| > Unless there is too much inflation like in Weimar Republic The government money printing press is not free market. > too much corruption like in Russia The government's role in a free market is to prevent corruption. > too much monopoly like with Standard Oil Standard Oil was very good for consumers, as SO brought about something like a 70% reduction in kerosene prices. Besides, SO never was a monopoly. It was accused of attempting to create one. > imagine that without central bank support Don't need to imagine it. It happened several times in the 1800s. Recovery tended to be as quick. > given working police and the justice system Free markets require a working police and justice system |
Oh no, not again this 'No True Scottman'-'Free market' myth.
Let's go down this path - what does 'free market' theory say, how much money should be in the economy? How should it be created or destroyed? There is no natural process for it, whoever has lisense to print money can rule the world or collapse the economy. 'Free market theory' provides no answer, just like it provides no answer to most important economic questions.
Is using a physical valuable substance as money, let's say gold, free market? That's Mercantilism and it brought national economies to a standstill due to lack of liquidity. People couldn't trade goods, take loans, nations went to wars over silver.
Do you want to have gold standard and fractional reserve banking? Is it freely floating currency and a system where banks create money out of thin air? (governments don't print money any more by the way). Which one of these three totally different systems is the mythical true 'free market'?
Are private currencies owned by banks free market? That's what we used to have, they used to collapse all the time. That's why we invented central banks.