Adam Smith Institute

Europe's favourite think tank website
  • Narrow screen resolution
  • Wide screen resolution
  • Decrease font size
  • Default font size
  • Increase font size
Blog Review 696 Print E-mail
Written by Netsmith   
Thursday, 21 August 2008

Quite classic government. The private sector invents some useful new technology, government at various levels ties it all up in red tape making it uneconomic whereupon government decides to subsidise it. Not having the red tape in the first place would of course leave us wondering why we have all those governing us, something which would never do.

More government: why we really really don't want them to take over the job of drug development. But we'd love to see them trying to run a system in parallel to the private sector, just so we can benchmark the two systems.

One underappreciated glory of the markets. You don't have to expand if you don't want to: you can simply carry on doing things in your own desired manner.

There's a very good reason that we want (as Adam Smith noted) continual economic growth. It makes the whole society happier.

That credit boom and bust: yes, there was indeed a large supply of capital from China. But why?

Competition time! A one sentence explanation of why this doesn't tell us what people think it does.

And finally, the true state of play in the Olympic medals table.

Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment
This content has been locked. You can no longer post any comment.

busy
 

About the ASI

The Adam Smith Institute is the UK's leading innovator of free-market economic and social policies. Politically independent and non-profit, the Institute promotes its ideas through reports, briefings, events, media appearances, and its website and blog. For further information, click here.

Join our email list

Keep up-to-date with the latest events, reports and information from the Adam Smith Institute by joining our fortnightly email list. It's free and you can unsubscribe at any point. Just enter your email address here: 


Support the ASI

Enter Amount: