Darias wrote:I don't know what I take issue with more, the fact that WinePusher thinks corporations, as they exist now, are compatible with the free market, or that my argument is "inappropriate" because I wish to define a corporation for what it is.
I have read many writers that come out of the Free Market/Austrian tradition and no single writer I've come across claim that corporations are not compatible with the Free Market. No economist I've ever read has argued that corporations are somehow 'anti free market.'
Darias wrote:Now, I am not surprised when I hear socialists and statists blame the free market for problems perpetuated by the state and crony capitalism -- and I shouldn't be surprised to hear that the same person who thinks that the free market and government control of the money supply are compatible also thinks that corporations are as well.
I have argued here and elsewhere that I don't think the Federal Reserve should exist. But, unlike you I have thought out my position. If you abolish the Federal Reserve would you send the jurisdiction of the money supply back to Congress? How would you control the money supply?
And the fact of the matter is, what you said about corporations is bizarre. I've never heard anybody say that corporations anti free market, and that in a true free market corporations wouldn't exist.
Darias wrote:In my view it is astoundingly inappropriate for someone who is familiar with economics as yourself, and for someone who considers themselves conservative, to redefine a corporation as merely a partnership of businesses.
I never said a corporation is the same thing as a partnership. I said that a corporation is a
type of firm/business, just like a sole propriertorship and a partnership are merely a
type of firm/business.
Darias wrote:You should know that corporations are state sanctioned organizations. They have legal personhood, and limited liability means that CEOs don't have to take much personal risk or responsibility for their actions -- and the taxpayer ends up footing the bill when man made corporate disasters happen. I think it's dishonest on your part WinePusher for not acknowledging this; I wouldn't expect anyone else here to know better, but you should.
Still don't see how any of this is relevant. Just because there are laws that oversee corporations (corporate law) it doesn't mean that corporations are anti free market. Using this extremist view, in order for a true free market to exist you would have to abolish all laws. There are laws that govern interstate commerce, and there are government laws that oversee business partnerships...are these things somehow anti free market?
I'm not sure what McCulloch was specifically referring to when he said you're 'redefining' things, but if he was referring to the term 'free market' than he would be right. You are redefining what a free market actually is. You think that a free market can only exist if there are absolutely no laws whatsoever, and that view is equivalent to anarchy. Free marketers like Friedman and Hayek never advocated anything of the sort. They believed government intervention should be rare, not non existent.
For example, I don't want a bloated welfare system like the one we currently have. But I also don't want no welfare system whatsoever. I want a basic governmental welfare system that takes care of the basic needs of truely disadvantaged people who actually need it and cant make it on their own. And if you disagree with this notion then you really need to take some time and rethink your position.
Darias wrote:Corporations, as they exist now, cannot exist without a state. They wouldn't have legal personhood or limited liability or government subsidies or any of that.
Again, you're confused. Corporations are recognized as persons under the law so they can be sued and taxed. The government grants them the right to personhood for these purposes. That is not opposed to free market principles.
But I agree that subsidies and bailouts are against the free market and I would not support those policies.
Darias wrote:And when a state grants legal protections and subsidies to big businesses, and when the state controls the money supply - there can be no free market.
How would you control the money supply? Even Ron Paul doesn't want to get rid of the Federal Reserve, only extreme libertarian figures do. The money supply needs to be controlled by something.