Talk:Free Market
Providing the most goods and services possible
- - - - - - - - - > at the lowest cost
The principles of a free market are defined as:
1. Individual Rights: "We are each created with equal individual rights
to control and to defend our life, liberty and property and to voluntary contractual exchange."
2. Limited Government: "Governments are instituted only to secure individual rights,
deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed."
3. Equal Justice Under Law: "Government must treat everyone equally;
neither rewarding failure nor punishing success."
4. Subsidiarity: "Government authority must reside at the lowest feasible level."
5. Spontaneous Order: "When individual rights are respected, unregulated competition will maximize economic benefit for society
by providing the most goods and services possible at the lowest cost."
6. Property Rights: "Private ownership is the most efficient way to sustainably utilize resources."
7. The Golden Rule: "Deal with others honestly and require honesty in return."
Lawrence Reed, who argued that monopolies have historically failed to form
even in the absence of anti-trust law.
This is because monopolies are inherently difficult to maintain:
a company that tries to maintain its monopoly by buying out new competitors, for instance,
is incentivizing newcomers to enter the market in hope of a buy-out.
Command economies, where the government controls and regulates production, distribution, prices, etc
Important allocation decisions are made by government authorities and are imposed by law.
Soviet-type central planning, which involves centralized state planning and administrative decision making.
Venezuela
Unplanned economies, where production, distribution, pricing and investment decisions
are made by autonomous firms operating in markets.