Friday, September 15, 2006

About

Clive Crook, writing in The Economist asked, "Who will speak up for international capitalism?", and went on to say, "Governments and businesses. What a pity that is. These supposed defenders of globalisation may do more to undermine support for it than the critics."

How so? I think one of the best answers came from Raghuram Rajan and Luigi Zingales, authors of Saving Capitalism from Capitalists - here. They said:

There is widespread belief that the most important tools of capitalism, free markets, do not benefit the common man, let alone the poor. We argue in this book that this belief is misplaced. The last three decades have shown that free markets are perhaps the most important tools for lifting the huddled masses out of poverty. But why then does the belief exist? We argue that it is because markets need rules to flourish. Rules are set by the politically powerful. Even in democracies, these do not always represent the common man. Instead, they often serve special interests such as dominant industrialists and well-connected bankers. The common belief is that these people want markets to be free. The truth, however, as we document in this book, is that in many countries the dominant business elites have created rules that prevent markets from becoming truly free, thus keeping their peoples mired in poverty.


This blog hopes to do something similar - document the attempts made by incumbents (who push for certain rules) and politicians (who impose them) to prevent markets from becoming truly free. Mostly from reports that appear in newspapers.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

great initiative. intelligent writings. enjoyed reading the blog. will definitely recommend it to a whole lot of blog reading friends.

Ramnath said...

Thanks Hirva!

Mana said...

Great to find more supporters of free markets especially those who quote hazlitt! check out http://www.ccs.in/blog/