Why governments' attempts to pick winners produce more losers than winners.





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The Financial Times

I'm quite proud of this

On 7 April, I posted an article comparing the car-scrappage schemes with Bastiat's broken-window analogy.

The following is the leader from today's FT:

FT leader on Bastiat and scrappage 

Great minds think alike.


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Capitalist pigs of the media

Tim Worstall picked up yesterday on George Monbiot's rant against "neo-liberalism" and its promoters in the Mont Pèlerin Society and elsewhere. George names a large number of participants in the global conspiracy to promote the view "that we are best served by maximum market freedom and minimum intervention by the state", but

"the most powerful promoter of this programme was the media. Most of it is owned by multimillionaires who use it to project the ideas that support their interests. Those ideas which threaten their interests are either ignored or ridiculed. It is through the newspapers and TV channels that the socially destructive notions of a small group of extremists have come to look like common sense."

Which publication could be more representative of this global capitalist conspiracy in the media than the Financial Times? So it was interesting to see the stories they covered that same day, and the angles they took on those stories:

I'd say George has nothing to worry about. When the media's supposed high representative of free markets is loaded down with this much material critical of markets or supportive of big government, it's those of us who believe in freedom that need to worry, not twats like Monbiot who think they know what's best for us. Which leftward slant amongst even our supposed market advocates is not very different to the intellectual climate after the war, which led Hayek, Friedman and co to judge that they needed to found a society to preserve the idea of freedom and to discuss how to promote it. Plus ça change.


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Quotes

"This high official, all allow,
Is grossly overpaid;
There wasn't any Board, and now
There isn't any Trade."
The President of the Board of Trade (1922)

— A.P.Herbert



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