What Is This Free Market We Keep Hearing About? Part II

Posted by Tom Mullen on Mon, 08/24/2009 - 8:37pm in

Previously, I wrote an article entitled “What Is This Free Market We Keep Hearing About?” In it I attempted to demonstrate that a free market is the only economic system compatible with liberty, in addition to being the system that will yield the best results for society. The dissenting views were familiar ones, which I will attempt to answer.

The first category of dissenting opinions came from those that somehow misunderstood the article to have argued that a free market exists right now, or has existed in the recent past (perhaps under the Republican regime that has thankfully gone the way of the hula hoop). For the record, we have not had any semblance of a free market since at least the New Deal, and probably not since the institution of the Federal Reserve and the income tax in 1913. If anything, we have had markets that have been “progressively” less free in each succeeding decade, the trend accelerating markedly during a few notable periods, including the 1910’s, the 1930’s, the 1960’s, and the present devastation of our liberty that is occurring before our very eyes. As I have argued more extensively before, the Bush years did not represent free markets.

The next broad category of comments could generally be grouped as those which implied that a truly free market system would amount to no government or restrictions at all and therefore necessitate that market participants would have to be trusted to “do the right thing” at the expense of their own profits. Those making this argument went on to say that history shows that “the corporations” or other wealthy market participants will always choose profit over the good of society.

This is a complete misunderstanding of the concept of free markets presented in the article and of the non-aggression principle of liberty in general. “Non-aggression” does not mean the absence of the use of force (government) under any circumstances. In a free market, there is a very necessary role for government to play, just as in nature there is an appropriate time for the use of force. Specifically, the government brings force to bear against those who have committed or are committing aggression against another’s rights. In a truly free market, the government prevents any party from using coercion or fraud to secure an exchange of property. If a company lies on its financial statements to attract investors or credit, it is the government’s job to prosecute those responsible for fraud. If a company employs violence or the threat of violence in trying to eliminate its competition, it is the government’s responsibility to prosecute the aggressor in defense of the victims.

However, if the company participates in exchanges of property whereby all participants voluntarily consent to the terms and all information pertaining to the transactions are represented truthfully, then that activity is beyond the reach of government, just as speech, religion, and conscience are beyond the reach of government because they do not represent acts of aggression against anyone else’s rights.

With the natural boundary of non-aggression enforced, the market requires no consideration for any participant other than the pursuit of profit. With truly free markets, it is never true that society is threatened unless firms sacrifice their profits to benefit society. Rather, firms can and should pursue only profit so long as they commit no aggression against another’s rights. The law should never be a positive force – it should never compel anyone to do anything. It should only prohibit certain actions, namely those that amount to aggression (fraud being aggression against the rights to property). It is this principle that is consistently violated by our modern brand of “regulation.”

This brings us to a third category of objections, namely that insufficiently regulated markets have resulted in the massive consolidations that have occurred over the past quarter century, decreasing competition and creating overly influential corporations that dominate markets and our government. This argument is rooted in the same misconception as the first – that we have had free markets at some point in our recent past. However, even if one argues that some “deregulation” has taken place and that is the reason for the consolidation, the position still begs one question. Why are new competitors not entering the market to compete with these overly dominant corporations?

There are only two possibilities. One is that the corporations in question have achieved natural monopolies. A natural monopoly is a good thing. It means that one firm is producing products of such high quality and such low price that no other firm is able to compete with it. A natural monopoly can only be sustained as long as the monopolist continues to offer products that consumers prefer over all others based upon their own voluntary decisions. Natural monopolies harm no one.

The only other explanation for a dearth of competition is that there are artificial forces at work that are keeping competition out. This means that market participants are not acting voluntarily, but make their choices under some type of coercion. There is only one entity that can legally coerce participants in any market – government. In fact, it has been the ocean of rules and regulations itself – in violation of every market participant’s natural rights – that has led to the dearth of competition in our supposedly free markets. This conclusion is intuitive. If the corporations are not natural monopolies then their competition must have been eliminated unnaturally or artificially, i.e, by the government.

It is abundantly clear that our labyrinthine regulatory structure is an artificial barrier to new competition, particularly since the regulations are now written by the very corporations they are supposed to govern. However, the root of the problem is not bad regulations or corruption. It is the fact that any barriers to human action exist at all beyond those that prevent aggression. Even without back door deals and outright corruption, these artificial barriers necessarily favor entrenched market players over new firms trying to enter the market, as compliance with regulation drives up start up and compliance costs beyond what all but the largest firms can afford.

