Not nearly as many Americans as were out of work during the Great Depression. Remember how this came up. Your posting #327 suggested that our (sort of) Free Market would lead us to a better world if it were more “unbridled”. I challenged that assertion in #329 by saying that maybe it would be better if it were more “encumbered”. After your re-assertion in #342, I challenged you to back up that assertion with evidence, to which you responded in #344:
The “Great Depression” was due, in a greater part, to government over regulation. More regulations and socialist government programs prolonged it.
What is with all the previous post numbers…??
While I go back and research #327 to #344, how about you answering the question in #365?
So I suppose you think that the economic history of our country from 1900 illustrates that the less we “encumber” the free market, the more it leads us to a better world. Well, from what I know of American History, the trend in government regulation over that period of history has been from very little regulation to much greater regulation. And during that same period of history, our standard of living has been getting better, our productivity has been going up, and we seem to be going toward a better world. Pointing out that unemployment is still a problem in 2014 does not change the 114 year trend. So if you think otherwise, please show the economic measure by which our lives have been getting uniformly worse over these past 114 years. You can speculate that things might have been even better with less regulation, but speculation is not evidence.
The Industrial Revolution produced the greatest increase in wealth, overall prosperity and standard of living the world has ever known. This occurred with VERY little or NO government intervention. In the early 1900’s governments began to exert more control of industry. the results…as you said, were “… 114 years of
gradually increasing regulation and
gradually increasing prosperity”
The evidence is quite clear. The world went from a robust increasing prosperity to a
gradual or slow growth. All due to government interference.
There is not one regulation that increased production. There is not one regulation that increased prosperity. Governments do not produce prosperity…they depend on it.
Why can’t anyone be anything they like in a Free Market? Because that is too big a promise for** any** economic system to make. Some people just have limitations. I think you are clever enough to think of a dozen or so without any help from me.
As Dirty Harry said: “A man’s got to know his limitations.”
In a Free Market a man with a limitation does not have a government bureaucrat telling him what he can or cannot do because of his limitation.
Except for the bad old days when regulations were race-specific, today’s regulations apply to everyone equally. If one person is denied the right to be an airline pilot because of his poor eyesight, then everyone else with similarly poor eyesight is also denied that right by the same regulation. Most regulations do not discriminate between people unfairly. There are some exceptions. For example there are regulations in some localities that prevent someone from opening a flower shop unless they have passed a government test in floral arrangement. This test was devised by the area’s existing florists to suppress competition, since not every flower shop should have to offer floral arrangement services. And I never heard of anyone dying because of a poorly arranged bunch of flowers. But I would not want to see most of the federal regulations on airline pilots go away, and I don’t think you would either.
Good example about the airline pilot. (See my response above about limitations)
Better example about florists. That is the wide spread, restrictive nature of government regulations. It effects more people than the occasional wannabe airline pilot.
“Luck” in this context refers to any factor that is beyond one’s control. And with that understanding, I still maintain that success in today’s economy has a large measure of luck involved, in addition to a certain level of determination. But determination alone will not guarantee you economic success in a Free Market.
Then a failed bank or business would be attributed to simply BAD luck, rather than mismanagement or competition???