| If I were to summarize the insights of economic schools of thought, then we get: 1. Keynesianism: "Your spending is my income, so when there's not enough spending, the government needs to step in". 2. Monetarism: "The monetary supply directly controls the economy and is the primary reason for economic phenomena". 3. Austrian economy: the market god, the market is king, all hail the market. The first two approaches provide actionable models and make predictions. As with all models, they have limits of applicability, and they are often wrong to some degree. Meanwhile, Austrian economics is always right. And when it's wrong, it's because you haven't done it hard enough. > If you think people in the market do things that are nasty when all the actions are voluntary (and that certainly can happen), shouldn't you be even more skeptical of those who are willing to engage in violence to force the things they want to come to be to happen? Well, let's look at a particular example: pollution regulation. Laws limit the almighty Market by forcing compaines to clean up their waste. Another example is monopolism. In the view of the Austrian economy "school" it is _always_ the result of government actions. And monopolies wouldn't exist otherwise, even for things like water supply and sewer. |
The Capitalist Market is the One True God of America. All the math and waxing philosophic are just set dressing to make that idea less obviously absurd.