Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Trade as a path to social harmony and peace
Trade as a path to social harmony and peace
Mar 19, 2026 7:29 AM

In 1980, PBS first aired Milton Friedman’s series, “Free to Choose,” which chronicledthe glories of liberty across a range of areas, from welfare policy and education to healthcare, monetary policy, and beyond.

In a new 19-minute documentary, Johan Norberg revisits Friedman’s famous episode on trade, applying its core arguments to our modern economic context and debate, summarizing the key arguments with refreshing concision.

Friedman’s episode rested heavily on the story of Hong Kong, which he visited in the original series. Norberg returns to the city, even tracking down and interviewing a business owner who has adapted his enterprise throughout the economic changes ofthe past few decades.

The episode highlightsthe arguments for trade as it relates to efficiency, economic dynamism and diversification, innovation and creative destruction, and equal opportunity. Yet as I argued rather recently, the material features offer but a hint of other baseline benefits, which are ultimately social and spiritual.

On this, Friedman connects the dots accordingly, noting the benefits of trade when es to fostering harmony and collaboration among workers, trade partners, foreign countries, and petitors. “The operation of the free market is so essential, not only to promote productive efficiency,” Friedman explains, “but even more, to foster harmony and peace among the peoples of the world.”

Further, in an age where free and open exchange is now ridiculed as benefiting only a conspiratorial global elite, Friedman reminds us that it is trade, not protectionism, that ultimately benefits the least powerful in a society. Indeed, the more “protections,” the more cronyism.

As Friedman explains, “the major beneficiaries are always the small man”:

When people are free, they are able to use their own resources most effectively and you have a great deal of productivity, a great deal of opportunity. The major beneficiaries are always the small man. The man who has power who is at the top of a society, he’s going to do well whatever kind of society you have. It’s the society which gives the small man the opportunity to go his way, which is going to benefit him the most.

The more basic economic arguments are important, and they will always be worth revisiting and reexamining and re-articulating. Norberg reminds us how well Friedman covered those bases, but more importantly, of his enduring contributions on the deeper and more profound social value of liberty itself.

Photo: The Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice, CC0 1.0

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
Sebelius Asks Health Care Industry For ‘Donations’ To Prop Up Obamacare
While the Obama administration is busy dealing with the IRS scandal, the Benghazi scandal and the seizure of reporters’ phone records, HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius is skirting around a problem as well. Sebelius has been asking for donations for Obamacare costs from the very people and industry who will be charged with implementing it and getting government money to do so. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius has gone, hat in hand, to health industry officials, asking them to...
Should We Be Eating More Bugs?
Our planet contains about forty tons of bugs for every human, says Helena Goodrich, offering and “ongoing ‘all you can eat” insect buffet.” While snacking on cicadas probably won’t catch on in the U.S. anytime soon, could eating more bugs help solve world hunger? According to a recent U.N. report, insects could indeed be part of the solution to some of the world’s food security and health problems. More than 1,900 species have reportedly been used as food and insects...
What capitalists can learn from Pope Francis
In a May 16 address to four new Vatican ambassadors, Pope Francis denounced the “cult of money” in today’s culture, stating that we are now living in a disposable society, where even human beings are cast aside. Phil Lawler, at CatholicCulture.org asks if this means the pope is a socialist. Not so: Socialists make their arguments in moral terms, because if the argument is stated purely in practical terms, the socialists will lose. By the same logic, capitalists prefer to...
Education Choice Helps Minorities
Sometimes parents in e areas get a bad rap. Many are thought to be negligent and uncaring about their children’s education and futures. While that may be true in some extraordinary cases, you will rarely ever meet a parent who wants to enroll their child in a low-performing school. In fact, research suggests that when parents are given free choice about where to place their children in school, they will choose the best school they can find. The positive es...
German Homeschoolers Denied Asylum in U.S.
On Tuesday, the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals said that Uwe and Hannelore Romeike along with their children were not persecuted by the German government and will not be granted asylum in the United States. According to the Religion News Service, the Romeikes wanted to home school their children, fearing public education would discourage “Christian values.” The German government levied thousands of dollars of fines on the family and threatened to take away their children. The Romeikes fled Germany and...
Black America, ‘We’ve got no time for excuses’
President Obama, on Sunday, delivered a touching mencement address at Morehouse College, an all-male historically black college that is also the alma mater of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr, that will likely bother many progressives. NPR captured these important sections: We know that too many young men in munity continue to make bad choices. Growing up, I made a few myself. And I have to confess, sometimes I wrote off my own failings as just another example of...
Rent and Regulations are a Household’s Greatest Expenses
A new study estimates the cost of regulation in the U.S. at $14,768 per household: For two decades, Wayne Crews of the Competitive Enterprise Institute has tracked the growth of new federal regulations. In his 20th anniversary edition this week, he’ll report that pages in the Code of Federal Regulations hit an all-time high of 174,545 in 2012, an increase of more than 21% during the last decade. Relying largely on government data, Mr. Crews estimates that in 2012 the...
Sisters’ Proxy Resolutions Dilute Catholic ‘Brand’
Standing up for religious principles in an increasingly secularized and politicized country has e extremely difficult for religious and clergy. It doesn’t help their spiritual causes when these very same religious and clergy cannot delineate between what their respective faiths teach and what is simply the desire to attain a political or economic result. For example, the Sisters of St. Francis of Philadelphia, a member of the Interfaith Counsel on Corporate Responsibility, have issued a shareholder proxy resolution to Walgreens...
IRS Asked Pro-Life Group About Content of Public Prayers
IRS agents appear to need a refresher course on First Amendment freedoms. While applying for tax-exempt status in 2009, an Iowa-based pro-life group was asked by the agency to provide information about its members’ prayer meetings: On June 22, 2009, the Coalition for Life of Iowa received a letter from the IRS office in Cincinnati, Ohio, that oversees tax exemptions requesting details about how often members pray and whether their prayers are “considered educational.” “Please explain how all of your...
‘Buy Yourself a Cup of Tea’ — A Collapse in Culture
The Rana Plaza garment factory collapse in Bangladesh on April 24th killed 1,127 people, including almost 300 whose bodies have not yet been identified. In the article, “Buy Yourself a Cup of Tea” — A Collapse in Culture”, PovertyCure’s Mark Weber highlights plex and deeply-rooted problem within Bangladeshi culture that has contributed to numerous disasters like this: corruption. The reversal of this pattern requires mitment much stronger than any government regulation can provide, he maintains. He says, Corruption disguises what...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved