
Enemies of unfettered capitalism, unite!
For as long as I can remember, people on the left have complained about "unfettered capitalism." Moderate liberals do it, and of course flat-out Marxists do it.
In his new book, "A Bit of Everything: Power, People, Profits and Progressive Capitalism for an Age of Discontent," Nobel Prize-winning economist
"Capitalism will be part of the story, but it can't be the kind of capitalism that we've had for the last 40 years," Stiglitz writes. "It can't be the kind of selfish, unfettered capitalism where firms just maximize shareholder value regardless of the social consequences."
Sen.
History texts insist that the New Deal followed in the wake of the unfettered capitalism of the 1920s. The Progressive Era, we're told, was in part a response to the unfettered capitalism of the late 19th century and the "Gilded Age." In 1987, the
Recently, the concern with capitalism's unfetteredness has become bipartisan. Sens.
My response to this dismaying development is: What on earth are these people talking about?
If the Progressive Era was a response to unfettered capitalism, did it accomplish nothing?
I could go on and on. I mean, I haven't even mentioned the Great Society.
A fetter is a chain, manacle or restraint. If you think there are no restraints on the market or on economic activity, why on earth do we have the
Now, if you think we don't spend, regulate or tax enough, fine. Make your case. If you think we should spend and tax differently, I'm right there with you. But the notion that
My frustration stems from the fact that we "fetter" the market constantly. And whenever the fetters yield an undesirable result -- like, say, the financial crisis of 2008 -- the blame always lands on eternally unfettered capitalism.
Just to be clear: I'm not an advocate for unfettered capitalism. But I am sick and tired of hearing people advocate unfettered government to fight an enemy that doesn't exist. And I'm particularly dyspeptic about the fact that conservatives are now buying into the same fantasy.
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Jonah Goldberg is a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and editor-at-large of National Review Online.