52 pages • 1 hour read
Ha-Joon ChangA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
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Chang opens by summarizing the belief, common among free-market economists, that the economy functions most efficiently when people are left to act freely, with no restrictions on their behavior. He then points out that no market is completely free, since each one comes with various rules and restrictions. As an example, Chang recounts the history of laws outlawing child labor, which were viewed as controversial governmental overreach in the 19th century but are widely accepted today, even by proponents of free markets. Other restrictions on what can be bought and sold, such as laws against political bribery, have emerged over time.
Comparing regulations to the invisible wires used to suspend martial artists in kung fu movies, Chang argues that judgments about whether a market is free or not are political, not economic, in nature; regulations only appear onerous to those who oppose the political motivations underlying them. As examples, Chang cites the debate over free trade and fair trade between the US and China, as well as the US government’s bailout of failing companies during the 2008 global financial crisis. In the end, no market can objectively be described as purely free.
This first essay establishes structural patterns that continue throughout the text. Specifically, it opens with two brief sections titled “What they tell you” and “What they don’t tell you,” which introduce the main ideas under discussion: The first summarizes views attributed to free-market economists, while the second introduces Chang’s thoughts. These are followed by additional, longer sections with unique, content-specific titles. Often, these sections alternate back and forth, developing the typical free-market viewpoint before turning to a rebuttal.
While Chang states no clear rationale for the order of his essays, even encouraging readers to skip to the essays of most interest to them, his placement of this essay first seems intentional, as it deals with the concept of free markets in a meta, definitional context. Here, Chang’s purpose is not so much to oppose any concrete policy as it is to lay bare the semantic gymnastics necessary to characterize any market as “free.” If, as Chang suggests, free markets don’t exist, the point of defending them becomes questionable, introducing the theme of Deconstructing Free-Market Economics Dogma.
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