Difference between revisions of "Marketism"
m (fixed self-link) |
(another belief) |
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** A society without government would be more free. | ** A society without government would be more free. | ||
* [[All political power comes from government]]. | * [[All political power comes from government]]. | ||
+ | * All coercion originates from government. | ||
+ | ** Government has a monopoly on force. | ||
* [[Monopolies cannot exist without government]]. | * [[Monopolies cannot exist without government]]. | ||
+ | * Government is the only thing forcing people to associate with others they do not wish to associate with. | ||
+ | ** ''(...ignoring factors such as non-portability of major assets such as land and housing)'' | ||
==Links== | ==Links== | ||
===Reference=== | ===Reference=== |
Revision as of 22:53, 13 December 2014
Free-marketism is a loose aggregation of beliefs that generally favor private enterprise over government, almost always advocating for "smaller" government or at least less government regulation of private business (laissez-faire economics). Some advocate for the abolishment of government altogether.
Terminology
An adherent of free marketism is called a free-marketeer or free-marketist.
Free-marketism that only advocates for "smaller" government, i.e. deregulation, is a form of minarchism.
Free-marketeers who advocate for the complete abolishment of government often self-identify as anarcho-capitalists (AnCaps for short), a form of anarchism, or as advocates of "Austrian economics", a reference to the Mises Institute.
Beliefs
Free-marketeers generally believe some combination of the following:
- Government is not inherently something desirable.
- Government is inherently evil.
- A society without government would be more free.
- All political power comes from government.
- All coercion originates from government.
- Government has a monopoly on force.
- Monopolies cannot exist without government.
- Government is the only thing forcing people to associate with others they do not wish to associate with.
- (...ignoring factors such as non-portability of major assets such as land and housing)
Links
Reference
Organizations
- Mises Institute: by far the most common source of free-marketist philosophy