Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
A Cultural Case for Capitalism: Part 3 of 12 — What Economic Freedom Is and Isn’t
A Cultural Case for Capitalism: Part 3 of 12 — What Economic Freedom Is and Isn’t
Jun 17, 2026 6:53 PM

[Part 1 is here.]

Even a cursory look at the annual list of the freest and least free economies in the world suggests a strong correlation between economic freedom and the prosperity of its citizens, including its poorest citizens. But there’s another correlation that tends to capture the attention of those making a cultural critique of the free economy. They note that America is economically free, and that it’s experiencing cultural decay, so they conclude the first causes the second. The conclusion isn’t absurd, but it also doesn’t follow necessarily. Sometimes correlation is due to causation, and sometimes it isn’t. To avoid confusion and false conclusions, we need to distinguish the idea of economic freedom from some things it isn’t.

A lot of people view economic freedom as synonymous with big corporations cutting sweetheart deals with politicians to petitors and consumer choice. This stuff goes on all the time, of course, but it isn’t economic freedom. It’s the leviathan state and big business colluding to manipulate the market, to stack the deck in favor of political insiders. Every market economy on the planet has some of this sort of thing, since economies are operated by fallen human beings. The question is, where does cronyism tend to be the worst?

Think about modern day economies famous for their endemic cronyism—countries such as Venezuela and Russia. They’re planned and regulated to the hilt. This pattern shouldn’t surprise us. The more economic planning and manipulation a government performs on a market, the more Big Business X will be tempted to lobby its government to plan things in its favor. Or e at it from the other direction, the more politicians and government bureaucrats an entrepreneur has to get past in order to launch or grow a business, the more opportunities there are for politicians and government bureaucrats to insist on special favors or outright bribes.

Now imagine an economy where the citizens limit the government to its core roles of protecting people’s life, liberty, and property, and of bringing criminals to justice. Picture an economy where people are free to make voluntary exchanges, and because of the robust rule of law, are able to do so confident that theft, fraud, or government shakedowns will be rare exceptions and not the norm.

In a fully free economy, there isn’t a government bureaucrat insisting you not buy sugar from that business over there, or that if you want to buy from this fishing boat maker, you’ll have to pay a hidden fee called a tariff, some of which will be used to pay a government salary and some of which will be used to prop up two of the boat-makers you decided not to buy from. That’s a planned or mixed economy, and it creates incentives for businesses to lobby and even bribe political players for special favors and protections.

A free economy in the strict sense of the term is one where the government fulfills its core role of enforcing laws against things like theft, fraud, violence and toxic waste dumping, and refuses to get involved in picking winners and losers in the marketplace. In that sort of economy, businesses have strong incentives to avoid theft, fraud and the like, and to focus on meeting the wants and needs of customers better than petitors do.

Notice what this also entails. Economic freedom doesn’t mean a lawless, anything-goes economy. The free economy is characterized by the rule of law, that is, by an mitment to justice for all classes and members of society.

It isn’t that we need a little freedom and a little promise where both promised. It’s that freedom is diminished without the rule of law. This is what the American Founders recognized and emphasized: there is a positive link between freedom and morality.

Think of driving a car. How free would any of us be to drive where we wanted to go if others on the road insisted that, in the interest of freedom, the traffic laws didn’t apply to them? Sprinkle enough of that kind of freedom into the traffic mix and soon you’re not free to drive anywhere without risking life and limb.

This lawless roadway can serve as a metaphor for what many poor people in the developing world face as a daily reality beyond the roadway, a lack of basic justice that is the subject of the 2014 book The Locust Effect by Gary Haugen and Victor Boutros. The work details how “most of the global poor lack the most basic ingredient of forward progress: personal security” and are forced to struggle “outside the protection of rudimentary law enforcement … utterly vulnerable to the locusts of violence that e on any given day and sweep all other good efforts to improve their lives away.”

It may be hard to digest this point about freedom vs. chaos when considering it on a global scale, so consider it on the scale of a neighborhood farmer’s market. The freest farmer’s market isn’t the one where the police sleep through an endless series of muggings. It’s the one characterized by ordered liberty, where buyers and sellers generally behave themselves, the law punishes the rare instances of overt criminal behavior (e.g., fraud and muggings), and intervenes when, for instance, the workers from the biggest produce stand try to threaten and harass from of the marketplace a new vendor offering better prices or tastier produce.

