What Is the Free Market?
by Murray N. Rothbard

The Free market is a summary term for an array of
exchanges that take place in society. Each exchange is
undertaken as a voluntary agreement between two people or
between groups of people represented by agents. These two
individuals (or agents) exchange two economic goods,
either tangible commodities or nontangible services. Thus,
when I buy a newspaper from a news dealer for fifty cents,
the news dealer and I exchange two commodities: I give up
fifty cents, and the news dealer gives up the newspaper. Or
if I work for a corporation, I exchange my labor services, in
a mutually agreed way, for a monetary salary; here the
corporation is represented by a manager (an agent) with the
authority to hire.

Both parties undertake the exchange because each expects
to gain from it. Also, each will repeat the exchange next
time (or refuse to) because his expectation has proved
correct (or incorrect) in the recent past. Trade, or exchange,
is engaged in precisely because both parties benefit; if they
did not expect to gain, they would not agree to the exchange.

This simple reasoning refutes the argument against free
trade typical of the "mercantilist" period of sixteenth- to
eighteenth-century Europe, and classically expounded by
the famed sixteenth-century French essayist Montaigne. The
mercantilists argued that in any trade, one party can benefit
only at the expense of the other, that in every transaction
there is a winner and a loser, an "exploiter" and an
"exploited." We can immediately see the fallacy in this
still-popular viewpoint: the willingness and even eagerness
to trade means that both parties benefit. In modern
game-theory jargon, trade is a win-win situation, a
"positive-sum" rather than a "zero-sum" or "negative-sum"
game.

How can both parties benefit from an exchange? Each one
values the two goods or services differently, and these
differences set the scene for an exchange. I, for example, am
walking along with money in my pocket but no newspaper;
the news dealer, on the other hand, has plenty of
newspapers but is anxious to acquire money. And so,
finding each other, we strike a deal.

Two factors determine the terms of any agreement: how
much each participant values each good in question, and
each participant's bargaining skills. How many cents will
exchange for one newspaper, or how many Mickey Mantle
baseball cards will swap for a Babe Ruth, depends on all
the participants in the newspaper market or the baseball
card market  on how much each one values the cards as
compared to the other goods he could buy. These terms of
exchange, called "prices" (of newspapers in terms of
money, or of Babe Ruth cards in terms of Mickey Mantles),
are ultimately determined by how many newspapers, or
baseball cards, are available on the market in relation to
how favorably buyers evaluate these goods. In shorthand,
by the interaction of their supply with the demand for them.

Given the supply of a good, an increase in its value in the
minds of the buyers will raise the demand for the good,
more money will be bid for it, and its price will rise. The
reverse occurs if the value, and therefore the demand, for
the good falls. On the other hand, given the buyers'
evaluation, or demand, for a good, if the supply increases,
each unit of supply  each baseball card or loaf of bread
will fall in value, and therefore, the price of the good will
fall. The reverse occurs if the supply of the good decreases.

The market, then, is not simply an array, but a highly
complex, interacting latticework of exchanges. In primitive
societies, exchanges are all barter or direct exchange. Two
people trade two directly useful goods, such as horses for
cows or Mickey Mantles for Babe Ruths. But as a society
develops, a step-by-step process of mutual benefit creates a
situation in which one or two broadly useful and valuable
commodities are chosen on the market as a medium of
indirect exchange. This money-commodity, generally but not
always gold or silver, is then demanded not only for its own
sake, but even more to facilitate a re-exchange for another
desired commodity. It is much easier to pay steelworkers
not in steel bars, but in money, with which the workers can
then buy whatever they desire. They are willing to accept
money because they know from experience and insight that
everyone else in the society will also accept that money in
payment.

The modern, almost infinite latticework of exchanges, the
market, is made possible by the use of money. Each person
engages in specialization, or a division of labor, producing
what he or she is best at. Production begins with natural
resources, and then various forms of machines and capital
goods, until finally, goods are sold to the consumer. At each
stage of production from natural resource to consumer good,
money is voluntarily exchanged for capital goods, labor
services, and land resources. At each step of the way, terms
of exchanges, or prices, are determined by the voluntary
interactions of suppliers and demanders. This market is
"free" because choices, at each step, are made freely and
voluntarily.

The free market and the free price system make goods from
around the world available to consumers. The free market
also gives the largest possible scope to entrepreneurs, who
risk capital to allocate resources so as to satisfy the future
desires of the mass of consumers as efficiently as possible.
Saving and investment can then develop capital goods and
increase the productivity and wages of workers, thereby
increasing their standard of living. The free competitive
market also rewards and stimulates technological
innovation that allows the innovator to get a head start in
satisfying consumer wants in new and creative ways.

