Friends of Liberty VOL 2
04/12/2009
JC
The Importance of Free Markets
The Free Market seems to be misunderstood by most Americans. Over and
over again I hear the Government and the political pundits say the
Markets must be controlled, that left unregulated they lead to
economic disparity and unfair outcomes. The greed of the Free Market
leads to corruption and exploitation of the working man and woman.
Liberals mistrust the Free Market and install through legislation and
rule-making ways to limits its activities. Liberal political pundits
say the Free Market is risky and has failed us. They lay our current
economic woes at the feet of the Free Market. In truth the Free Market
hasn't been completely free in decades.
It's easy for politicians to fear the Free Market, whether talking
about the stock market, the housing market, commodities market or any
other venue where market forces determine the value of things. They
fear it because at its root they cannot control it. Politicians love
control and make no mistake, control is what they are about. Because
they fear the outcomes of a Free Market, Washington has done its best
to corrupt its functioning. Politicians want people to look to them
for answers, for security and something as vague as the Free Market is
portrayed as risky and even anachronistic.
Americans seem to have forgotten that our wants, desires, opinions,
fears, ambitions and most all, our choices are the forces which drive
the Free Market. It is based on the simplest of concepts: the freedom
to live our lives as we choose. We have the freedom to choose what
house we buy and how much we?re willing to pay for it, what car we
drive and how much we will pay for it, the companies in which we
invest and how much we will pay for a good or service. It's that
simple. The Free Market is our choices.
The price of a good or service is based on what we will pay for it.
Competition is what keeps prices in check. If the price of some
product rises due to increased demand, an opportunity is created for a
competitor to offer a comparable product at a lower price. This
competitor cannot sell an inferior product and expect to make sales.
The competitor must produce something comparable for a lower price.
This takes hard work, dedication, risk-taking and innovation. If
successful they make money and the consumer benefits from the lower
prices. It also serves as a wake-up call for the first company to
increase their efficiency, or they go out of business. The consumers'
choices drive the market. Most people do not realize that the profit,
the primary goal of all businesses, is realized most often by
producing a superior product or service at prices that benefit the
consumer. Exploiting the consumer or providing them with
unsatisfactory alternatives is a sure-fire way to bankrupt yourself.
The stock and commodities markets are no different. The price of a
stock or commodity is determined by the buyers and the sellers, each
operating in their own interests, opposing forces keeping the markets
in check. Free choice determines where investment occurs with
companies competing to attract investors. Companies strive to increase
performance, which leads to sales and profits, allowing them to reward
their investors through dividends or increased value of the shares.
Left to its own devices free markets can make short-term mistakes, but
they are always self-correcting. If something is overvalued, the true
value will eventually become evident and the price will fall. Free
Market Capitalism is an economic auto-pilot that will keep an economy
on a mostly even keel.
That being said, Government does its best to corrupt free markets, to
exert control of the people and limit our freedoms. It does this
through tax policy, regulation, price controls, subsidies, interest
rates, monetary supply, wage controls, environmental regulations which
defy common sense and other freedom-limiting legislation. Government
continually makes decisions which limit our freedom, corrupts the
natural cycle of supply and demand, disincentivizes competition and
reduces choices.
One great example of Government interference is the fossil fuel
industry. This country is blessed with an abundance of oil, coal and
natural gas. Offshore areas of the US are rich in oil and gas and
we?ve recently discovered an oil field in the Dakotas that rivals
Saudi Arabia. You wouldn?t know this by where we get our fuel,
however. In the name of stopping global warming the Government will
not let us drill for these resources. This restricts supply, increases
price and exports trillions of dollars a year to Middle Eastern
countries not exactly our friends.
Why was there a housing boom for the last ten years? Why were prices
rising 20% a year in California, New York and Florida? Why was the
demand for new homes so high? Once again the Government interfered in
the Market. Through their surrogates Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, they
created the sub-prime mortgage market, encouraging banks to make loans
to people who would not normally qualify. They would in turn buy the
loans from the banks. This generated false demand for homes and caused
existing home prices to rise dramatically. When tens of thousands of
these risky loans finally went bad, the bubble burst and the Market
tried to correct itself, but Government is still fighting it tooth and
nail, pouring hundreds of billions into the banking industry and
trying to re-inflate the bubble. The equity of those homes is not
coming back up anytime soon. It was never real to begin with.
As Americans we have to be wary of Government tampering with our free
markets, recognize it for what it is and act in the best interest of
the nation at each election. We cannot sit idly by and watch the
economic freedoms which have made this country great be slowly
destroyed, only to be replaced with a Government-planned economy
designed to cement power for a new political ruling-class. Janis
Joplin said freedom is just another word for nothing left to lose. We
are rapidly approaching that level of "freedom."
Quote of the Week:
The world-view of the Party imposed itself most successfully on people
incapable of understanding it. They could be made to accept the most
flagarant violations of reality, because they never fully grasped what
was demanded of them, and were not sufficiently interested in public
events to notice what was happening.
George Orwell
1984
by Jim Clonts,
2009
Welcome to the latest edition of Friends of Liberty. The last edition
did generate a few replies and I'd like to send them out to the group,
but I want to be sure those individuals are okay with it. In the
future if you send me a response, please indicate if I can reprint
your comments for general distribution or if I can print them but
you'd like to remain anonymous. This week's topic is the Free Market.
Government often tells us to mistrust the Free Market and I hope this
piece explains why we must embrace it.
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