When the government consistently enforces the rule of law in this robust but limited way, economic freedom increases and, along with it, the capacity for entrepreneurs to create new wealth and better meet the wants and needs of customers. This is economic freedom, a ponent of capitalism rightly understood.

[Part 4 of 12 is here.]

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Shake your groove thing
Many of you may have already heard of the new line of Levi’s jeans due out later this year, the patible RedWire DLX jeans: “With a joystick remote control built into the watch pocket, the new jeans will allow wearers to play, pause, track forward or back and adjust the volume on their iPods without having to take them out of their pockets.” There is also a built-in pocket designed to “conceal the bulge of the iPod.” But Levi Strauss...
Liberty for Liberia
After decades of civil unrest, the African nation of Liberia has elected the first female head of state in the history of the continent. Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, a Harvard-educated economist and veteran of international affairs, was sworn in yesterday in the capital city of Monrovia. Founded in 1822, Liberia is Africa’s oldest republic, and the result of the work of the “American Colonization Society to settle freed American slaves in West Africa. The society contended that the immigration of blacks to...
Christ and the culture wars
Mark your calendars: The Institute for the Study of Christianity and Culture at Michigan State University is hosting a conference on April 7-8 with the keynote address to be given by Dr. Randall Balmer, Ann Whitney Olin Professor, Barnard College, Columbia University. From the conference site: “Dr. Balmer will be giving a lecture and a panel discussion on the topic of his ing book Taking the Country Back: How the Religious Right is Winning the Culture Wars.” There will also...
King’s dream: beyond black and white
As the nation prepares to celebrate the birthday of Martin Luther King Jr. on Jan. 15, it’s time to broaden the discussion of race relations in America to include not just blacks and whites, but Asians, Hispanics and Native Americans. The long fixation on black-white relations has obscured some important measures of racial progress — or lack of it — in American society, argues Anthony Bradley. “In fact, the greatest impediment to appropriating King’s dream is our unwillingness to move...
Concerns about a la carte
Some new developments on the idea to move cable television to an a la carte subscription model: Christians and minorities are “concerned.” According to the Christian Science Monitor, FCC chairman Kevin Martin is pressuring cable providers to move away from the tier-based subscription system to “a full thumbs-up/thumbs-down choice of individual channels.” In what’s sure to tweak the sensibilities of the cable industry, Martin threatened that if no such moves were made, “basic indecency and profanity restrictions may be a...
‘A superb butler’
Continuing the discussion of energy usage from yesterday, check out this review in the New York Sun of Children of the Sun (W.W. Norton), by Alfred Crosby, emeritus professor of history, geography, and American studies at the University of Texas. Reviewer Peter Pettus says that Crosby “has written a direct and clearly expressed analysis of the energy problem without hysterics, apocalyptic threats, or partisan rancor.” These, of course, are the precisely the characteristics that are so often found in discussions...
New human rights group
The U.N. and many of its attendant NGOs have often supported dubious and even Orwellian interpretations of human rights (pushing, for example, for coercive population control measures in the name of reproductive “freedom”). A new group, the International Solidarity and Human Rights Institute aims to promote an agenda more in keeping with a Christian concept of rights. One of its goals is to influence the U.N. positively on this issue. Godspeed. ...
Does American charity cheat the tax man?
A Stanford expert on philanthropy argues that tax-deductible American charity is actually a government subsidy and that philanthropy is not ‘redistributive’ enough. Acton’s Karen Woods points out (obvious to most) that helping the needy is not the exclusive domain of the state. “The real problem with government ‘charity’ is that government takes a ‘one size fits all’ approach to the problem of poverty,” Woods writes. Read mentary here. ...
Unintended consequences
There’s interesting news on the global warming front in today’s Financial Times: Everyone knows trees are “A Good Thing”. They take in the carbon dioxide that threatens our planet with global warming and turn it into fresh, clean oxygen for us all to breathe. But now it seems we need to think again. In a discovery that has left climate scientists gasping, researchers have found that the earth’s vegetation is churning out vast quantities of methane, a greenhouse gas far...
A harsh but good market
Apologies for a second Apple-related post in a row, but I thought this example might prove to be a decent case-study petition in the marketplace. One of the new products that Apple recently introduced was iWeb, a new program that makes it easy “to create websites and blogs plete with podcasts, photos and movies — and get them online, fast.” Why do I bring this up? The reason is that a small pany has been working on a similar program,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved