What are your thoughts?
I don't plan on getting into this. I'm just hoping I can cause quite the storm.
It depends on how one defines "corporation". Given the commonly taken, albeit tacit definition, a corporation is nothing other than a legal fiction whereby some group of people are able to function in concert according to a set of rules promulgated, codified, and formalized into law by... <drum roll>... the "state", yet another legal fiction, but let us not digress.
A corporation is a creation of the state at the very least, which is to say that in our world a corporation is never not that. A corporation may, however, be more than that, though it is not required to be.
That there are no free markets of any significance to be found on the planet and given that most of the few that exist are black markets, it must therefore be impossible for a corporation to such an entity.
The entire purpose of the existence of incorporation is to put the state's stamp of approval on an enterprise.
In a free market system the privileges of a corporation (e.g. shield its owners from personal liability for its debts) don't exist, and the amount of business anyone would choose to do with such an entity would be minimal.
Originally I felt the same, though have re-thought the issue as of late. I think it's important that we first solidify the definition of that which we are discussing.
No we shouldn't, then we'll lose too many arguments. It's better to have a fluid argument so you can always change them last minute and win. Oh, I forgot, you don't play politics![]()
that's why you go by my definition, if you like them, they're good and free market results, but if you don't, they can only be creations of the state, because obviously, free markets never do wrong and everything the state does is evil. So if you use my definition, you'll never go wrong.
"Free market good. State bad."--if you can't elaborate and reason beyond this, just don't talk about economics at all, for all of our sakes.
do you disagree that free market is always good and state is always bad? what more do I need to elaborate beyond that? Do I need an economics degree?
If you can't explain your reasoning behind the positions you take, then the positions you take and advocate become disregarded.
Saying you think free markets are always good doesn't illustrate anything to anyone other than perhaps you aren't worth engaging.