Jagdish Bhagwati defends free markets against “capitalism’s petty detractors“:
Inevitably, the crisis on Wall Street has revived the never-ending notion that markets undermine morality. Oliver Stone, ever restless to recapture the days of former glory, has begun production on a sequel to the 1987 movie Wall Street, which immortalized Gordon Gekko as the symbol of markets and greed. But the debate on how markets affect morality has not always been a slam dunk for capitalism’s naysayers. . . .
After two and a half centuries of this fascinating debate, I have to say that my own sympathies lie with those who have found markets, on balance, to be on the side of the angels. But I should also add that I find the specific notion that markets corrupt our morals, and determine our ethical destiny, to be a vulgar quasi-Marxist notion about as convincing as that other vulgar notion that
ownership of the means of production is critical to our economic destiny. The idea that working with and within markets fuels our pursuit of self-interest, greed, avarice, and self-love, in ascending orders of moral turpitude, is surely at variance with what we know about ourselves.Yes, markets will influence values. But, far more important, the values we develop will affect in several ways how we behave in the marketplace.





October 13th, 2009 | 12:15 pm
Odd…the placement of this article directly beneath the one on the significance of poker as the US national card game.
I think there’s a link there.
Heh. Can you imagine socialists playing poker? Would they all demand equal hands? share in the pot equally? Interesting thoughts…
October 13th, 2009 | 4:36 pm
Please quit relating the Marxist term Capitalism with the new world term free market. The latter was born from individual freedom, something the Old World of Marx and Rousseau, and Obama, never experienced. They were the few elite ruling the many, and capitalism was a reaction to how the few elite did things, later to be replaced with different elite. Check http://www.claysamerica.com for more on this subject.
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