The so-called “deregulation” in many of our markets did nothing to dismantle this quagmire of regulation, but merely eliminated barriers to consolidation while continuing to insulate established players from new competition. The results were predictable but certainly not the results of natural market forces. The proper solution to this problem is not to violate the rights to liberty and property by prohibiting one company from buying another, but rather to remove the further violations of those rights that our massive regulatory structure represents.

On this point there were some thoughtful comments attempting to determine whether corporations have rights or whether only people have rights. I would argue that the rights in question when discussing corporations are those of the shareholders, who retain all of the same rights to life, liberty, and property as any other market participant. Some argued further that the shareholders obtain certain privileges granted by government, particularly in limiting liability, that justify taxes or restrictions that would not be justified on individuals.

However, this argument ignores the fact that corporations are required to register and therefore declare to all of society their corporate status. As the decisions to form a corporation, buy its stock, lend it money, or purchase its products are all made voluntarily and with full knowledge of its corporate status, there is no justification for government to impose special restrictions upon a corporation outside of those disclosure requirements necessary to inform the public that it is a corporation.

Finally, there were those that argued that unfettered free markets result in corporations achieving too much “power,” rather than merely too much wealth. Corporate “power” is a misnomer. Power is the ability to use force. Only government has power. It is government’s sacred duty to wield that power only in defense of each individual’s rights. No matter how much wealth a corporation obtains, it exercises no power, unless it literally spends its capital to raise an army and engage in open rebellion. Clearly, this has not been the case. However, it is also clear that corporate or other wealthy interests have used their wealth to buy political favors and to induce politicians to pervert the laws themselves, leading directly to the quasi-fascist economy that we find ourselves confronted with today.

This has been a failure of government, not the free market. It is certainly not admirable when an individual or group uses its wealth to achieve injustice. Nor are interested parties participating in a free market when trying to bring government force to bear upon competitors or other market participants. However, it is ultimately government that is entrusted to preserve justice. The members of government are never compelled to allow wealthy interests to persuade them to abandon their duty. It is the government’s job to say “no,” and when they fail to do so they are destroying the free market, not licensing it.

This brief article certainly does not answer every specific argument made against free markets, but it does illustrate something common to all of them: all objections against free markets result from a misunderstanding of what a free market is. A free market is one in which no one’s rights are violated, resulting in all transactions occurring by mutual, voluntary consent. Participants in a free market practice the non-aggression principle. This does not require unrealistic virtue from market participants, because it is government’s duty to enforce the non-aggression principle. Every economic problem plaguing American society today stems from some departure from the free market, which is some violation of the rights of market participants. Justice is the protection of those rights. Social justice can only be achieved when absolutely free markets exist. Properly understood, freedom and free markets are one and the same.

Check out Tom Mullen’s new book, A Return to Common Sense: Reawakening Liberty in the Inhabitants of America. Right Here!

Home



Paste this code into your site to promote this story!
   
Comment viewing options
Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
مسجات رومانسيه

مسجات رومانسيه جديده

مسجات رومانسيه 2010

مسجات رومانسيه جديده

مسجات غرام

مسجات حب

مسجات عشق

مسجات عشق

تثبيت ماسنجر 8,5 دون طلب تحديث

سكربت كشف دون اتصال للماسنجر

برنامج كشف الحظر في ماسنجر ياهو

برنامج ماسنجر هوتميل على الموبايل والجوال

صور زوجة امير الحقيقيه

قصائد عبدالرحمن الشمري

قصايد عبدالرحمن الشمري

الشاعر عبدالرحمن الشمري

قصايد عبدالكريم الجباري

قصائد عبدالكريم الجباري

الشاعر عبدالكريم الجباري

قصايد خلف المشعان

قصائد خلف المشعان

الشاعر خلف المشعان

قصايد مطلق النومسي

قصائد مطلق النومسي

الشاعر مطلق النومسي

قصايد محمد بن الذيب

قصائد محمد بن الذيب

الشاعر محمد بن الذيب

قصايد محمد بن فطيس

قصائد محمد بن فطيس

الشاعر محمد بن فطيس

قصايد محمد مريبد العازمي

قصائد محمد مريبد العازمي

الشاعر محمد مريبد العازمي

قصايد مدغم ابو شيبه

قصائد مدغم ابو شيبه

الشاعر مدغم ابو شيبه

قصايد صوتيه

منتديات

مقاطع فيديو

العاب فلاشيه

العاب بنات

دليل مواقع

توبيكات

Posted by nasser29 (not verified) on Mon, 01/18/2010 - 5:46am
Tom, I am in need of an answer ...pls.

