Talk:Free market: Difference between revisions - Wikipedia


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== Unsourced edits and warring ==

'''Any Other Models are Marxist''' ? where is the source for this ?

Also knowing your enemy helps please learn to differentiate between Socialism (French) & Communism (Marx) . Is that not taught at "hard On for Self prosperity" Institute ?

I seriously cant fathom the mind that thought any '''criticism/alternatives to Free Markets is Marxist''' ?

Generalizing this Page lacks any structure at best seems like its composed by a 10year ole fanboy with a Freedman Textbook <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/122.172.182.107|122.172.182.107]] ([[User talk:122.172.182.107|talk]]) 14:13, 22 August 2013 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

After discussion a recent edit was made here: [[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Free_market&diff=531230742&oldid=531060825]].

'''It should be remembered that a free market is a technical issue of economic science NOT a political point'''. Any edits should ideally make reference to economic text books or treatises.

:This is plain wrong to separate economics from politics as they were tied together at the time the term "free market" was first in the corn law arguments.[[User:Sigiheri|Sigiheri]] ([[User talk:Sigiheri|talk]]) 19:27, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

::This is plain wrong. Richard Cantillon pre-dates Cobden and they were already isolating economic market processes as distinct from the state back then. "political economy" is a British invention. It's quite hypocritical of you to take umbridge with my hard stance on science when you're doing the same thing for something that's wrong. [[User:Rothbardanswer|Rothbardanswer]] ([[User talk:Rothbardanswer|talk]]) 23:49, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

:::I'm will to consider an alternative view. Please explain Cantillion in the sense that his economics is separate from politics as I am unfamiliar with this view. Thank you in advance.[[User:Sigiheri|Sigiheri]] ([[User talk:Sigiheri|talk]]) 23:53, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

:::: Why do I need to explain economic science to you? Is this what the physics talk pages are like? Is it full of scientists explaining each aspect of positivism so that they can change the lead and say the earth goes round the sun and not the other way around? '''We don't matter.''' What matters is the economic writings. I've already made the appropriate edits with all the citations you need. If you are affirmed to change it back you need to read economics. Read Karl Popper's The Poverty of Historicism if you're interested. (I've already devoted far to much time to protecting the truth here) [[User:Rothbardanswer|Rothbardanswer]] ([[User talk:Rothbardanswer|talk]]) 00:28, 6 January 2013 (UTC)

These last edits completely undermine the validity of the article and aren't supported by the source. The phrasing is incorrect and incoherant now. "Setting of prices" means nothing. Prices are qualitatie psychic data that becomes cardinal data through action. A free market can determine an approxomate democratic aggregate but it is never at equilibrium. It certainly isn't "set" by anyone. Unexplained deletion of "Free market anarchism" and sources by User: Battlecry. I looked on his user page and he's openly socialist so this may be political POV pushing.

:Ad hominem attacks are NOT appropriate. Who are you to call others names?[[User:Sigiheri|Sigiheri]] ([[User talk:Sigiheri|talk]]) 19:27, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

::His name is BATTLECRY, and he has a banner saying he's a socialist, and he's editing on the free market page! All his edits are simply deletions of sources and properly structured sentences. I haven't even accused him of anything other than deleting my contributions in what seems a malicious way.

:::Calling Battlecry names is an ad hominem attack and inappropriate for Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ad_hominem_attack[[User:Sigiheri|Sigiheri]] ([[User talk:Sigiheri|talk]]) 20:41, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

I'm going to edit the text so it is correct and I'll give multiple citations to the relevant sources.

Notes:

1). Supply and demand doesn't mean anything without reference. e.g. the supply and demand of labour, savings, goods, services, skills.

2). Supply and demand and the structure and hierarchy of capital and consumer good are coordinated by prices (value)

3). A price is psychic. (subjective value theory). To say that a price is "distorted" by mandate and dictate is not loaded language. it is a technical issue of economic science without any political bias to say that a price is undistorted on a free market.

4). A free market is not a structure. A free market is existence in the absence of state regulation.

:What does it mean: "free market is existence..."[[User:Sigiheri|Sigiheri]] ([[User talk:Sigiheri|talk]]) 19:29, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

::Quite frankly I've said this too many times and it is finally wearing my patience: I shouldn't have to explain economics to you. Period. What do you think a free market is? Poverty isn't imposed. Economics is the study of human action. A free market is just existnce without a state. It doesn't preclude any of the features of any specific market. Just the absence of the state. '''I'm not here to defend economic science'''. I'm here to contribute without getting drawn into defensive edit wars.

[[User:Rothbardanswer|Rothbardanswer]] ([[User talk:Rothbardanswer|talk]]) 20:19, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

:::Rothdardanswer is standing by his post that "a free market is existence in the absence of state regulation". Parsing the sentence, "a free market is existence". How does this make any sense? When questioned, Rothardanswer replies, the question, is, "finally wearing my patience: I shouldn't have to explain economics to you" Then on his own page Rothardanswer says that he is always very polite to people. I feel he is hurting the editing of this free market page, not helping. [[User:Sigiheri|Sigiheri]] ([[User talk:Sigiheri|talk]]) 20:27, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

:::: I '''shouldn't''' have to explain economic science to you! Read Cantillon, or Mises. That's either the earliest or one of the latest economists and both understand that the market exists independent of the state. How on earth is it my job to defend economic science. If I add multiple eminent sources and write it well isn't that enough? Surely it's your job to read up if you want to undoo my edits? [[User:Rothbardanswer|Rothbardanswer]] ([[User talk:Rothbardanswer|talk]]) 23:49, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

::::What exactly should I read of Cantillon or Mises. I have several books by Von Mises, so please point me to the book and passage. You do need to explain and defend your assertions to others on Wikipedia if you want to contribute.[[User:Sigiheri|Sigiheri]] ([[User talk:Sigiheri|talk]]) 23:56, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

::: Read Epistemological Problems of Economics Or Theory and History. Your historicist approach isn't economic science. The free market (the subject of the article) IS. What I'm doing now is teaching anyone reading the nature of economic law in order to give the correct definition of a free market. Ok. Well I have one question. '''How on earth do you think you're neutral'''. I assume if you don't know physics you don't edit pages on quantum mechanics and then demand to be taught about it? I've already done my part! I've written the correct definition as I see it and started a talk section '''(which no one used they just started edit warring)''' and given all the best links. It isn't POV pushing or violation of neutrality because I'm intimating economic science OTHERS have developed. '''Your historicist opinions don't get to censor my contribution. It could take hours to teach you basic econ. The burden is on you to source and cite your edits'''.

