5 Reasons Millennials Should Support ‘Capitalism’
“What many of us (I’m tempted to say true capitalists) prefer is not an amorphous capitalism, but an economic system that is outgrowth of the natural order of liberty: a free economy. There’s no agreed upon term for the system of a free economy (which is why capitalism is often used as a substitute) but it includes free people engaging in free enterprise in free markets.”
Carter does a nice job—though I’d say not as thorough as the subject might demand—pointing out why free markets are a good thing. He might have spent a bit more time pointing out that what we have today is not free markets, but rather is fairly heavily regulated and mercantilistic, but how do you do that in a short column?
Aspiring to be a stick in the mud.
I found his portion on defining the term “capitalism” especially helpful… for understanding a bit better why there seems to be so much confusion and/or hostility from unlikely sources. Sometimes folks are just not talking about the same thing at all while they’re debating the pros and cons of “capitalism.”
I’ve discovered that to some, the term only correctly applies to large scale banking-based economies. So they promptly assert that the Bible in no way commends or even accommodates “capitalism” in any special way.
But the term has long been used far more flexibly and, as Carter pointed out, we don’t really have a better term for the idea of freedom-based commerce vs. centralized/government owned/government-directed commerce. Even “free market” falls short because people tend to assume “free” means “free to be dishonest and cheat people.” The opposite is true. The market is only free to the extent that people are empowered by accurate information to make trades they are confident will be honored.
So where there is cheating, robbing, looting… there is no free market. (Just as there is no free market when the government is micromanaging it from some far away administrative power center.)
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
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