Not only is investment encouraged, but perhaps more
important, the price system, and the profit-and-loss
incentives of the market, guide capital investment and
production into the proper paths. The intricate latticework
can mesh and "clear" all markets so that there are no
sudden, unforeseen, and inexplicable shortages and
surpluses anywhere in the production system.

But exchanges are not necessarily free. Many are coerced.
If a robber threatens you with "Your money or your life,"
your payment to him is coerced and not voluntary, and he
benefits at your expense. It is robbery, not free markets, that
actually follows the mercantilist model: the robber benefits
at the expense of the coerced. Exploitation occurs not in the
free market, but where the coercer exploits his victim. In the
long run, coercion is a negative-sum game that leads to
reduced production, saving, and investment, a depleted
stock of capital, and reduced productivity and living
standards for all, perhaps even for the coercers themselves.

Government, in every society, is the only lawful system of
coercion. Taxation is a coerced exchange, and the heavier
the burden of taxation on production, the more likely it is
that economic growth will falter and decline. Other forms
of government coercion (e.g., price controls or restrictions
that prevent new competitors from entering a market)
hamper and cripple market exchanges, while others
(prohibitions on deceptive practices, enforcement of
contracts) can facilitate voluntary exchanges.

The ultimate in government coercion is socialism. Under
socialist central planning the socialist planning board lacks
a price system for land or capital goods. As even socialists
like Robert Heilbroner now admit, the socialist planning
board therefore has no way to calculate prices or costs or to
invest capital so that the latticework of production meshes
and clears. The current Soviet experience, where a bumper
wheat harvest somehow cannot find its way to retail stores,
is an instructive example of the impossibility of operating a
complex, modern economy in the absence of a free market.
There was neither incentive nor means of calculating prices
and costs for hopper cars to get to the wheat, for the flour
mills to receive and process it, and so on down through the
large number of stages needed to reach the ultimate
consumer in Moscow or Sverdlovsk. The investment in
wheat is almost totally wasted.

Market socialism is, in fact, a contradiction in terms. The
fashionable discussion of market socialism often overlooks
one crucial aspect of the market. When two goods are
indeed exchanged, what is really exchanged is the property
titles in those goods. When I buy a newspaper for fifty
cents, the seller and I are exchanging property titles: I yield
the ownership of the fifty cents and grant it to the news
dealer, and he yields the ownership of the newspaper to me.
The exact same process occurs as in buying a house, except
that in the case of the newspaper, matters are much more
informal, and we can all avoid the intricate process of
deeds, notarized contracts, agents, attorneys, mortgage
brokers, and so on. But the economic nature of the two
transactions remains the same.

This means that the key to the existence and flourishing of
the free market is a society in which the rights and titles of
private property are respected, defended, and kept secure.
The key to socialism, on the other hand, is government
ownership of the means of production, land, and capital
goods. Thus, there can be no market in land or capital goods
worthy of the name.

Some critics of the free-market argue that property rights
are in conflict with "human" rights. But the critics fail to
realize that in a free-market system, every person has a
property right over his own person and his own labor, and
that he can make free contracts for those services. Slavery
violates the basic property right of the slave over his own
body and person, a right that is the groundwork for any
person's property rights over nonhuman material objects.
What's more, all rights are human rights, whether it is
everyone's right to free speech or one individual's property
rights in his own home.

A common charge against the free-market society is that it
institutes "the law of the jungle," of "dog eat dog," that it
spurns human cooperation for competition, and that it exalts
material success as opposed to spiritual values, philosophy,
or leisure activities. On the contrary, the jungle is precisely
a society of coercion, theft, and parasitism, a society that
demolishes lives and living standards. The peaceful market
competition of producers and suppliers is a profoundly
cooperative process in which everyone benefits, and where
everyone's living standard flourishes (compared to what it
would be in an unfree society). And the undoubted material
success of free societies provides the general affluence that
permits us to enjoy an enormous amount of leisure as
compared to other societies, and to pursue matters of the
spirit. It is the coercive countries with little or no market
activity, notably under communism, where the grind of daily
existence not only impoverishes people materially, but
deadens their spirit.

This article was first published as an entry in The Fortune
Encyclopedia of Economics (Time Warner, 1993), David
Henderson, ed., pp 636-639.




ForumWebSiteAt  http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Libertarian  
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Libertarian/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to