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Craig Barnes

Craig Barnes

Posted: August 16, 2010 10:09 AM

The Myth of the Free Market

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Millions of Americans are today unemployed because the free market is not working for them. Millions of Americans have lost their homes because the free market did not work for them or for the banks. Before the health care bill passed last January millions could not get health care because the free market worked for them when they were healthy but often did not work at all when they needed care.

The free market sent jobs to China and Mexico, India and Taiwan. The free market encouraged subprime mortgages and collateralized debt obligations that were collages of numbers that the market itself did not understand. The free market encouraged insurance companies to compete for ways not to pay for health care rather than to encourage ways to provide health care.

During the years of the Bush administration's free market advocacy, Bear Stearns collapsed, Merrill Lynch failed, and Lehman Brothers collapsed. The free market enabled Goldman Sachs to act as if it believed in securities that it sold to others while at the same time betting with its own money that these securities would fail. To knowingly induce buyers with misinformation is intentional fraud, but the free market did not and has not ever protected against intentional fraud.

In a free market, British Petroleum risked environmental catastrophe in order to save money on expensive cement or time-consuming testing and used cheaper designs rather than safer ones for the most complex drilling apparatus in the world. Transocean obeyed the demands of the market by not fixing 390 maintenance items that were back-listed, ignored a leak in the control pod of the blowout preventer, and avoided the delay caused by its gas detection alarms by simply shutting them off.

Now come Rep. John Boehner of Ohio and Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky leading the Republican charge toward the fall elections urging Americans to once again undo government regulation and rely for their protection and safety, their jobs and their health care on the free market. They would undo newly passed protections against free market fraud and against incentives for health care providers and against more regulation of Wall Street.

The fall campaign is therefore shaping up as a contest of slogans urging voters to choose between the free market and big government. Republicans are hoping to evoke old stories of freedom and liberty, Paul Revere and individualism. Big government, they say, is the opposite of all these and the free market is the way to be truly American.

The Democrats respond: "Wait a minute! The free market has led to outlandish gaps between the wealth of the rich and that of the rest of us Americans; it provides yachts and golf vacations for the rich and foreclosures and joblessness for the middle class! Hold on! The rich are not the only ones who count!"

But Democrats have not found a symbolic spokesperson for that cry. President Obama seems reluctant to lay down the gauntlet or to use his oratorical skills to shame the arrogant, make mad the guilty, or cow the slanderous. Perhaps he is afraid that becoming the passionate spokesperson for sufferers, workers, the destitute and the ill would open him up to the attack that he is just protecting his own. He acts as if his personal background keeps him from letting fly passionate rhetoric lest he be accused of being all for blacks or all for the poor which he supposes would lose him the support of everyone else.

Boehner and McConnell hammer away at big government, not admitting the bald truth that the opposite of government is free market gambling, recession, underfunded schools, fewer police and firemen, less money for science and China buying up American debt. Democrats have yet to find those voices who will sing with pride that the opposite of bonuses and corporate tax breaks is the undeniable reality that Americans will succeed all together or not at all, build bridges and schools together or not at all, curb our appetites for carbon fuels together or not at all, do science and research as our common endeavor, heal the sick as our common need, and sing our common future or not survive at all.

Craig Barnes is the author of Democracy At The Crossroads, Princes, Peasants, Poets and Presidents Struggle for (and against) the Rule of Law.

 
 
 
 
 
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kamachanda
Mr. President, Tear this Wall Street down!
07:14 AM on 08/18/2010
The free market is little more than a slogan used in a propaganda campaign meant to benefit the rich and powerful who fear that the government might curtail their activities or modify their profit margins in the name of public safety or long term goals such as environmental protection.
01:26 AM on 08/18/2010
Millions of Americans are today unemployed because they were not willing to work for wages commensurate with their productivity. Millions of Americans have lost their homes because they refuse to live within their means.

The free market put an extra $600 a year into family household budgets, real money, through lower prices on the things middle-class and lower-class families have to buy.

Blaming the free market for people borrowing more than they can afford to repay is like blaming a corkscrew for alcoholism. Sure, it might be an enabler, but that doesn’t make is a cause.
06:17 AM on 08/18/2010
The "free market" allowed active fraud in home mortgages that was impossible for the home buyer to discover. Market self-regulation is oxymoronic on it's face. Always will be.
07:23 PM on 08/16/2010
Mr. Barnes, you are a columnist at a political website. You've written a book about democracy. Yet you wrote, for example, the following sentence that displays both naivety and lack of awareness:

"President Obama seems reluctant to lay down the gauntlet or to use his oratorical skills to shame the arrogant, make mad the guilty, or cow the slanderous."

First of all, Obama uses his rhetoric all the time to condemn greedy Wall Street interests. Secondly, it is well documented, for example, that he cut deals with health insurance and drug companies while ostensibly fighting against them on health reform. How can you be so unaware of political reality of and so wrapped up in your abstract concepts of who the good and bad guys are? It's bizarre.
04:34 PM on 08/16/2010
This article is a bunch of disingenuous tripe. None of the evil aspects of the free market you list are free from the heavy hand of massive government and regulation.
10:51 AM on 08/16/2010
good read
10:26 AM on 08/16/2010
The problem for the right wing is that the rhetoric of the free market has never been correct. Take the "market" rate of interest as determined by invisible pushes of supply and demand. This is all bullshit. It is the central bank that sets interest rates. It may well be that "market competition" exists above the central bank rate, but when easy Al Greenspan had the fed funds rate at 1%, asset inflation and speculative bubble was the result. When Paul Volker had the fed funds rate at 18%, any business with a credit requirement died, e.g. leveraged farms or car dealerships. In Greenspans case he was trying to push the economy after the dot.com bubble recession and in Volkers case he was trying to kill the cancer of consumer price inflation (along with unions).
If we wanted the free market to determine the rental rate of credit (money) then we need to get rid of the central bank and let separate banks issue their own notes at their own rental rates. Ouch.
05:59 PM on 08/16/2010
True. We have very little truly "free market" activity in this country. But it isn't free market proponents that promote confusion. Left-wing Idealogues like the author of this article who dishonestly try to convince us that all our problems arise from the "free market" without acknowledging that practically all economic activity in our country's economy is mixed market.

Truth is that, because we have a mixed economy, it is very difficult to come to clear-cut conclusions about fundamental economic truths by looking at how our economy operates.