Is there a difference between privatization of schools and how schools would be developed in a truely Free Market economy?. Or would schools be considered or not considered private schools in a truely Free Market economy??? If you don't understand what I'm trying to get to...trust me, I understand...please let me know. I'll try to be more clear...

Let me explain...NAPTA and you are from Florida right...NAPTA- National Association for the Prevention of Teacher Abuse founded 7 years ago by Karen Horwitz whose book is "White Chalk Crime" believes that privatization of schools would not keep Abuse from happening to children, parents, and teachers from the Administrators and Board of Directors...particularly to children in need of special attention due to mental and/or physical limitations.

NAPTA is beginning to generate a lot of interest, its growing... I am in support of this organization and hopefully will become as active as I am with NVIC against mandated vaccination programs pushed by the schools and the media... WHY because I have been a victim of teacher abuse several times and presently...

A very large impetus is presently going on in Florida they have 4 counties involved.. email if you are interested is team4reform@gmail.com

With so many issues to represent it is very difficult for people to become informed on all levels especially in the one I think is the root cause, which is the corruption of our government...

If I am right, I would like to help Karen understand why she needs to be concerned about the politics ...I don't think we would be fighting on so many fronts if it wasn't for the corruption of our government whose tennacles have reached into almost every aspect of the individual's life wanting to take over of what little is left of our inalienable rights.

Thank you
poulianna

The eye of G_d is watching us....

poulianna Posted by poulianna on Sun, 08/30/2009 - 8:26pm
What do you mean by "privatization?"

A free market would mean this: no one would have their money seized from them and used to pay for the education of anyone else or their children - as thousands of dollars are seized from me every year against my will and given to other people to pay to educate their children, while I pay for my own child over and above what I pay for theirs. That is the first change toward a free market.

Secondly, as "education" is nothing more than a product, more specifically a service, provided by educators, it would be offered to other people at the price that the educators demanded to be paid. If there was not enough demand at that price, the educators would have to lower their price until there was enough demand to make their service profitable to continue to offer. This is how bread, rice, underwear, and everything else necessary to maintain our lives are sold. The idea that education is somehow different is a fallacy that has cause tremendous harm over the past century (likewise for health care).

I'm not sure what "abuse of teachers" refers to, but if they offer their services voluntarily to customers, who purchase those services voluntarily, I don't see any opportunity for "abuse," any more than I see any opportunity for abuse of grocers by their customers buying milk. A transaction that is undertaken by mutual, voluntary consent cannot be abusive to either party.

Does this answer your question?

Tom Mullen

www.tommullen.net
Author of A Return to Common Sense: Reawakening Liberty in the Inhabitants of America

Tom Mullen Posted by Tom Mullen on Mon, 08/31/2009 - 10:05pm
Thank you Tom

for continuing to post...even in light of the terrible spamming that is going on. Im very glad that you as well as others with credible information are continuing to post.

poulianna

The eye of G_d is watching us....

poulianna Posted by poulianna on Sat, 08/29/2009 - 4:03pm
By definition a free market

By definition a free market is a market which is free from economic intervention and regulation by government, other than protection of property rights. Critics dispute the claim that in practice free markets create perfect competition or even increase market competition over the long run Whether the marketplace should be or is free is disputed; many assert that government intervention is necessary to remedy market failure that is held to be an inevitable result of absolute adherence to free market principles.It is worth having a payday loans to study in deeper sense the effect of this free market on economic imbalance

Posted by LukeS on Tue, 08/25/2009 - 11:49pm
Tagging Again for Revenue Purposes On Taxpayer Monies?

Tagging again for revenue purposes on taxpayer monies usurous lenders even, at that. Unbelieveable, really. And I guess you don't believe this site is the epitomy of "corporate welfare" at the taxpayer's expense?

