A friend from UPSE alumni association, Mike A. wrote me
in our SEAA yahoogroups and asked my views on Pope Francis, as he
has made a critique on the Free Market ideology, and
the Social Darwinian "survival of the fittest" philosophy.
Below is portion of a news report from theblaze.com.
Nov. 26, 2013
1:26pm By Becket
Adams
Pope Francis
rebuked the culture of profit at any cost as he issued a 224-page mission
statement for his papacy Tuesday, saying that mankind is called first to care
for his neighbor and the poor….
The document also denounced
the survival of the fittest theory of economics “where the powerful
feed upon the powerless” and the poorest in society are excluded….
Unsurprisingly, as
is the norm for this particular pontiff, some media outlets chose to present
Francis’ words as an attack on yet another traditional pillar of
“conservative” ideology: the free market.
Today Pope Francis blasted
capitalism as "the new tyranny" that "kills" people.
Well, a religious argument is based on faith, on belief and morality not so much on hard facts. No one asks for graphs, charts, tables and
regression analysis to believe that a God exists, people just believe and have
faith in a God.
To disappoint some people’s obsession with central planning
and critique of free market, now invoking the Pope to strengthen their weak and
lousy belief, here are some quickies.
1. The free market system, the capitalist economic system, gave us yahoo, yahoogroups,
google, facebook, youtube, twitter, linkedin, Samsung, Apple, iPad, HTC, Starbucks,
McDo, Mang Inasal, Aling Karing Carinderia, Toyota, GM, BMW, Vespa, Suzuki,
Shimano bikes, etc. They are all useful. If people do not find any of them as
useful, then they don't use or buy it. There are still people in fact who don't
have facebook until now, it should be fine, no one coerces them to get one. In addition, no one was also coerced via taxation to finance the start up of those private enterprises.
2. The non-free market, the non-voluntary exchange, the
force and coercion sytem, gave us what? Thousands of bureaucracies,
local-national-multilateral, and tens or hundreds of thousands of central
planners, very often their plans contradict or duplicate the plans of other
bright boys and bureaucracies.
There is also "state capitalism" where an institution of coercion tries to enter the world of voluntary exchange. But such state capitalism is possible only via rule of men, not rule of law. Certain requirements and polices on taxation, business registration and other regulations that normally apply to private enterprises do not apply to government- or state-owned enterprises (SOEs).
There is also "state capitalism" where an institution of coercion tries to enter the world of voluntary exchange. But such state capitalism is possible only via rule of men, not rule of law. Certain requirements and polices on taxation, business registration and other regulations that normally apply to private enterprises do not apply to government- or state-owned enterprises (SOEs).
3. "Survival of the fittest" economic theory is a wrong term. The appropriate term is "expansion of the efficient" and "non-expansion of the inefficient", or Yes, “bankruptcy of the inefficient.” Mr. A puts up a bakery shop in a corner lot, it was doing well initially. Then Mr. B and Mr. C also put up a competing more glitzy, more fanciful bakery shops nearby and draw in many customers of A. Does this mean the death, non-survival of bakeshop A?
Maybe yes, but maybe No. People are rational, they
innovate and adjust as much as possible. Those who do not adjust and innovate
are likely to go bankrupt. So bakery A can focus on cheaper (and smaller) pandesal
at P1 per piece while B and C sell fancy pandesal at P3 or more a piece. They
serve certain markets, certain consumers, over the same locality, and they can all
survive, no one dies. Instead of A prospering to become a big bakery shop, it
just retained its small size in that area, and can plan an expansion elsewhere,
in another village or municipality where it can innovate in its products,
pricing and marketing.
Market segmentation, product and pricing differentiation.
These are the key for enterprise innovation, market competition and economic
freedom. Even people who took Economics for their college degree forget their Econ
102 or Micro Economics course. They may consider reading old books on
microecon, or have a sit down in one undergrad lectures at UPSE.
Instead of listening to the Pope on economics, perhaps
people should consider listening to undergrad lectures at UPSE or other
universities. They will learn more. But if they want to hear stories for
enrichment of the soul, then they should listen to the Pope.
See also:
Welfarism 26: John Mangun on Economic Decline of the West, July 31, 2013
Inequality 16: Inclusive Growth and Central Planning, October 21, 2013
EFN Asia 32: Day 2 of Conference 2013 in Bangkok, November 09, 2013
Basic Economics by Thomas Sowell should be a very good primer. Highly recommended!
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