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Chapter 5: Entrepreneurs and Economic Freedom
Entrepreneurs are risk-takers who engage
in enterprises with the hope of making a profit. Those who
start small businesses such as restaurants and shoe repair
shops are entrepreneurs, as are those who improve existing
services and products or create new ones.
Entrepreneurs of all types are important
to our economic well-being, but the most dramatic progress
comes from the ventures of a relatively few. These are the
entrepreneurs who challenge the conventional vision of what
is possible and turn one generation's fantasies into the next
generation's necessities.
Every country and culture has men and
women with the spirit of bold entrepreneurship, but this spirit
alone will not result in economic progress. Market economies
provide the freedom and discipline needed for entrepreneurship
to flourish.
Achieving great success requires taking
great risks—attempting things that few would dare and
that most would consider impractical, if not impossible. Most
such bold ventures do fail. The only way to discover what
works and what doesn't is by turning people loose with the
freedom to pursue their dreams.
Market economies allow the productive
energy of entrepreneurs to be unleashed by ensuring that they
are accountable to consumers.
Consumer Communication as Discipline
Consumers discipline entrepreneurs by
letting them know what they think of projects as they develop,
in ways that cannot be ignored.
First, the prices entrepreneurs pay
for the inputs they use reflect the inputs' value in the production
of other goods, and consumers communicate that value through
the prices they are willing to pay for those goods. So entrepreneurs
receive a clear message—one that hits them in their
bank accounts—on the sacrifice their activities impose
on consumers. Second, the price consumers pay for an entrepreneur's
product communicates how much value they realize from her
venture.
Of course, when an entrepreneur is getting
started, her product won't be fully developed and on the market,
so the only consumer feedback will be through the cost of
the inputs. This is where entrepreneurial confidence is important.
It helps the entrepreneur persuade others to help fund the
project and motivates her to put up much of the money herself,
with the expectation of a large return if the venture succeeds.
Often, entrepreneurs and venture capitalists
fund good ideas—or what seem like good ideas—for
a long time without generating enough revenue to cover cost.
These undertakings often catch on eventually, with consumers
rewarding entrepreneurs and investors with large profits,
communicating that the new goods are worth more than the old
goods being sacrificed.
But no matter how confident an entrepreneur,
if consumers continue to indicate the project is worth less
than its cost, she will eventually have to respond. A lack
of sales is a powerful signal, forcing entrepreneurs to respond
by acting as if they are saying, "Although I am convinced
my venture is worth more than it costs, consumers are telling
me the opposite. They are telling me they value other things
that could be produced with the resources I am using more
than they value what I am producing. So I will call off my
venture to free up resources to produce more of what consumers
value more."
Obstacles to Success
The market economy keeps entrepreneurs
accountable to consumers by giving consumers the power to
pull the plug on some ventures and encourage others. It is
this accountability that makes entrepreneurial freedom possible
and entrepreneurial ventures such a powerful force for progress.
Yet some object to the success of entrepreneurial
ventures. Entrepreneurial activity always disrupts established
ways of doing things, particularly when it makes consumers
better off. Indeed, the greater the potential benefit from
an entrepreneurial venture, the more likely it is to provoke
opposition from those with a vested interest in the status
quo.
Entrepreneurial success results from
the most potent and ruthless form of competition—one
that allows the new and improved to sweep away the old and
threatens the existence of well-established and profitable
firms. As economist Joseph Schumpeter pointed out, the most
important competition is "from the new commodity, the
new technology, the new source of supply, the new type of
organization.competition which commands a decisive cost or
quality advantage and which strikes not at the margins of
the profits and the outputs of the existing firms but at their
foundations and their very lives."
All competition is unpopular with producers
because it forces them to remain vigilant to consumer interests.
But it is the competition from successful entrepreneurs that,
because it benefits consumers the most, poses the greatest
threat and prompts the greatest reaction.
If established firms responded by trying
to develop better and less expensive products or by passively
going out of business, there would be no problem. But these
firms commonly wield significant political influence because
of the many jobs they provide and their long-standing support
for powerful officeholders. When faced with either making
painful changes or being driven out of business, firms often
use their influence to hamper entrepreneurs' freedom to get
their products and services to market.
Entrepreneurial
Davids are able to slay the status quo Goliaths on the
field of market competition, but the Goliaths have the
advantage when the battle shifts to the political arena.
Those with the better products can capture the patronage
of large numbers of consumers in open competition, but
they may not be able to mobilize large numbers of voters
to overcome political barriers. So while the market
makes it possible to tolerate the risk of entrepreneurial
failure, the political process often has difficulty
tolerating entrepreneurial success.