Betsy Ross

Betsy Ross Posted by Betsy Ross on Wed, 08/26/2009 - 12:16am
Still Leaves Much Out In The Out Of Balance Marketplace

This does still leave much out and spins quite a bit insofar as corporate entities are concerned. For example, the arguments regarding "corporate person-hood" which was unconstitutionally given under a rogue Supreme Court after the 13th and 14th Amendments were "passed" and used by corporate lawyers throughout the nation to get Bill of Rights protections for corporate entities, even those under the first 10 amendments which were clearly meant for the people and not "corporate" entities in the slightest.

Second, these corporations have been given "privileges and immunities" such as limited liability under their supposed corporate structures by state governments also throughout the nation, over the rights of the individuals. And that is not Constitutional either. Thus, all such laws null and void as illegal. And the shareholders may be the owners and the "persons" you refer to, but also laws have been passed throughout the states affording Boards of Directors more power than they were ever intended to have absent shareholder consent. Such as executive compensations, and even large capital improvements and expenditures.

And corporate lawyers have also attempted to facilitate boilerplate contracts for these large industries, which take away the true basis of contract law in this country that was intended by the founders under American contract law doctrine. Going so far as mandating "arbitation" for the settlement of contractual disputes, and attempting to remove citizens "unalieanable" rights in the process. This isn't "fraud," per se, but it is illegal under our existing law though done everyday at the instruction of their corporate legal teams.

And the UCC laws also that were lobbied and passed in order to remove the right to trial by juries for negotiable instruments such as mortgage loans which is why so many now, even large front end costs and equity investments in those properties, are being threatened and harassed with foreclosure, without given their "day in court" over the usurous lending practices and unregulated banks that were responsible for those loans.

And since Congress unlawfully privatized the banks in this country to begin with, strict regulation of them then was their primary duty. Not hands off policies which have lead to this.

And the founders abhorred monopolies of any kind. Natural or otherwise of vital services and industries. APS in Arizona is a monopoly, and public utility that was also a governmental function to regulate since it existed only on ratepayers monies. After Palo Verde was put in and bond elections held for its construction, it was privatized illegally and now costs in orded to provide the dividends for those investors has made energy costs now off the charts, rather than cheaper than it was prior to going nuclear.

You've left out much, and spun quite a bit again. And corporate entities were to be regulated insofar as fraud, and their products if they caused a danger to the public and their right to "life, liberty and property." Especially municipal corporations as "state actors" threaten under eminent domain now regularly in every state throughout the nation since Kelo, which case was the greatest treason upon the Constitution ever.

And as a "liberal" Libertarian, Tom, seems your theories of free markets border on those of corporate socialism actually, more than "free markets," and with respect to global trade - the founders never literally meant that international trade was to be free at all, but taxed in order to protect U.S. domestic production and labor from "foreign" competitition. Have you read the Constitution?

Betsy Ross

Betsy Ross Posted by Betsy Ross on Tue, 08/25/2009 - 10:22pm
In Other Words, With Respect To Contact Law

In other words, with respect to the true intent and meaning behind "obligations under contract" as meant by the founders were contracts that were freely entered into and "negotiable" as to their terms, not boilerplate as now which exists by the major industries for their "welfare" and protection - no more than adhesion contracts really. There is little that is negotiable in a mortgage loan today, due to "industry standands." As I said, assumable loans and fixed loans have really gone the way of the dinosaur, and thus the banks are attempting to retain true "ownership" over land ownership AND use rights within the loan documents themselves.

That is why they have gone from 20 pages now to over 50, and really nothing more than foreclosure contracts since the 1980's when these "sliding scale" escalating and interest only loans started being marketed for both the realtors, and the banking industries profits most of all. What actually are "points" anyway, but junk fees? And "loan origination fees"? And a host of other junk fees that make those loans usury - yet the states and federal government stand by in their negligence to protect the public from these criminal bankers decade after decade. And even incorporated two of their own - Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, who underwrote most of those usurous documents to begin with.

And it all started with one ILLEGAL Supreme Court decision for the railroad industries benefits after the 13th and 14th were passed (although not at the consent of the governed at all per the 9th, but legal insofar as the "intent" was to rectify the slavery issue which is on record as being contentious at the time the original Constitution was signed and directly contrary to the overall intent of "equality" of persons and individual freedom and rights over the corporate). Capitalists lawyers then capitalized on those amendments in conjunction then with their bar affiliated brothers for their own welfare in order to gain access to the corporate purse most of all, without the "shareholders" consent. And thus it has progressed and brought us to where we are now living under global corporate socialism, along with then what occurred in 1913 also unlawfully and without the consent of the governed per the 9th.

