The next time you hear someone complain about
capitalism, consider this: The
percentage of people living at starvation level poverty has fallen 80% since
1970. Before then, more than one in four people around the world were
living on a dollar a day or less. Today, it’s about one in twenty.
This is the greatest
anti-poverty achievement in world history. So, how did this remarkable transformation come to
pass? Was it the fabulous success of the United Nations? The generosity of U.S.
foreign aid? The brilliant policies of the International Monetary Fund and
World Bank? Stimulus spending? Government redistribution?
No. It was none of those things.
It was capitalism. Billions of souls around the world
have been able to pull themselves out of poverty thanks to five incredible
innovations: globalization, free trade, property rights, the rule of
law, and entrepreneurship.
Globalization means the ever-increasing ability to
move goods, people, and ideas from one distant location to another.
Free trade is open access to markets and people
from all over the world with few, if any, barriers.
Property rights is ensuring that what belongs to you
can’t be taken away on a whim by the state.
The rule of law safeguards contracts, assuring that
they will be respected and lived up to whether the deal is made in Peru or
Poland.
And entrepreneurship
is the creativity of free people to dream up new products that we never knew we
wanted or needed.
It’s worth noting that in places like East Asia, these
five things were all made possible by the historic peace after World War II
that resulted from America’s global diplomatic and military presence.
Let me put this in a slightly different way:
The ideals of free enterprise and global leadership,
central to capitalism and American conservatism, are responsible for the
greatest reduction in human misery since mankind began its long climb from the
swamp to the stars. This remarkable progress has been America’s gift to the
world.
So, if these American conservative ideals have done so
much to lift up the world’s poor, you would think conservative ideas would be
gaining strength every single day – everywhere. And not just gaining strength
among conservatives, but also among young idealists, immigrants, minorities,
and advocates for the poor—all embracing the principles of free enterprise and
unleashing its power on behalf of the vulnerable.
But this hasn’t happened. To the contrary, capitalism
is struggling to attract new followers. Indeed, some believe it’s destined to
fade away – just as it has in much of Europe.
According to a Harvard Study, only 42% of young
Americans 18 to 29 have a favorable view of capitalism. What explains this
discrepancy between the incredible results of capitalism and its popularity?
Why does capitalism get such bad rap?
One answer is simple: The defenders of free enterprise
have done a terrible job of telling people how much good the system has done
around the world. Capitalism has saved a couple billion people, and we have
treated this miracle like a state secret.
According to a 2013 survey, 84 percent of Americans
are unaware of the progress made against poverty worldwide. Indeed, more than
two-thirds think global hunger has actually gotten worse.
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