::::I disagree that the free market IS economic science. I don't even believe that economics as it stands is a science in the sense that its theories are testable, fyi. And what is "economic law". Is that just the law? [[User:Sigiheri|Sigiheri]] ([[User talk:Sigiheri|talk]]) 00:58, 6 January 2013 (UTC)

5). "Monopolies" is a politically loaded and ambiguous term. A price can't be monopolised on a free market in the absence of government violence, threat or legality. See: [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=baxaay2m9yk]]

[[User:Rothbardanswer|Rothbardanswer]] ([[User talk:Rothbardanswer|talk]]) 14:47, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

:If you're going to support an economic argument with a youtube video, walking away from the article now is the least unhappy of the possible outcomes for you, and I would strongly recommend that course of action. [[User:Bobrayner|bobrayner]] ([[User talk:Bobrayner|talk]]) 17:11, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

:: I haven't cited a youtube video in the article. The article now has multiple citations to economic textbooks.

[[User:Rothbardanswer|Rothbardanswer]] ([[User talk:Rothbardanswer|talk]]) 17:14, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

This page is getting worse not better.

Can we stop using Dictionary.com as a source. We have the internet and can easily determine the origin of the term "free market". For example, http://www.fee.org/the_freeman/detail/richard-cobden-creator-of-the-free-market#axzz2H8IUL6IE

This article shows that the term "free market" was around well before neo-classical economics and the idea that supply and demand set price. Thus, I would argue that "free market" should be discussed in terms of its historical significance in politics (i.e., the corn laws). Also, it should be discussed in terms of classical economics, not neo-classical economics.[[User:Sigiheri|Sigiheri]] ([[User talk:Sigiheri|talk]]) 21:44, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

:: "Thus, I would argue that "free market" should be discussed in terms of its historical significance in politics" How is anything I've ever said arrogant and this isn't? WHY should we make give this concept of economic theory a historicist bureaucratic analysis? Historicism was the position that there is no economic law. From the standpoint of economic theory history is in the strict sense irrelevant. You're advocating a hard erroneous position without even knowing it! Is this why you were offended that I would suggest we use economic textbooks to describe an economic concept? [[User:Rothbardanswer|Rothbardanswer]] ([[User talk:Rothbardanswer|talk]]) 23:49, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

: The free market is an economic concept more than a political one. If you go to the article on gravity you won't find a classical definition from Copernicus in the lead. Have you looked at my edit? [[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Free_market&diff=531488957&oldid=531482363]] They've just deleted citation and damaged sentence structure. I don't see how my edit made the page worse and not better?

[[User:Rothbardanswer|Rothbardanswer]] ([[User talk:Rothbardanswer|talk]]) 21:28, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

I take issue with your analogy on the grounds that gravity is discovered (presumably by Newton) and a free market is invented by people. I believe that the free market simply means, no regulations. Repealing the corn laws in England made the market more "free."[[User:Sigiheri|Sigiheri]] ([[User talk:Sigiheri|talk]]) 21:44, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

:: Yes well this is my point '''and this is why I stress the nature of economic science'''. A free market isn't invented by people any more than value and action are. They have universal existence and laws. Humans have their own values and purposes but we don't create value itself or action or thought themselves any more than we can imagine new colours or change our bodies by thinking. This is the point; we are economies, we don't create economy. You lot are implicitly taking the historicist approach that there is no such thing as economic law. (I can't believe I'm explaining all this!) I think if you lot haven't read economics it isn't authoritative or arrogant to say you shouldn't delete sources and edits because they conflict with your intuition. [[User:Rothbardanswer|Rothbardanswer]] ([[User talk:Rothbardanswer|talk]]) 23:49, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

The suggestion that we should use economics textbooks only is preposterous, imo. The term and concept of a "free market", simply meaning without regulation, arose before the neo-classical economic theories.[[User:Sigiheri|Sigiheri]] ([[User talk:Sigiheri|talk]]) 19:54, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

This article should reference the Manchester school, imo. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manchester_capitalism[[User:Sigiheri|Sigiheri]] ([[User talk:Sigiheri|talk]]) 20:06, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

:: I didn't contribute dictionary.com. Cobden is a GREAT source but why do you think the classical economists are better than the more advanced so called "Austrians"? seems silly.

[[User:Rothbardanswer|Rothbardanswer]] ([[User talk:Rothbardanswer|talk]]) 20:19, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

:::Once again with the inappropriate remark that my post is "silly". But you are always "polite" aren't you? The reason is that the term "free market" arose prior to neo-classical economics and way before the Austrian school.[[User:Sigiheri|Sigiheri]] ([[User talk:Sigiheri|talk]]) 20:31, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

:: I'm going to put all this aggitation aside (but from first to last comment you've been condescending to me and it's all spiralled into LAYERS of demonstrable hypocrisy) but who cares, back to the article! :) I don't think we should use the originator of the phrase as gospel. Why does a historical source trump contemporary sources? Better yet why not have both? They don't conflict.