The political obstacles to successful
entrepreneurs are more limited in the United States than in
many other countries, thanks to the Constitution and public
opinion. Still, organized interest groups have been able to
use the political process to slow the introduction of technology
and products. Consider the following examples.
- As motorized vehicles gained popularity, groups such as
the Horse and Mule Association of America, the Master Horseshoer
National Protection Association and the National Hay Association
lobbied legislatures, with some temporary success in the
1920s, to limit the use of automobiles, trucks and tractors.
- In the 1920s and '30s, local retailers sought legislation
restricting competition from lower cost chain stores. Today,
many retailers lobby local governments to prevent, or at
least delay, the opening of large discount stores such as
Wal-Mart.
- Responding to dairy interests, many states once banned
the sale of yellow margarine. Consumers had to tint their
margarine at home, with coloring provided by the manufacturer.
Such laws began to fall in the early 1950s but held on in
Wisconsin until 1967.
- Despite the general enthusiasm for the Internet, many
existing retailers have fought some types of e-commerce.
In a number of states, it is illegal to use the Internet
to buy out-of-state wine or purchase automobiles directly
from manufacturers.
Economic Freedom
Centrally planned economies fail because
they deny people the freedom to act on the information that
only they possess to innovate, start businesses, and buy and
sell. Substituting the direction of political authorities
for the market choices of individual producers and consumers
guarantees that economic decisions are made in an informational
vacuum.
A productive economy requires using
the information dispersed throughout the population, but this
cannot be done unless individuals are free to interact in
the marketplace. Destroy freedom, and you destroy the information
flows necessary for sound economic decisions.
The connection between freedom and markets
also runs the other way. Freedom depends on properly functioning
markets as much as properly functioning markets depend on
freedom.
The market protects freedom by establishing
the only setting in which it can be tolerated. Freedom without
accountability soon becomes license and cannot endure for
long. The only freedom that can survive is one exercised in
ways that take into account the concerns of others—freedom
subject to the discipline of the marketplace.
In a market economy, I can tolerate
your freedom to buy the clothes you prefer, eat the foods
you like and pursue almost any objective you desire. When
you use resources to pursue your objectives, you take my concerns,
and those of others, into consideration. As discussed earlier,
the price you pay for the things you buy reflects the value
others place on them, so you buy them only as long as their
marginal value to you is at least as great as their marginal
value to others. Similarly, you can tolerate my freedom to
pursue my objectives in the marketplace.
But when markets are undermined, so
is the discipline necessary for freedom to survive. There
is no mystery about why people are denied basic freedoms in
countries where markets are suppressed. Freedom without discipline
is unacceptable, and without markets, the discipline will
come from central direction and bureaucratic red tape.
Even in primarily free market economies,
market incentives aren't always operating, and when they aren't,
bureaucratic limits on our freedom are imposed.
For example, excessive pollution results
from not having markets to discipline waste emissions into
the environment. If such markets existed, polluters would
have to pay prices that reflect the cost their emissions impose
on others, and this accountability would motivate polluters
to voluntarily limit their discharges. But without markets
for the right to pollute, we accept bureaucratic restrictions
on polluting activities that we would consider unacceptable
in most areas of our lives.
We all value freedom, and few want our
own freedoms denied. But it is easy to lose our freedoms a
little at a time, without noticing the loss.
First, many of the benefits we realize
from freedom are the result of the freedom exercised by others.
For example, most of us are not entrepreneurs and are not
directly affected by government restrictions on entrepreneurial
ventures that threaten well-established producers with new
and improved products and technologies. Even though they receive
most of the benefits from the progress fueled by entrepreneurs,
few consumers object to these restrictions because they don't
notice the loss of benefits they never had.
Second, it is always possible to provide
very visible benefits to identifiable groups through restrictions
on freedom. For example, the government greatly benefits a
handful of U.S. sugar growers by restricting American consumers'
freedom to buy sugar from foreign countries. Growers are fully
aware of the millions of dollars in benefits they receive
from these restrictions, and they use campaign contributions
to show their appreciation to those in Congress who support
them. The cost of these restrictions to consumers exceeds
the benefits to sugar growers, but because it is spread over
270 million consumers, few ever notice it.
And even when a consumer does notice,
he has no motivation to take political action to eliminate
the restriction on his freedom. The cost of the action would
greatly exceed the cost he would save from lower sugar prices,
even if he succeeds. And because of the difficulty of organizing
people to take action, success is unlikely.
