid for it, not the taxpayers
- And all packing companies should have been free to reject State regulation, especially small producers
- This would have allowed consumers to decide what they preferred, and what they were willing to pay for — meat inspected by The State, or meat regulated by the self-interest of the meat packers.
In other words…
- State regulation, using initiated force, was completely unjustified, even if Sinclair had been writing fact, instead of fiction.
- We should have relied on consumer-controlled regulation instead.
Two parting notes…
Thank you to Lawrence W. Reed, President of the Foundation for Economic Education. Many of the facts used in this essay were drawn from an article he wrote for The Freeman: Ideas and Consequences: Of Meat and Myth.
His article, in turn, relied heavily on the classic book by the historian Gabriel Kolko, The Triumph of Conservatism. Kolko was a Marxist, but few people have done better work on the intersection of The State with American business.
Copyright © Perry Willis 2023
Perry Willis is the co-founder of Downsize DC and the Zero Aggression Project. He co-created, with Jim Babka, the Read the Bills Act, the One Subject at a Time Act, and the Write the Laws Act, all of which have been introduced in Congress. He is a past Executive Director of the national Libertarian Party and was the campaign manager for Harry Browne for President in 2000.