[[User:Rothbardanswer|Rothbardanswer]] ([[User talk:Rothbardanswer|talk]]) 21:28, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

:::I think that providing the historical perspective would be useful. The neoclassical economics theories assumes a "free market" to get there results. But I would argue that economics is orthogonal to the free market as a free market can exist without economic theories. In a nutshell, I disagree that we should tie the article on "free market" exclusively to neo-classical economics. At the same time, I think the article should explain how economists claim that a free market economy affects supply and demand.[[User:Sigiheri|Sigiheri]] ([[User talk:Sigiheri|talk]]) 21:52, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

:: I'm glad you put your position clearly and stopped insulting me. (I wish you had just done this immediately and not took umbridge with what you thought was arrogance when I defended the scientific position). You're wrong about this. Historicism isn't the method of economic science. You're right to say economy exists without scientific study. Physics exists without positivism. But if we want to write wikipedia articles about what a proton is we give the logical positivist info. The articles on physics aren't full of creationists arguing in the talk section and reverting well cited edits. Economy doesn't exist because of economists. Economic theory can't change economy. Economic theory is the study of economy. What economic theory CAN do is let me write a well sourced lead to this article where I describe a free market acording '''to the WRITINGS of economists'''. The whole problem here seems to be you've made the mistake of thinking economists design freedom differently now. They've never been in the business of designing anything. (I shouldn't of had to explain this to you because we're only supposed to intimate economic writings '''we're supposed to be neutral!'''). [[User:Rothbardanswer|Rothbardanswer]] ([[User talk:Rothbardanswer|talk]]) 23:49, 5 January 2013 (UTC)([[User talk:Rothbardanswer|talk]]) 23:49, 5 January 2013 (UTC)

::::The "free market" exists independent of economic theory. Whether the economic theory is accurate is an empirical question that no one has answered to my knowledge. Vernon Smith showed it in an experiment, but no one has show that people act according to theory in a real world setting. Thus, we should describe free market not in terms of economic theory but in terms of law and society. Then discuss the neo classical economic theory that was developed later, in the late 1800s. The point is that if free market exists without economic theory, describe free market first, then discuss economic theory.[[User:Sigiheri|Sigiheri]] ([[User talk:Sigiheri|talk]]) 00:04, 6 January 2013 (UTC)

::::: No it actually isn't an empirical theory. If A squared plus B squared doesn't = C squared on a flat plane right angle triangle you haven't discovered a new shape, you've drawn the triangle incorrectly. '''I'm sure it isn't my job as edditor to explain the epistemological foundation of economic science to you. If you lot don't know economics the least you could do is stop editing my contributions'''. PEOPLE DON'T ACT ACCORDING TO A THEORY. We're talking about the study of human action. That's what economics is! What you're saying is backwards. We can't describe protons without using positivism. The free market is just a name we've given something using economic theory AND FOR WHAT I HOPE IS THE LAST TIME HERE IT IS:

:::::You're saying that the conclusions of neo-classical economic theory is fact such that empirical test are unnecessary. And you're also saying that economics is the "study of human action." I would hope that anyone reading treat your edits accordingly.[[User:Sigiheri|Sigiheri]] ([[User talk:Sigiheri|talk]]) 01:01, 6 January 2013 (UTC)

A '''free market''' is an [[economic system]] in which the [[supply and demand]] of labour, savings, investment, along with the structure and hierarchy between capital and consumer goods, services, and profits are coordinated entirely by individual [[subjective value theory|market values (prices, interest rates, wage rates)]] rather than by governmental regulation, or bureaucratic mandate and dictate.<ref>[http://books.google.co.uk/books/about/Economics_in_One_Lesson.html?id=c2j494_m84IC&redir_esc=y] Economics in One Lesson. Henry Hazlitt.</ref><ref>[http://library.mises.org/books/Milton%20M%20Shapiro/Foundations%20of%20the%20Market%20Price%20System.pdf] Foundation of the Market Price System. Milton M. Shapiro.</ref><ref>[http://www.econlib.org/library/Bastiat/basHar.html] Economic Harmonies. Bastiat.</ref><ref>[http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=lhiIyq8ylUMC&source=gbs_book_similarbooks] Basic Economics. Thomas Sowell.</ref><ref>[http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/free%20market]. Dictionary.com</ref> A free market contrasts with a [[controlled market]] or regulated market, in which supply or demand are distorted by regulation or direct control by government. An economy composed entirely of free markets is referred to as a [[free-market economy]] or [[free-market anarchism]].

OKEYDOKEY?

:I think that paragraph is not suitable as a lead in for the article. Free markets can exist independent of capitalism or economic theory and the lead in should reflect this. I wrote on the talk page about this (at the top), fyi.[[User:Sigiheri|Sigiheri]] ([[User talk:Sigiheri|talk]]) 01:05, 6 January 2013 (UTC)

::I have removed the material about market socialism emerging as a response to Mises' argument because that does not belong in the lead and is blatant PoV pushing. Criticism of the subject being discussed in the article generally does not belong in the lead, and the language used was loaded (implying that the free-market forms of socialism discussed in the book were "socialist bureaucracies" organized as markets). Bockman's book, which is cited for the inclusion of the socialist tradition of free markets, was not about the Lange-Lerner model and the simulation of markets, it discussed how free-markets have been promoted by early socialists including Pierre-Joseph Prodhoun and later by neoclassical economists such as Jaroslav Vanek and Branko Horvat (who proposed a free market form of socialism, not the Lange model). These forms of socialism were not formed in response to the argument put forth by Mises, and some of these socialist philosophies existed before Mises wrote about socialism.

::[[User:Rothbardanswer|Rothbardanswer]] is pushing the same PoV in the [[market economy]] article and is gradually transforming the [[Template:Capitalism]] sidebar into a sidebar on Austrian school philosophy and methodology.-[[User:Battlecry|<font color="orange" size="2px">Battlecry</font>]] 01:38, 6 January 2013 (UTC)

:::Wikipedia is not a platform for discussing controversial subjects as per [[WP:NOTAFORUM]]. The term "intervene" or "intervention" is more neutral than "distortion" because economists have differing views on the nature of interventions - some view it as a means to correct market failures, such as internalizing externalities or improving access to information for market participants to make more informed choices; while others view interventions as distortions rather than corrective measures. The fact is, regardless of what position one may take, a free market is simply defined as a market structure absent from interventions in the formation of prices. Furthermore, free-markets are more of a political and prescriptive concept rather than a technical economic concept. The "technical" economic concept you are referring to is competitive markets or a state of [[perfect competition]], which economists generally agree is pareto efficient and an optimal state for an economy. But again, economists disagree on how this technical optimal state is to be achieved - some believe interventions are necessary in order to move closer toward this optimum state, while others argue that the unhindered "free" market will approximate this state on its own. Advocating for free markets as a means to this end is prescriptive and therefore political in nature.-[[User:Battlecry|<font color="orange" size="2px">Battlecry</font>]] 09:33, 6 January 2013 (UTC)

Markets cannot exist without government.

