If the principle is conceded that virtuous individual action can lead to chaotic social outcomes, then all manner of central state planning can be justified as not only of public benefit but as fundamentally essential. It is the validity of Say’s Law that stands as the gatekeeper of economic freedom and prosperity. Without it, economic fallacies justify state force, which is multiplied in the name of public salvation. Read more…
The Folly that is Nationalisation
When all is said and done, nationalisation is simply the exchanging of majority shareholding from private investors who invested their own funds, to a public entity called the State who invests other people’s funds (taxes). This shift in shareholding is profound. The problem is not that “government doesn’t know how to run a mine.” Few […]