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7 - Markets Are Not Perfect

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 April 2021

James R. Otteson
Affiliation:
University of Notre Dame
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Summary

Given all the claims we have made about how beneficial markets and market-based commercial societies are, one might be surprised at the title of this chapter. Markets lead to increased prosperity; exchanges in markets are positive-sum; honest profit is the result of mutual betterment; markets allow inequality in wealth that we should welcome as a reflection of human uniqueness and diversity; free trade is a boon to society and to all parties concerned; and markets encourage the virtues of tolerance, openness, civility, and what David Hume called “sociality.” And the proof is in the pudding: on virtually every way we have devised to measure human well-being – everything from longevity to life satisfaction to peace to prosperity to politeness – the more market-based a country’s economy is, the better its citizens fare. It sounds as if markets are an unalloyed good, perhaps even perfect. Is that the claim?

Type
Chapter
Information
Seven Deadly Economic Sins
Obstacles to Prosperity and Happiness Every Citizen Should Know
, pp. 208 - 241
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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