Money, private property & property rights, corporations & other forms of ownership, contact enforcement and the rule of law are all creatures of government.

Without a legal & regulatory system to enforce contracts and punish cheaters, trust cannot exist. And without trust markets break down.

Not only can't markets exist without government, human society can't either.

All human groups have some form of government.

[[User:Vilhelmo|Vilhelmo]] ([[User talk:Vilhelmo|talk]])

In the hunter gatherer societies in which humans have spent the majority of our existence in, markets did not exist. [[User:Vilhelmo|Vilhelmo]] ([[User talk:Vilhelmo|talk]]) 09:28, 4 July 2013 (UTC)

== Definition - Criticism & Suggestions ==

The definition is incredibly vague.

What government actions, law (rule/regulation) making, intervention, enforcement, institution making, functions is a "free market" free from?

Line 128 ⟶ 22:

The inclusion of furthur details would greatly improve the article

[[Special:Contributions/24.36.14.161|24.36.14.161]] ([[User talk:24.36.14.161|talk]]) 00:34, 11 December 2013 (UTC)

From the article:

Line 138 ⟶ 31:

These definitions clearly imply that a "free market" must be free of both Government Money (a Government Monopoly) & Private Property (a Government-Granted Monopoly).

[[User:Vilhelmo De Okcidento|Vilhelmo De Okcidento]] ([[User talk:Vilhelmo De Okcidento|talk]]) 22:05, 26 July 2014 (UTC)

One question I had about the article is; why is the section on Non-laissez-faire capitalist systems so small in comparison to the others?

Line 147 ⟶ 38:

The article is well constructed from the sources cited. The sources used are varied in time, perspectives, and media. The sources are reputable and unbiased. The Washington Post articles though may be seen as biased but after reading through them, they seemed to be neutral. Though three citations stood out as incorrectly formatted, only containing a name, presumably from a published work, the year of publishing, and the name of the author. The citation numbers are 2, 8, and 25. [[User:Jrobles2795|Jrobles2795]] ([[User talk:Jrobles2795|talk]]) 01:43, 29 January 2017 (UTC)

The article is very self conflicting.

==Deletions from External Links section==

[[User:bobrayner]] took it upon himself to [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Free_market&diff=642080663&oldid=641938416 delete two external links I recently added] which, if anything, added balance to an external links section that gives [[Wikipedia:External links#Avoid undue weight on particular points of view|undue weight]] to Austrian School and libertarian viewpoints on the Free Market. The two links in question were both to reliable sources critical of free market ideas, one being a [http://www.ted.com/talks/michael_sandel_why_we_shouldn_t_trust_markets_with_our_civic_life TED conference] with scholar [[Michael J. Sandel]] and the other being an [http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/monkey-cage/wp/2014/07/18/the-free-market-is-an-impossible-utopia/ interview in the Washington Post] with the sociologists [[Fred L. Block]] and [[Margaret Somers]]. Although the user who deleted these two links claimed to be "[https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Free_market&diff=641935131&oldid=640337489 trimming the link farm]," I attribute these deletions to ideological bias and [[WP:I just don't like it]].--[[User:C.J. Griffin|C.J. Griffin]] ([[User talk:C.J. Griffin|talk]]) 00:41, 12 January 2015 (UTC)

> Conditions that must exist for unregulated markets to behave as "free markets" are summarized at perfect competition.

...

> A free market does not require the existence of competition, however it does require a framework that allows new market entrants.

The whole article is jumbled with things like this. [[User:Livingfractal|living]]<sup>[[User talk:Livingfractal|frac'''t@lk''']]</sup> 02:44, 25 December 2018 (UTC)

Clarifying what a free market is

A free market is a political term for any market that complies with the social right to freedom of association. - specifically market associations. It prohibits mandated associations in the market that violate that freedom.

It is not an economic system itself like capitalism is. <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:Howardpearce|Howardpearce]] ([[User talk:Howardpearce#top|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Howardpearce|contribs]]) 22:24, 1 November 2020 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

"free from any intervention by a government or other authority"

That is simply nonsense, it would imply that in a free market you could murder and steal without government intervention which is obviously not what is meant by free market.[[Special:Contributions/78.82.228.158|78.82.228.158]] ([[User talk:78.82.228.158|talk]]) 05:30, 6 October 2021 (UTC)

The thing that is missing here is to note how the land is controlled. If land is a commodity and many people are landless and this is enforce by the state, then this is not a free market at all. It's a coerced market, heavily coerced by control of the land in a mode that makes many people landless and therefore beholden to wage labor to survive, which keeps wages low macroeconomically for the whole working class. Not free for the people. <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/216.19.250.77|216.19.250.77]] ([[User talk:216.19.250.77#top|talk]]) 11:36, 29 September 2023 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

== References to "Anarchism" and "Profit-Sharing" aren't warranted in the lead ==

These philosophies aren't notable enough to include in the lead and aren't specifically mentioned by the source given. "Anarchism" is much more a political ideology rather than an economic system, and has played a minor role in modern economic thought. It seems to have been added to the lead to push a particular point of view. Similarly with profit-sharing, which isn't incompatible with capitalism or socialism. Simply mentioning that free markets have been part of some proposals of (market) socialism should be sufficient to cover non-capitalist market systems in a succinct manner. -[[User:Battlecry|<span style="color:brown; font-size:small; font-family:Segoe Print">Battlecry</span>]] 10:32, 17 March 2021 (UTC)

== Definition is wrong ==

== Large set of references which could be used to improve the article ==

The definition at the head of this article is wrong. A free market is not one where there is no government intervention; rather, it is a market in which people are free to buy and sell voluntarily. See: http://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/FreeMarket.html Price controls make a market not free, but incentives only distort the market rather than changing its nature. <small><span class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:Angmar09|Angmar09]] ([[User talk:Angmar09|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Angmar09|contribs]]) 15:49, 27 January 2016 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

This is a long set of references which were added by an IP editor and may be helpful for use as sources to improve the article: - but until a specific statement is sourced to a specific source, these don't belong in the article.

