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  • If we look at the history of the world,

  • a huge fraction of the improvements in standard of living have come because

  • private businesses have created new products, have given people jobs,

  • have generated profits that raise people out of poverty and

  • allow them to live fruitful and productive lives with reasonable standards of living.

  • We can have much more of that,

  • and it will have beneficial effects around the world if we step back

  • from the excessive regulation and have a much more capitalistic system.

  • My name is Jeff Miron, and I'm Director of Undergraduate Studies in the Department of

  • Economics at Harvard University.

  • I wanna talk about three myths about capitalism,

  • the first is that being pro-capitalism is the same as being pro-business.

  • Nothing could be farther from the truth.

  • The point of capitalism is to make sure that businesses have to compete

  • vigorously against each other and that benefits consumers.

  • It's not good for the businesses per se because they have to work really hard, so

  • many businesses understand this, and they hate capitalism.

  • They are constantly trying to get government to erect various rules,

  • restrictions, regulations that help them,

  • but they're not in the interest of the consumers.

  • So pro-capitalism is good for consumers.

  • That's whom we're ultimately trying to help.

  • A second myth is that capitalism generates an unfair distribution of income.

  • What true capitalism does is rewards people who are productive,

  • people who work a lot of hours, people who have a lot of talent.

  • People who come up with good ideas, they get big rewards under capitalism, and

  • people who don't do those sorts of things get less.

  • The one negative one might be concerned about is that some people

  • are not able to earn very much left on their own, and

  • so very reasonable people support some anti-poverty spending.

  • But that's completely different than interfering with capitalism.

  • Regulating prices, limiting quantities, imposing all sorts of things on

  • businesses, those make the economy less productive, give us a smaller pie.

  • And make it even harder for us to operate programs,

  • which help those who are less fortunate.

  • The third myth is that capitalism was responsible for

  • the recent financial crisis and the recession.

  • That, again, is almost exactly the opposite of what is true.

  • First of all, nobody who is being intellectually honest thinks that we had

  • unbridled, serious capitalism before the crisis hit,

  • before the subprime build up occurred, before we had all the housing problem.

  • We had enormous government interventions that subsidized risk,

  • enormous government interventions that encouraged an overinvestment housing.

  • If one's going to try to draw any conclusions,

  • it seems to suggest much more clearly that interfering with capitalism

  • generates financial crises, generates recessions.

  • Because what we experienced was directly related to the incentives for

  • excessive risk taking, the incentives for

  • overinvestment housing that were created by government.

  • The private sector responded to those incentives, so

  • of course, the private sector can't be completely absolved of being involved.

  • But in the sense of causing, it is the bad policies that caused it,

  • not what the private sector or capitalism did by itself.

  • Most importantly, whenever government bail out people who took excessive risk,

  • it encouraged people to do more of that in the future.

  • And we unfortunately went a huge way in that direction via the TARP, and via all

  • the Federal Reserve policies, which helped Wall Street and the risk takers

  • not have to pay the true price for all the excessive risk taking they engaged in.

If we look at the history of the world,

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