A good 7/8's of the laws on the books today at the federal and state level could not at all be deemed to have been either lawfully passed, or legal under the existing law of the land, the Constitution.

Which was written to protect the individual from the corporate, bottom line, which is why I thus question your continued references to what the founders meant by free markets (small business sole proprietory competitive merchants selling and/or bartering needed goods and services - since bartering also was a legally recognized right in a free enterprise economy as an equal exchange of goods).

Since taxation on owned property at that time was the main source of revenue for the federal governments cost along with excise taxes and tariffs, then left the level of taxation on Americans at their discretion. Own more property, pay more taxes. So the "wealthy" actually mostly were expected to fund the government, sinced they were the recipients also of most of the foreign trade agreements for products which could not be produced in this country (of which there really are few), and thus "to which much was given, a portion returned" since you did "own" the fruits of your labor outright, with the government merely acting as "agent" on your behalf for those trade agreements with their "agency fee" for their services rather minimal in the process (since taxes and tariffs were under "common law" usury rates factored at less than 10% by federal and state laws).

And with respect to alternative dispute resolution that has now becoming a major focus in contract law now in this country, meant also to benefit taxpayers in the costs for the courts and also provide for "jobs and the economies" in this also "privatization" now for civil matters, it is not at all "cheaper" than a court action actually but more expensive since it has become nothing more than an added "step" in the process. Judges themselves can act as mediators if either party desires a "settlement conference," and lawyers again lobbied in order to guarantee their incomes in those arbitrations which were originally meant to be solely between the parties themselves with merely a facilitator clarifyiing what was in dispute and helping to facilitate a compromise in less complicated contractual matters. Lawyers again interjected themselves into that process and now it is no "alternative" at all but merely extends and makes civil law contract resolutions now not "due process" but "abuse of process."

As far as taxation and even with respect to contractual matters in American civil and criminal common law jurisprudence for well over 200 years , usury was any tax or fee for any one transaction that is levied at over 10% in total, and also based on Christian and Jewish doctrine in money lending or exchange of goods, which also proves that this country was founded on Christian laws and doctrine most of all. The difference being that in a few sects of the Jewish faith, their interpretation means merely transactions between Jews, and not Gentiles. Whereas under Christian and Muslim doctrine, it means in any transaction with anyone of any religious or even non-religious belief.

Which is why the European bankers at the Fed are not really Torah believing Jews at all but secular or pharisetic interpreters, since those Torah or Talmud faithful Jews do interpret it to extend to all also, as one of the fundamental mitzvahs.

Betsy Ross

Betsy Ross Posted by Betsy Ross on Wed, 08/26/2009 - 4:51pm
One thing to get people's attention...

Seems to me, that you are spot on with this. The one thing needed to get people's attention on this - would have to been right up front with saying our current market is not a 'Free Market'. But yeah, I think you made some great points. I just hope things start changing soon, because if the current methodology keeps being followed, things are going to get badly broken very soon.

Debbie
Brainwave Entrainment

Posted by Debbie82 on Tue, 08/25/2009 - 6:57pm
I'm suprised anyone on this site objected.

I'm suprised anyone on this site objected to the 1st article. Are you sure they weren't spammers?

Posted by David S on Mon, 08/24/2009 - 10:04pm
See Above

See above. The founders were "protectionists" of American jobs and labor and rights of the individual over the corporate. That is fundmentally why the Bill of Rights was provided. Not just against the government, but against all "corporate" entities - sinced corporations are state registered and sanctioned, and due to progressive legislation now which has resulted in even out of district corporations lobbying at the state and federal level for their own "special interests" nothing more than "state actors" of the government itself.

Each and every member of Congress and the Senate are in violation of the true "campaign finance" laws for representative government. Since the only "financing" that the founders intended for office seekers mandated it be from their own districts so that they could represent strictly their constituency and their interests.

And global corporations or foreign owned and domiciled businesses to have no say at all, as "foreigners."

Betsy Ross

Betsy Ross Posted by Betsy Ross on Tue, 08/25/2009 - 11:12pm
Comment viewing options
Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.