== "FreeMarketPrinciples.com" POV spam ==

* PHILIPPON, THOMAS. “The Rise in Market Power.” The Great Reversal: How America Gave Up on Free Markets, [[Harvard University Press]], 2019, pp. 45–61, {{jstor|j.ctv24w62m5.7}}.

Elements such as:

:1) Individual Rights: "We are each created with equal individual rights to control and to defend our life, liberty and property and to voluntary contractual exchange."

* Noriega, Roger F., and Andrés Martínez-Fernández. The Free-Market Moment: Making Grassroots Capitalism Succeed Where Populism Has Failed. [[American Enterprise Institute]], 2016, {{jstor|resrep03243}}.

And

:5) Spontaneous Order: "When individual rights are respected, unregulated competition will maximize economic benefit for society by providing the most goods and services possible at the lowest cost."

* Cremers, Jan, and Ronald Dekker. “Labour Arbitrage on European Labour Markets: Free Movement and the Role of Intermediaries.” Towards a Decent Labour Market for Low Waged Migrant Workers, edited by Conny Rijken and Tesseltje de Lange, [[Amsterdam University Press]], 2018, pp. 109–28, {{jstor|j.ctv6hp34j.7}}.

These aren't really "principles" but more "beliefs" regarding what one thinks things should be alongside, or favoring a free-market. But technically the free market itself has nothing to do with "equal rights for self-defense". You can have equal rights of self defense without freedom (legal rights for self-defense don't guarantee the actual means and possibilities of self-defense), and at the same time you can have considerable market freedom with a wide variation in rights for self-defense. Having security itself is more fundamental for a free market to work than the enforcement of that security by means of self-defense. One can argue that it's ideal that people were one-man-armies that can resist any sort of coercion, but that's not a requirement for real world free-market situations.

The "spontaneous order" is a theoretical prediction of what would derive from a free market, not a principle from which free markets derive.

* Jónsson, Örn D., and Rögnvaldur J. Sæmundsson. “Free Market Ideology, Crony Capitalism, and Social Resilience.” Gambling Debt: Iceland’s Rise and Fall in the Global Economy, edited by E. PAUL DURRENBERGER and GISLI PALSSON, [[University Press of Colorado]], 2015, pp. 23–32, {{jstor|j.ctt169wdcd.8}}.

The item 4, "Government authority must reside at the lowest feasible level" is also not without some arguable high degree of bias, not to mention that the "lowest feasible level" is rather vague. Somalia possibly has what one could describe as "government authority residing a the lowest feasible level", close to "none", but only rarely non-anarchists will see there an ideal example of free-market ideals, more likely they'll find them in highly functional states such as those listed by the Heritage foundation as the freer economies. Which may perhaps provide a better parameter for "lowest feasible level", who knows, but again, that's not immediately clear from this wording. <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/189.18.16.47|189.18.16.47]] ([[User talk:189.18.16.47|talk]]) 19:30, 5 July 2016 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

[[User:Daveburstein|Daveburstein]] ([[User talk:Daveburstein|talk]]) 04:25, 27 December 2016 (UTC) Rewrote first 2 paras per rest of article. Displaced previous non-neutral claim that dereg is the definition of free. Some believe so; others believe market power etc. must be regulated to keep a market "free." I merely noted both, without judging which is more accurate. The article was not neutral, previously leaning to deregulation as the primary definition of "free market," especially in the first two paragraphs. While some strongly hold that belief, discussion in the balance of the article makes clear there is a second view. For example, it's suggested later in the article that a fully deregulated market tends towards monopoly and hence is unlikely to be free. Both opinions have adherents so I rewrote for neutrality. (In case anyone cares, my personal view is closer to the latter. I've watched deregulation virtually kill U.S. competition for robust broadband.)

* MITTERMAIER, KARL, Karl Mittermaier, and Isabella Mittermaier. “Free-Market Dogmatism and Pragmatism.” In The Hand Behind the Invisible Hand: Dogmatic and Pragmatic Views on Free Markets and the State of Economic Theory, 1st ed., 23–26. [[Bristol University Press]], 2020. {{doi|10.2307/j.ctv186grks.10}}.

I did my best to write neutrally here. More effective writing welcome, but please do not simply revert to one's preferred view of the subject. I recognize opinions here are strong, reinforced by the writings of Hayek and others. Please stay in the spirit of neutrality because there is a genuine difference of opinion.

The balance of the article should be rewritten to reflect both views. Dave Burstein

* Sloman, Peter. “Welfare in a Neoliberal Age: The Politics of Redistributive Market Liberalism.” In The Neoliberal Age?: Britain since the 1970s, edited by Aled Davies, Ben Jackson, and Florence Sutcliffe-Braithwaite, 75–93. [[UCL Press]], 2021. {{jstor|j.ctv1smjwgq.11}}.

* Orłowska, Agnieszka. “Toward Mutual Understanding, Respect, and Trust: On Past and Present Dog Training in Poland.” Free Market Dogs: The Human-Canine Bond in Post-Communist Poland, edited by Michał Piotr Pręgowski and Justyna Włodarczyk, [[Purdue University Press]], 2016, pp. 35–60, {{doi|10.2307/j.ctt16314wm.7}}.

* Block, Fred, and Margaret R. Somers. “TURNING THE TABLES: Polanyi’s Critique of Free Market Utopianism.” The Power of Market Fundamentalism, [[Harvard University Press]], 2014, pp. 98–113, {{jstor|j.ctt6wpr3f.7}}.

* TOMASI, JOHN. “Free Market Fairness.” Free Market Fairness, STU-Student edition, [[Princeton University Press]], 2012, pp. 226–66, {{jstor|j.ctt7stpz.12}}.

* Hoopes, James. “Corporations as Enemies of the Free Market.” Corporate Dreams: Big Business in American Democracy from the Great Depression to the Great Recession, [[Rutgers University Press]], 2011, pp. 27–32, {{jstor|j.ctt5hjgkf.8}}.

