- Mar 11, 2009
- 10,526
- 3,596
- 28,180
Well, it all depends on how "free" is free, isn't it? The US, at it's most economically laisse faire (or conservative), has always been at least somewhat both monitored, and defended. Capitalist markets are and must be, If they're not, they don't stay free for long. There are too many people who would like to take control of them by might for their own materialistic benefit at the the entire expense of others. Not every capitalist, no. But plenty enough to completely upset the system (ie. How many Bernie Madoff, Mark Stanford, or Ken Lay's does it take?), especially if it's legal to do so (as in AIG bonuses). To quote James Madison "If all men were angels, no government would be necessary."ihavenolimbs said:It became fashionable in the 80s to believe in the magic of free-markets. And that anything that the govt does will make them less efficient. This has subsequently been shown to be wrong, but the idea of free-markets seems so simple and elegant that it has stuck around.
I'm all for a truly free and fair market, within reason. But when there is no oversight, something will always attempt to fill the power vacuum. This is why when such predators want to attack what amounts to true democratic capitalism, they always try to convince people that the government is unnecessarily regulating their lives. To some extent, as Madison noted, because of the nature of government itself, that has to be true. But what's far more true is that government control "takes away the freedom" from predators to pillage their fellow citizens.
At its imperfect best, true freedom occurs somewhere along a continuum between a communist totalitarianism of total government control, to anarchy and no government control at all. It's a blend of freedom from governmental restrictions on individual behavior which we all dislike that "conservatives" consider evil, and freedom from social and financial thugs who will exploit everyone else to no end, which somehow many conservatives believe is acceptable as not all in power think this way.
With the way our government is set-up now, with both wealthy individuals and wealthy groups able to essentially buy access to politicians (now more legal than ever thanks to the Supreme Court), what we have isn't so much capitalism or democracy, as plutocracy or kleptocracy.
Stiglitz, yes. That man is brilliant, and doesn't simply carry on Keynesian thought without introspection. Krugman...hmmm.ihavenolimbs said:That's beside the point, anyway. I can quote Nobel Prize winning economists like Stiglitz and Krugman that say differently to these anonymous, "govt economists". And they don't mind having their names linked to their views either. A tad more credibility?
To the flip side, Peter Schiff, who comes from the Austrian school of economics predicted the housing bubble, plus Fannie and Freddie going under, plus the bailouts, plus their failing. He hasn't been right on everything, but very forward thinking. (I should note that Schiff stops short of wishing to further deregulate large markets and Wall Street, focusing instead on limiting regulation on small and micro businesses in the US. He's also against both wars.).
I've never fully ascribed to Keynes thinking, at least without strict rules in place, none the less, it's great that you bring this quote up, because hardly anyone gives him credit for expressing it, or analyzing it.As Keynes pointed out, markets will actually self-correct in the long-term, but how long? 10 years? 100? And at the expense of how much productivity, and how many jobs in the mean-time?
The sad part is that the term "Tea Bagger" no longer has any meaning, even if it ever did, it certainly didn't mean anything close to limited government conservativism (see: Andrew Bacevich). It's now been stretched further than "liberal" or "conservative". The truth is that Palin's thinking and suggestions are much more in line with the Washington neoconservatives who favor no market control, but have no problem at all with government bailouts of banking (which she supported) or nation building through military might (such as invading Iran, which she supports), and wars that completely destroy any potential balancing of budgets.Maybe if the tea-baggers in your country actually believe this free-market fundie stuff, and then turf out Obama and implement this Palinomics, it might give little ol' NZ a chance to pass the US in per capita wealth again.
