MCViewPoint

Opinion from a Libertarian ViewPoint

Posts Tagged ‘Invisible Hand’

Unleashing the Power of Greed: How the Free Market Propels Progress | Mises Wire

Posted by M. C. on June 26, 2023

I don’t see even the most Left-Wing scholar in this country scornfully burning his salary check. In other words, “greed” simply means that you are trying to relieve the nature-given scarcity that man was born with. Greed will continue until the Garden of Eden arrives, when everything is superabundant, and we don’t have to worry about economics at all. 

https://mises.org/wire/unleashing-power-greed-how-free-market-propels-progress

Michael Matulef

The free market system has faced its fair share of criticism, often being labeled as a breeding ground for greed and self-interest. However, let’s take a closer look and see how greed, when properly channeled and regulated within a free market framework, can actually bring about positive outcomes for society.

One fascinating thought experiment that showcases the positive role of greed in the free market is Adam Smith’s concept of the “invisible hand.” Smith proposed that when individuals pursue their own self-interest, unintended benefits are generated for society as a whole. By seeking personal gain, individuals are motivated to produce goods and services that others value, leading to voluntary exchanges that benefit both parties. This intricate network of self-interest forms the foundation of a prosperous and efficient free market system.

At the heart of the free market lies the entrepreneurial spirit, which is driven by the desire for profit. Entrepreneurs spot unmet needs and desires within the market and strive to fill those gaps with innovative products, services, and solutions. Through their endeavors, they not only create wealth for themselves but also stimulate economic growth, generate employment opportunities, and contribute to the overall expansion of the economy. Greed, when harnessed by entrepreneurs, becomes a catalyst for innovation and progress.

Competition, an inherent aspect of the free market, acts as a powerful force that channels and refines the actions driven by greed. In a competitive marketplace, self-interested individuals are compelled to provide superior goods and services at lower prices in order to attract customers and maximize profits. This compulsion leads to a broader range of choices, improved quality of goods and services, and lower prices for consumers. The drive for personal gain is transformed into a pursuit of excellence, resulting in a more efficient and consumer-oriented market.

The pursuit of self-interest in the free market fosters cooperation and specialization. Individuals, motivated by their desire for personal gain, recognize the benefits of collaboration and form mutually beneficial relationships. This division of labor allows individuals to focus on their strengths, increasing overall productivity and efficiency. By leveraging their respective areas of expertise, individuals fueled by the inherent drive for greed contribute to the collective advancement of society.

While it’s essential to recognize the positive aspects of greed within the free market, we must also shed light on how the state, through coercion and intervention, can turn greed into a destructive force. When greed operates outside the bounds of ethical principles and voluntary exchange, it poses a significant threat to the fundamental principles that underpin a free market system.

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Seeing The Invisible Hand

Posted by M. C. on April 11, 2023

Thomas Sowell said it best when he averred: “It is hard to imagine a more stupid or dangerous way of making decisions that by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no penalty for being wrong.” He, too, is herein channeling the invisible hand.

Hint: don’t bet against the invisible hand. It is a losing proposition.

https://open.substack.com/pub/walterblock/p/seeing-the-invisible-hand?utm_source=share&utm_medium=android

Luis Rivera

By Walter E. Block

Adam Smith’s “invisible hand” is certainly the most wondrous, astounding and marvelous concept in all of economics, and there are quite a few doozies in the dismal science. I go further than that. The invisible hand ranks as high or higher, in terms of pure beauty, than even the smile of a baby, the music of Mozart or the most beautiful sunset that ever took place. In terms of what it means for our potential prosperity, it has no upper bounds whatsoever.

Bastiat perched himself on the top of the Eifel Tower, looked down at the people scurrying around far down below him, and marveled at the fact that Paris got fed, without any central direction at all. This was in invisible hand (that is, free enterprise) at work; you can’t see this “hand,” but you can discern its effects.

We all marvel at the teamwork of the championship basketball team, the winner of the eight-person shell in the regatta, a 100-member orchestra playing 64th notes without a hair’s breath of discord. But this pales into total insignificance compared to the teamwork made at least potentially possible by the invisible hand; all eight billion of us cooperating producing goods and services and thus fighting poverty. These other accomplishments have a coach, a coxswain or a conductor; in contrast, when the human race bans protectionism and regulation, the invisible hand will take over without any central direction at all. If that is not a miracle, then nothing is (Adam Smith thought that the invisible hand was God’s hand). If that does not at least slightly shake up the atheists of the world, then nothing will.

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Sugar and Spice and Everything Vice: the Empire’s Sin City of London — Strategic Culture

Posted by M. C. on March 10, 2020

https://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2020/03/08/sugar-and-spice-and-everything-vice-the-empires-sin-city-of-london/

Cynthia Chung

The over 1000 point plunge of the stock market on Feb 27th and broader ruptures of the financial system last week have been yet another wake up call for those who have been contented so far to “live in the moment” of fast money.

Since the 2008 financial crisis, which is considered the most serious financial crisis since the Great Depression of the 1930s, many have not been able to go back to sleep after such a lucid nightmare. Some have chosen the path of stocking up on cans of beans, distilling their urine into water and binge watching survivalists such as Bear Grylls hoping to absorb his skills through television osmosis.

The 2008 crisis put in the spotlight the psychopathic level of greed, vice, apathy and short-sightedness from those who wanted to play into the City of London and Wall Street casino houses. Get rich quick and don’t care who you screw in the process, after all, at the end of the day you’re either a winner or a loser.

Since the general public tends to consist of decent people, there is a widespread difficulty in comprehending how entire economies of countries have been hijacked by these piranhas. That we have hit such a level of crime that even people’s hard earned pensions, education, health-care, housing etc. are all being gambled away… LEGALLY.

Looking upon investment bankers today, one is reminded of those sad addicts in the casino who are ruined and lose everything, except the difference is, they are given the option to sell their neighbour’s family into slavery to pay off their debt.

It is no secret that much of the “finance” that goes through the City of London and Wall Street is dirty and yet despite this recognition, there appears to be an inability to address it and that at this point we are told that if we tried to address it by breaking up and regulating the “Too Big to Fail” banks, then the whole economy would come tumbling down.

That is, the world is so evidently run by criminal activity that at this point we have become dependent on its dirty money to keep afloat the world economy.

Faced with the onrushing collapse of the financial system, the greatest Ivy League trained minds of the world have run into a dead end: the bailouts into the banking system that began this past September have prevented a chain reaction meltdown for a few months, but as the liquidity runs out so too will the ideas on where the money justifying bank bailouts will come from.

With these dead ends, we have seen the lightbulb go off in the minds of a large strata of economists who have been making the case in recent years that valuable revenue can yet be generated from one more untapped stream: the decriminalisation and legalisation of vice.

Hell, the major banks have already been doing this covertly as a matter of practice for generations… so why not just come out of the closet and make it official? This is where the money is at. This is where the job market is at. So let us not “bite the hand that feeds us”!

But is this truly the case? Is there really no qualitative difference how the money is generated and how it is spent as long as there is an adequate money flow?

Well it is never a good sign when beside the richest you can also find the poorest just a stone’s throw away. And right beside the largest financial center in the world, the City of London, there lies the poorest borough in all of London: Tower Hamlets with a 39% poverty rate and an average family income amounting to less than £ 13, 000/year.

A City within a City

Hell is a city much like London

– Percy Bysshe Shelley

Although Wall Street has contributed greatly to this sad situation, this banking hub of America is best understood as the spawn of the City of London.

The City of London is over 800 years old, it is arguably older than England herself, and for over 400 years it has been the financial center of the world.

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