* Althammer, Jörg. “Economic Efficiency and Solidarity: The Idea of a Social Market Economy.” Free Markets with Sustainability and Solidarity, edited by MARTIN SCHLAG and JUAN A. MERCADO, [[Catholic University of America Press]], 2016, pp. 199–216, {{doi|10.2307/j.ctt1d2dp8t.14}}.

* Chua, Beng Huat. “DISRUPTING FREE MARKET: State Capitalism and Social Distribution.” Liberalism Disavowed: Communitarianism and State Capitalism in Singapore, [[Cornell University Press]], 2017, pp. 98–122, {{jstor|10.7591/j.ctt1zkjz35.7}}.

* Holland, Eugene W. “Free-Market Communism.” Nomad Citizenship: Free-Market Communism and the Slow-Motion General Strike, NED-New edition, [[University of Minnesota Press]], 2011, pp. 99–140, {{jstor|10.5749/j.ctttsw4g.8}}.

* Newland, Carlos. “Is Support for Capitalism Declining around the World? A Free-Market Mentality Index, 1990–2012.” The Independent Review, vol. 22, no. 4, [[Independent Institute]], 2018, pp. 569–83, {{jstor|26591762}}.

* Taylor, Lance. “Keynesianism and the Crisis.” Maynard’s Revenge: The Collapse of Free Market Macroeconomics, [[Harvard University Press]], 2010, pp. 337–58, {{doi|10.2307/j.ctv1m592k8.12}}.

* ADLER, JONATHAN H. “Excerpts from ‘About Free-Market Environmentalism.’” In Environment and Society: A Reader, edited by Christopher Schlottmann, Dale Jamieson, Colin Jerolmack, Anne Rademacher, and Maria Damon, 259–64. [[New York University Press]], 2017. {{doi|10.2307/j.ctt1ht4vw6.38}}.

* Symons, Michael. “FREE THE MARKET! (IT’S BEEN CAPTURED BY CAPITALISM).” Meals Matter: A Radical Economics Through Gastronomy, [[Columbia University Press]], 2020, pp. 225–46, {{jstor|10.7312/symo19602.15}}.

* Higgs, Kerryn. “The Rise of Free Market Fundamentalism.” Collision Course: Endless Growth on a Finite Planet, [[The MIT Press]], 2014, pp. 79–104, {{jstor|j.ctt9qf93v.11}}.

* SIM, STUART. “Neoliberalism, Financial Crisis, and Profit.” Addicted to Profit: Reclaiming Our Lives from the Free Market, [[Edinburgh University Press]], 2012, pp. 70–95, {{jstor|10.3366/j.ctt1g0b72g.9}}.

* SINGER, JOSEPH WILLIAM. “Why Consumer Protection Promotes the Free Market.” No Freedom without Regulation: The Hidden Lesson of the Subprime Crisis, [[Yale University Press]], 2015, pp. 58–94, {{jstor|j.ctt175729r.5}}.

* Roberts, Alasdair. “The Market Comes Back.” The End of Protest: How Free-Market Capitalism Learned to Control Dissent, [[Cornell University Press]], 2013, pp. 41–57, {{jstor|10.7591/j.ctt20d88nv.6}}.

* OTT, JULIA C. “The ‘Free and Open Market’ Responds.” When Wall Street Met Main Street, [[Harvard University Press]], 2011, pp. 36–54, {{jstor|j.ctt2jbtz3.5}}.

* Zeitlin, Steve, and Bob Holman. “Free Market Flavor: Poetry of the Palate.” The Poetry of Everyday Life: Storytelling and the Art of Awareness, 1st ed., [[Cornell University Press]], 2016, pp. 127–31, {{jstor|10.7591/j.ctt1d2dmnj.17}}.

* Baradaran, Mehrsa. “The Free Market Confronts Black Poverty.” The Color of Money: Black Banks and the Racial Wealth Gap, [[Harvard University Press]], 2017, pp. 215–46, {{jstor|j.ctv24w649g.10}}.

* {{cite book|title=Free Market Fairness|author=Tomasi, J.|isbn=978-0-691-15814-3|lccn=2011037125|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LmmYDwAAQBAJ|year=2013|publisher=[[Princeton University Press]] }}

* {{cite book|title=The Free-Market Innovation Machine: Analyzing the Growth Miracle of Capitalism|author=Baumol, W.J.|isbn=978-1-400-85163-8|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tloXAwAAQBAJ|year=2014|publisher=[[Princeton University Press]] }}

* {{cite book|title=The Free-Market Family: How the Market Crushed the American Dream (and How It Can Be Restored)|author=Eichner, M.|isbn=978-0-190-05548-6|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9NjBDwAAQBAJ|year=2019|publisher=Oxford University Press}}

* {{cite book|title=Fighting Unemployment: The Limits of Free Market Orthodoxy|author=Howell, D.R.|isbn=978-0-195-16585-2|lccn=2004049283|series=Fighting Unemployment: The Limits of Free Market Orthodoxy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PHs8DwAAQBAJ|year=2005|publisher=Oxford University Press}}

* {{cite book|title=Economics in Two Lessons: Why Markets Work So Well, and Why They Can Fail So Badly|author=Quiggin, J.|isbn=978-0-691-21742-0|

url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qjwDEAAAQBAJ|year=2021|publisher=[[Princeton University Press]] }}

* {{cite book|title={Capitalism v. Democracy: Money in Politics and the Free Market Constitution|author=Kuhner, T.K.|isbn=978-0-804-79158-8|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ljaOAwAAQBAJ|year=2014|publisher=[[Stanford University Press]] }}

* {{cite book|title=Markets, Minds, and Money: Why America Leads the World in University Research|author=Urquiola, M.|isbn=978-0-674-24660-7|lccn=2019046786|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fR|year=2020|publisher=[[Harvard University Press]] }}

* {{cite book|title=The Illusion of Free Markets: Punishment and the Myth of Natural Order|author=Harcourt, B.E.|isbn=978-0-674-05936-8|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-nYLSvgP2ekC|year=2011|publisher=[[Harvard University Press]] }}

