First and foremost, a free market needs legal and political rules to function as otherwise the premises for a free market to function don't exist (and the likely outcome is an oligopoly or monopoly market). If you don't have a functioning legal system you likely simply won't have a free market system.I wonder if someone can help me locate this argument in the history of economic-ethical thought:
1. The parameters of a free market are informed by market forces
2. Market forces are precisely human (economic) desires
3. Some human (economic) desires are immoral
4. Some market forces are immoral
5. The parameters of a free market are informed by an immoral element
Thanks! — ZzzoneiroCosm
Some human (economic) desires are immoral — ZzzoneiroCosm
The free market usually expunges such forces, because, as might be expected, immoral behavior is bad for business. — Thorongil
it's the best method of raising billions out of poverty yet devised, such that one can safely ignore the empty sloganeering about "harmful inequalities" and the like.
Before we began regulating bad behavior the robber barons made killing off immoral behavior, so the market definitely does not naturally expunge such forces. — Sivad
Mixed economies do a much better job of that, in fact unregulated markets tend to produce extreme inequalities and severe negative externalities. — Sivad
It is funny, but the truth is an ACTUAL free market economy could be a good thing IF the powers that be would really let it exist — dclements
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