Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
When Being Pro-Market Requires Being Anti-Business
When Being Pro-Market Requires Being Anti-Business
Jul 4, 2025 6:15 PM

Who is the biggest enemy of the free market system? The late Milton Friedman, one of the 20th century’s most prominent free market champions, had a surprising answer: the munity.

Economist Arnold Kling explains whysupport for markets and business are not the same thing:

Consider the following matrix:

Pro-Business Anti-Business
Pro-Market
Anti-Market

The point is that there really are four separate categories, not just the two pro’s and the two anti’s. On health care reform and bank regulation, I would argue that the Obama Administration is trying to be pro-business and anti-market. The wonks do not trust markets at all, and they think they can do a better job of regulating them. But they are more than willing to keep big business interests happy.

An important point is that well-established businesses do not trust markets either. The last thing that a well-established business wants to see is a free market. What it wants is a regulated market that petitors at bay. The people who benefit from free markets are small entrepreneurs and, above all, consumers.

My sense is that until the 1980s conservatives (as opposed to Republicans) tended to lean toward the pro-market/anti-business side. During the Reagan years, though, the pro-market and pro-business sides created a fusionism that paralleled the alliance of libertarians and conservatives. This went largely unchanged for decades until a rift began to appear during the 2008 presidential primary (Huckabee leaned pro-market, while Romney skewed pro-business, and McCain seemed not to know the difference) until the financial crisis and the bailouts began. Similarly, liberals were anti-market and (moderately) anti-business until the Clinton era. After the 2000s, the Democrats remained anti-market while ing much more pro-business.

I suspect we’ll soon see a new realignment with conservatives (again, as opposed to Republicans) moving back to the pro-market and anti-business while the Democrats (as opposed to populist liberals) e fortable admitting they are pro-business and anti-market.

For many reasons, I believe it’s more important for Christians in America to be more pro-market (which is more conducive to freedom and virtue than it’s alternative) than to be either pro- or anti- business. When business is aligned with the interest of free markets, we should be pro-business; when business is aligned against free markets we should be anti-business.

Obviously, such a claim about what all Christians should do needs further explanation and a robust defense. That, of course, is a key part of the ongoing mission of the Acton Institute, so I hope to do that often in the near future. But a necessaryprolegomena is to point out that being pro-market does not mean being pro-business and being anti-market does not require being anti-business. This is one of the most misunderstood connections in modern thinking about economics and public policy. Only by clearing up the general public’s misconception about this pointcan we have an informed debate and make progress toward a more free market system.

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
Gregg, Jayabalan on Pope Francis’ Environmental Encyclical
On Naharnet, a Lebanese news and information site, Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg and Director of Istituto Acton Kishore ment on Pope Francis’s ing environmental encyclical, which the news organization says is planned for release this summer. (Note: The article describes Acton as a “Catholic” think tank but it is, in fact, an ecumenical organization with broad participation from Catholics, Protestants, Orthodox Christians and those of other faith traditions.) Naharnet notes that “a papal encyclical is meant to provide spiritual...
Why Property Rights Lead to Peace
Why are property rights important, even for those who own the least? Professor Tom W. Bell of Chapman University School of Law explains that property rights allow people to live together in peace, prosperity, and freedom. ...
Detroit: ‘It Didn’t Have To Be This Way’
Both my parents grew up in Detroit, and my childhood was filled with great trips to visit family for holidays and in the summer. The downtown Hudson’s store was always a destination. One of my aunts worked there, and it was the place to shop. Our trips always included a stop for a Sander’s hot fudge ice cream puff as well. My sisters and I played endless games on the stoop of my grandmother’s home, and a few miles away,...
Can Human Ecology Harm Humans?
That’s one of the questions es to mind when reading Bill McGurn’s op-ed in today’s Wall Street Journal. Many free-market advocates, including yours truly, have already expressed concern over what may appear in the papal encyclical due this summer. McGurn concurs but, like a good entrepreneur, also sees an opportunity: The fears are not without cause. There are many signs that do not augur well, from the muddled section on economics in the pope’s first encyclical [Actually, it was an...
Why Are Liberal Christian Leaders Supporting the Iran Nuclear Agreement?
Last week a group of (mostly liberal) Christian leaders took out a full-page ad in Roll Call calling on lawmakers to support the recent Framework Agreement on Iran’s nuclear program. “As Christian leaders we are telling our political leaders: It is imperative that you pursue this agreement with mitment, and perseverance,” The ad says. “We will be praying for you.” The support of the agreement is a mistake, saysNicholas G. Hahn III.Why focus on urging a nuclear agreement when Christians...
How the ‘Shoe That Grows’ is Helping Kids in Extreme Poverty
One day while walking to church in Nairobi, Kenya, Kenton Lee noticed a little girl in a white dress who had shoes that were way to small for her feet. He thought, “Wouldn’t it be great if there was a shoe that could adjust and expand – so that kids always had a pair of shoes that fit?” That question led to the development of “The Shoe That Grows,” a shoe that grows from a size 5 to a size...
Will An EU Ban On Thailand’s Slavery-Dependent Fishing Industry Make A Difference?
It is no secret that Thailand is rife with human trafficking. It is the world’s number one destination for sex travel. (Yes, that means people travel to Thailand solely for the purpose of having sex with men, women and children who are trafficked.) Thailand’s fishing industry is also dependent on human trafficking, often using young boys at sea for long periods of time, sometimes working them to death. Quartz is reporting today that the EU is considering a ban of...
How Justice Scalia Harmed Religious Liberty
Over the past hundred years few judges have been able to match the wit, wisdom, and intellectual rigor of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. During his thirty year career he has been an indefatigable champion of originalism (a principle of interpretation that views the Constitution’s meaning as fixed as of the time of enactment) and a vociferous critic of the slippery “living constitution” school of jurisprudence. When future historians assess his career Scalia will be viewed as one of the...
Socialism, Venezuela And The Art Of The Queue
According to Daniel Pardo, citizens of Venezuela have figured out the fine art of queuing (that’s “waiting in line” for Americans.) It’s a good thing, too, since things like milk, sugar, soap, toilet paper and other essentials are always in short supply in this socialist country. The government regulates the price of these goods. It doesn’t subsidise them – it tells the producer what they can charge. That might just about make sense in a buoyant economy but with inflation...
The Armenian Day of Remembrance
Armenian Orphans, 1918. At the end of this week, on April 24, many will recall the Armenian Genocide by observing the “The Armenian Day of Remembrance.” This day remembers the more than one million Armenians who were slaughtered by the Ottoman government during and after World War I. Patriarch of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Catholicos Karekin II, describes the genocide: Centuries of honest plishments and creativity were swiftly plundered…Thousands of monasteries and churches were desecrated and destroyed. National institutions and...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved