Roderick Long on the Myths of the Laissez Faire Golden Age and the Anti-Corporate State

by Will Wilkinson on September 19, 2008

Here’s how it starts:

There’s a popular historical legend that goes like this: Once upon a time (for this is how stories of this kind should begin), back in the 19th century, the United States economy was almost completely unregulated and laissez-faire. But then there arose a movement to subject business to regulatory restraint in the interests of workers and consumers, a movement that culminated in the presidencies of Wilson and the two Roosevelts.

This story comes in both left-wing and right-wing versions, depending on whether the government is seen as heroically rescuing the poor and weak from the rapacious clutches of unrestrained corporate power, or as unfairly imposing burdensome socialistic fetters on peaceful and productive enterprise. But both versions agree on the central narrative: a century of laissez-faire, followed by a flurry of anti-business legislation.

Every part of this story is false.

You will be more intelligent after reading the rest of this masterful post.

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  • Pages tagged "long"

    September 19, 2008 at 2:30 pm

    [...] bookmarks tagged long Roderick Long on the Myths of the Laissez Faire Go... saved by 3 others     LilGoth2292 bookmarked ...

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