Finally, every restriction on our freedom
erodes market discipline a little more, making it just a little
easier to justify further restrictions. If this destructive
dynamic goes unrecognized, our freedom and prosperity can
be gradually undermined.
| Table |
| Freedom and Wealth |
| In recent years, attempts have
been made to rank countries by the economic freedom their
citizens enjoy. Such attempts require the construction
of indexes, which are always somewhat arbitrary but do
provide rough and useful measures of economic freedom.
Of particular interest is the connection between how free
a country is economically and how wealthy its citizens
are. The evidence is clear: The more economic freedom
in a country, the wealthier its citizens tend to be. The
following table is based on one of the most widely cited
studies of economic freedom. |
| Freedom Ranking
|
Country |
Per Capita GDP
in U.S. Dollars |
|
1 |
Hong Kong |
$ 23,997 |
|
2 |
Singapore |
28,184 |
|
3 |
New Zealand
|
17,210 |
|
4 |
United States
|
31,567 |
|
(tie) 9 |
United Kingdom
|
21,736 |
|
9 |
Australia |
24,240 |
|
15 |
Canada |
22,575 |
|
20 |
Austria |
31,550 |
|
35 |
Japan |
43,119 |
|
38 |
South Korea
|
12,086 |
|
45 |
France |
28,959 |
|
(tie) 60 |
South Africa
|
3,904 |
|
60 |
Mexico |
3,613 |
|
79 |
Brazil |
4,479 |
|
(tie) 121 |
China |
818 |
|
121 |
India |
450 |
|
131 |
Russia |
2,211 |
|
(last) 155 |
North Korea
|
n.a. (but very
low) |
|
| SOURCE: O'Driscoll, Holmes and O'Grady
(2002). |
Our Best Hope
No economic system is perfect, and market
economies are no exception. A more extensive discussion than
is possible here would explain why prices do not always communicate
information accurately. An important reason for studying economics
is to gain a better understanding of the economy's flaws.
Then we can attempt to reduce them, even though we can never
eliminate them entirely.
But another reason—maybe a more
important reason—for most people to study economics
is to gain an appreciation for the difficulty of the task
faced by any economy and how impressively market economies
perform that task. The goal of every economy is to generate
the most value with the resources, skills and technologies
available, while creating opportunities and incentives to
expand these factors over time. This requires giving people
the maximum degree of freedom to use the information that
only they have, consistent with taking others' concerns into
consideration.
No economic system does a better job
than the market system of realizing the advantages of both
individual freedom and social cooperation. But no matter how
well the market works, people will still be dissatisfied with
the outcomes it produces because they always reflect the unavoidable
reality of scarcity. People will always want, and are easily
convinced they deserve, more than is available.
Many of the criticisms of the market
are really complaints about scarcity. Indeed, one reason the
market is so effective at pushing back the limits of scarcity
is that it forces us to face up to scarcity—and deal
with it—through the information that market prices communicate.
Market economies address scarcity by
keeping us informed and responsive to it. Understanding economics
reduces the temptation to temporarily mask scarcity by restricting
market communication. Our best hope for continued freedom
and prosperity is the social cooperation made possible by
communication through market prices.
—Dwight R. Lee
 |
| References
Anderson, Terry L., and
Donald R. Leal, Enviro-Capitalist: Doing Good
While Doing Well (Lanham, Md.: Rowman &
Littlefield, 1997).
Atkinson, Robert D., "The
Revenge of the Disintermediated: How the Middleman
is Fighting E-Commerce and Hurting Consumers,"
Policy Paper (Washington, D.C.: Progressive Policy
Institute, January 2001).
Cox, W. Michael, "The
Low Cost of Living," The Wall Street
Journal (April 9, 1998).
Cox, W. Michael, and Richard
Alm, "Time Well Spent: The Declining Real
Cost of Living in America," 1997 Annual
Report, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
O'Driscoll, Gerald P., Jr.,
Kim R. Holmes and Mary Anastasia O'Grady, 2002
Index of Economic Freedom (Washington, D.C.:
The Heritage Foundation and Dow Jones & Co.,
2002).
Read, Leonard E., "I,
Pencil," The Freeman (December 1958,
pp. 32-37).
Schumpeter, Joseph A., Capitalism,
Socialism, and Democracy (New York: Harper
Torchbooks, 1950), originally published 1942.
Smith, Adam, The Wealth
of Nations, Modern Library ed. (New York:
Random House, 1937), originally published 1776.
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Free Enterprise: The
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