* {{cite book|title=The Path of Economic Growth|author=Lowe, A. and Adolph, L. and Pulrang, S. and Nell, E.J.|isbn=978-0-521-20888-8|lccn=75038186|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lTUAGqp7PRQC|year=1976|publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] }}

* {{cite book|title=Capitalism and Desire: The Psychic Cost of Free Markets|author=McGowan, T.|isbn=978-0-231-54221-0|lccn=2016005309|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MMGlDAAAQBAJ|year=2016|publisher=[[Columbia University Press]] }}

* {{cite book|title=The New Stock Market: Law, Economics, and Policy|author=Fox, M.B. and Glosten, L. and Rauterberg, G.|isbn=978-0-231-54393-4|lccn=2018037234|url=https://books.google.co.in/books?id=\_oFbDwAAQBAJ|year=2019|publisher=[[Columbia University Press]] }}

* {{cite book|title=Partisan Politics in the Global Economy|author=Garrett, G. and Bates, R.H. and Comisso, E. and Migdal, J. and Lange, P. and Milner, H.|isbn=978-0-521-44690-7|lccn=97016731|series=Cambridge Studies in Comparative Politics|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RoePU0zM7t4C| year=1998|publisher=Cambridge University Press}}

* {{cite book|title=Maynard's Revenge: The Collapse of Free Market Macroeconomics|author=Taylor, L.|isbn=978-0-674-05953-5|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZEE9B2yU-kYC|year=2011|publisher=Harvard University Press }}

* {{cite book|title=Foundations in Public Economics|author=Starrett, D.A. and Hahn, F.H.|isbn=978-0-521-34801-0|lccn=87027892|series=Cambridge Economic Handbooks|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R35yljdyyIkC|year=1988|publisher=Cambridge University Press}}

* {{cite book|title=The Great Persuasion: Reinventing Free Markets since the Depression|author=Burgin, A.|isbn=978-0-674-06743-1|lccn=2012015061|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BnZ1qKdXojoC|year=2012|publisher=Harvard University Press }}

* {{cite book|title=Limits to Competition|author=Group of Lisbon Staff and Cara, J. and Group of Lisbon and MIT Press and TheGroup of Lisbon|isbn=978-0-262-07164-2|lccn=95021461|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2OT8IsbJubsC|year=1995|publisher=[[MIT Press]] }}

* {{cite book|title=Nothing is Sacred: Economic Ideas for the New Millennium|author=Barro, R.J.|isbn=978-0-262-25051-1|series=The MIT Press|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TmLyGCJE-rIC|year=2003|publisher=[[MIT Press]] }}

* {{cite book|title=Economics After the Crisis: Objectives and Means|author=Turner, A.|isbn=978-0-262-30099-5|series=Lionel Robbins Lectures|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=l6ZbiqFND2IC|year=2012|publisher=MIT Press }}

* {{cite book|title=Beyond Economic Man: Feminist Theory and Economics|author=Ferber, M.A. and Nelson, J.A.|isbn=978-0-226-24208-8|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BFg6lK48EX0C|year=2009|publisher=[[University of Chicago Press]] }}

* {{cite book|title=Free Markets and Social Justice|author=Sunstein, C.R.|isbn=978-0-195-35617-5|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Y2cFPSEn4xMC|year=1999|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] }}

* {{cite book|title=Freer Markets, More Rules: Regulatory Reform in Advanced Industrial Countries|author=Vogel, S.K.|isbn=978-0-801-48534-3|lccn=96005054|series=Cornell paperbacks|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2uasvzh5paMC|year=1998|publisher=[[Cornell University Press]] }}

* {{cite book|title=Beyond the Invisible Hand: Groundwork for a New Economics|author=[[Kaushik Basu|Basu, K.]]|isbn=978-0-691-17369-6|lccn=2010012135|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=n3CYDwAAQBAJ|year=2016|publisher=[[Princeton University Press]] }}

* {{cite book|title=Economic Nationalism in a Globalizing World|author=Helleiner, F.A.C.I.P.E.P.E. and Helleiner, E. and Pickel, A.|isbn=978-0-801-48966-2|lccn=2004015590|series=Cornell studies in political economy|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oCpor-DkFwwC|year=2005|publisher=[[Cornell University Press]]}}

* {{cite book|title=Government versus Markets: The Changing Economic Role of the State|author=Tanzi, V.|isbn=978-1-139-49973-6|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0|year=2011|publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]] }}

* {{cite book|title=Capitalism and Freedom|author=[[Milton Friedman|Friedman, M.]] and [[Rose Friedman|Friedman, R.D.]]|isbn=978-0-226-26401-1|lccn=62019619|series=Phoenix Book : business/economics|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CE49HAiRugAC|year=1962|publisher=[[University of Chicago Press]] }}

* {{cite book|title=Market Day in Provence|author=de La Pradelle, M. and Jacobs, A. and Katz, J.|isbn=978-0-226-14184-8|lccn=2005014063|series=Fieldwork Encounters And Discoveries, Ed. Robert Emerson And Jack Katz|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HHMlUcjfXPIC|year=2006|publisher=University of Chicago Press }}

---'''[[User:Avatar317|<span style="background:#8A2BE2; color:white; padding:2px;">Avatar317</span>]][[User talk:Avatar317|<sup><span style="background:#7B68EE; color:white; padding:2px;">(talk)</span></sup>]]''' 23:21, 15 March 2022 (UTC)

== External links modified ==

== "Market coercions" in lead - [[WP:OR|original research]] ==

Hello fellow Wikipedians,

The phrase "market coercions" is nowhere to be found in the body of the article, and the sources used do not describe the free market as such. Sources do not use the phrase. The lead is also problematic because it makes an arguably false definition of a regulated market. We need to find sources which support this, otherwise it smells like [[WP:OR]]. Speaking of looking for sources, the phrase "market coercions" doesn't even appear that much anywhere online. Google returns 849 results, a lot of which are a copy of the text from Wikipedia. [https://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?content=market+coercion&year_start=1800&year_end=2019&corpus=26&smoothing=0 Ngram] returns extremely small values. This doesn't seem to be a well established phrase, therefore shouldn't be used in the lead. [[User:BeŻet|BeŻet]] ([[User talk:BeŻet|talk]]) 10:59, 25 August 2022 (UTC)

