Free markets may yield odd results and certainly unequal outcomes, but the greater opportunities and prosperity have made the tradeoff worthwhile for American society.
From Our Economic Past ~ Equality, Markets, and Morality by Burton Folsom, Jr., posted at the Foundation for Economic Education.
Related posts:
- Burton Folsom, writer on capitalism, to speak in Wichita
- Myth: Markets rest on the principle of the survival of the fittest
- Myth: Markets can not meet human needs, such as health, housing, education, and food
- Myth: Markets lead to more inequality than non-market processes
- Myth: Markets lead to disastrous economic cycles, such as the Great Depression
- Myth: Markets don’t work in developing countries
- Myth: The more complex a social order is, the less it can rely on markets and the more it needs government direction
- Myth: Markets promote greed and selfishness
- Myth: Markets are immoral or amoral
- Myth: Privatizaton and marketization in post-communist societies were corrupt, which shows that markets are corrupting







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I couldn’t agree with that more.