The
Future of Freedom Foundation |
11/21/08
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
December
12, 2005 A standard charge against market-oriented societies is that they are corrupted by profit. Businessmen only want to make money. Profits come before people. At the same time, the markets critics blame business for wasting resources and neglecting peoples needs. These claims are inconsistent. If businessmen really want to make money, they will neither waste resources nor neglect peoples needs, because economizing and catering to customers is how you make money in the marketplace. Profit is what is left over after an entrepreneur pays all his expenses, including his own implicit wages for his toil. It is the reward for assembling land, labor, machines, and raw materials, and using them to make things people value. Obviously, an entrepreneur wants to minimize expenses by using no more resources than necessary to produce what people want to buy. At a given market price for a product, the lower the costs, the higher the profit. Why use two barrels of oil to make something, if you can make it using just one? Why dont the people who worry about depletion of resources give the market credit for this virtue? (By the way, we arent running out of resources.) The answer is that ideological environmentalists dont understand economics, and, further, they despise the marketplace because it embodies the freedom to pursue self-interest and make money. They find that morally repugnant. But there is nothing repugnant about pursuing self-interest, and what could be wrong with making money by producing things that people value? When will the critics learn that one gets wealthy in the market only by raising peoples living standards? But businessmen are greedy, arent they? Greedy is one of those words that is applied to others but never to oneself. What does it mean? Its hard to tell because it is used to describe a range of conduct, ethical and unethical. Luckily, we dont have to sort this out. All we need to know is that the desire to make high profits long-term induces business people to use resources wisely and to deal with others honestly. Squandering resources and cheating customers are business strategies that are sooner or later punished by the marketplace. Before anyone dismisses this as just theory, I will point out that history provides abundant examples of these principles. John D. Rockefeller squeezed every bit of value he could out of a barrel of oil not because he was ecologically concerned about future generations, but because he was cheap and hated waste. Beginning in the 19th century, factory owners routinely sold their waste byproducts to other businessmen who found valuable uses for what otherwise would have been refuse. Why did they do it? To make money. Nothing sparks imagination like the possibility of profit. As an unintended consequence, we all prosper. Even air pollution presents profit opportunities. Thats potential wealth going up the smokestack. Whoever can find a way to capture that lost energy or unused material stands to reap large profits. Of course, if someone can pollute and not bear the expense, he might do it. So the law must protect property rights from polluters. When it does, those who damage person or property must pay compensation. That principle of justice provides an incentive to minimize pollution by capturing what today is sent into the atmosphere as waste. The incentives
built in to the market raise living standards, minimize waste, and produce
a clean environment just by letting people make money. Not bad
for a system that has been condemned throughout history. (Feedback
form is at the bottom of the page.)
Samuel Bostaph is head of the economics department at the University of Dallas and an academic advisor to The Future of Freedom Foundation
Anthony Gregory is a policy advisor at The Future of Freedom Foundation
James Bovard is author of The Bush Betrayal and serves as a policy advisor for The Future of Freedom Foundation
Benedict LaRosa is a historian and writer and serves as a policy advisor to The Future of Freedom Foundation
Bart Frazier is program director at The Future of Freedom Foundation.
Sheldon Richman is senior fellow at The Future of Freedom Foundation in Fairfax, Va., author of Tethered Citizens: Time to Repeal the Welfare State, and editor of The Freeman magazine.
Mr. Hornberger is founder and president of The Future of Freedom Foundation. Send him email. The Future of Freedom Foundation.
|
Muddle at the Supreme Court over Medical Marijuana Boot Max Boots Recruiting Plan Trade Wars: The Empire Strikes Back Who Cares about the Income Gap? The Supreme Court Repeals the Constitution Africa Needs Freedom, Not Aid Zen and the Art of Iraqi Regime Change Why Payola Doesnt Matter by Bart Frazier The Chutzpah of Wal-Mart's Critics Virginia Politicians and Highway Pork Evolution or Intelligent Design? None of the Governments Business Pat Robertson Describes U.S. Foreign Policy by Jacob G. Hornberger In Iraq Zero Plus Zero Is More than Zero Katrina Exposes Government for What It Is Complete Archives for The Future of Freedom Foundation |
|||||||||||||||
|
Submit
Feedback
|
|