I have just modified 2 external links on [[Free market]]. Please take a moment to review [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=prev&oldid=758417596 my edit]. If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit [[User:Cyberpower678/FaQs#InternetArchiveBot|this simple FaQ]] for additional information. I made the following changes:

*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20140522012501/http://wps.pearsoned.co.uk:80/ema_uk_he_sloman_econbus_3/18/4748/1215583.cw/ to http://wps.pearsoned.co.uk/ema_uk_he_sloman_econbus_3/18/4748/1215583.cw/

*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20051125034758/http://www.fff.org:80/freedom/0292d.asp to http://www.fff.org/freedom/0292d.asp

:It is called "paraphrasing": coercion (from Wikitionary): "Use of physical or moral force to compel a person to do something, or to abstain from doing something, thereby depriving that person of the exercise of free will." and it seems to me to be a reasonable concise paraphrase of the many explanations of a free market in this article.

When you have finished reviewing my changes, you may follow the instructions on the template below to fix any issues with the URLs.

:If you can suggest better wording as a summary of the main concept, please do so on the Talk page here. ---'''[[User:Avatar317|<span style="background:#8A2BE2; color:white; padding:2px;">Avatar317</span>]][[User talk:Avatar317|<sup><span style="background:#7B68EE; color:white; padding:2px;">(talk)</span></sup>]]''' 23:36, 25 August 2022 (UTC)

::Which part of the body is this paraphrasing? Could you point at the appropriate fragment or fragments? [[User:BeŻet|BeŻet]] ([[User talk:BeŻet|talk]]) 13:46, 26 August 2022 (UTC)

{{Ping|Avatar317}} Please do not remove the tags until the issue is resolved. Please follow [[Help:Maintenance template removal]]. [[User:BeŻet|BeŻet]] ([[User talk:BeŻet|talk]]) 13:46, 26 August 2022 (UTC)

{{sourcecheck|checked=false|needhelp=}}

:The edit which added the word "coercions" was this one:

Cheers.—[[User:InternetArchiveBot|'''<span style="color:darkgrey;font-family:monospace">InternetArchiveBot</span>''']] <span style="color:green;font-family:Rockwell">([[User talk:InternetArchiveBot|Report bug]])</span> 08:54, 5 January 2017 (UTC)

:https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Free_market&diff=next&oldid=1072599370

:I have rolled the lead back to a version very close to what seemed constant for since 2018, so hopefully this is a more acceptable version of the first paragraph. ---'''[[User:Avatar317|<span style="background:#8A2BE2; color:white; padding:2px;">Avatar317</span>]][[User talk:Avatar317|<sup><span style="background:#7B68EE; color:white; padding:2px;">(talk)</span></sup>]]''' 22:07, 26 August 2022 (UTC)

::Current version is a bit circular. Also, who said monopoly is not a free market? It' s not "perfect competition" but that's a different matter.[[User:SPECIFICO |<b style="color: #0011FF;"> SPECIFICO</b>]][[User_talk:SPECIFICO | ''talk'']] 22:13, 26 August 2022 (UTC)

:::Ok, so maybe we can come to some consensus as to what a good lead would be here; that is what I had hoped Bezet would have suggested and we could discuss. If we can get a decent consensus than we can make it more stable. Looking from 2014 forward, it seems to have been somewhat stable with similar wording to now (but with more duplicity).

:::Monopoly: complicated-it can arise naturally or be given by law (patent or regulated utility)...so that might require careful wording. ---'''[[User:Avatar317|<span style="background:#8A2BE2; color:white; padding:2px;">Avatar317</span>]][[User talk:Avatar317|<sup><span style="background:#7B68EE; color:white; padding:2px;">(talk)</span></sup>]]''' 00:00, 27 August 2022 (UTC)

::::I can't think of an example of government granting a monopoly by regulation. Regulation is a policy to mitigate perceived inequities of natural monopolies.[[User:SPECIFICO |<b style="color: #0011FF;"> SPECIFICO</b>]][[User_talk:SPECIFICO | ''talk'']] 00:17, 27 August 2022 (UTC)

:::::You are correct; but a government grants an electricity distribution company monopoly rights for distribution, and then regulates it; it is a "regulated monopoly" - that's what I meant. ---'''[[User:Avatar317|<span style="background:#8A2BE2; color:white; padding:2px;">Avatar317</span>]][[User talk:Avatar317|<sup><span style="background:#7B68EE; color:white; padding:2px;">(talk)</span></sup>]]''' 01:03, 27 August 2022 (UTC)

::::::There is a whole wikipedia article on [[government-granted monopoly|government-granted monopolies]]. They used to be much more common. [[User:LastDodo|LastDodo]] ([[User talk:LastDodo|talk]]) [[User:LastDodo|LastDodo]] ([[User talk:LastDodo|talk]]) 16:44, 4 June 2024 (UTC)

::Arguably, the point of a regulated market is to address market inefficiencies and related problems - that's what is basically talked about e.g. in the Criticism section. That's why there isn't really a truly free market anywhere in the world. A price-setting monopoly can still exist within a free market, therefore I would avoid including that in the lead. [[User:BeŻet|BeŻet]] ([[User talk:BeŻet|talk]]) 14:14, 27 August 2022 (UTC)

== Criticism ==

== Part of a series on Conservatism? ==

I think it could be made better, currently feels like someone's personal view? [[User:Ruletheworst2|Ruletheworst2]] ([[User talk:Ruletheworst2|talk]]) 18:08, 31 October 2023 (UTC)

If this article is going to talk about how capitalism relates to libertarianism and socialism, and include the 'Part of a series on...' box; wouldn't it also make sense to include a section on it's relation with conservatism? --[[User:Stuck Internetting|Stuck Internetting]] ([[User talk:Stuck Internetting|talk]]) 15:44, 31 October 2018 (UTC)