Andy Puzder Mar 04, 2019 16m views – for Prager U
My cmnt: Some things to note about this lesson from Prager U. This was produced in the best economic year in America virtually ever. It was made at the height of President Trump’s Renaissance of America (i.e., Make America Great Again) and boy did he ever. Everything President Trump was doing was producing more peace and more prosperity in America and the world. President Trump was unleashing real hope and real change after 8 sorry years of Obama decline.
My cmnt: Then came the over reaction (by democrats) to the Covid-19 scare and the opportunity they were hoping and praying and scheming for to destroy the unprecedented Trump economic miracle. And by enacting socialistic policies, such as in Cuba and Venezuela, they managed to destroy our economy, our freedoms and enact dictatorial control. They made 2020 artificially the worse year since the ten years of the FDR Great Depression and the Carter four-year Depression and the Obama 8 year Great Recession. And ultimately (by election fraud) gave us the most mentally incompetent president and vice president duo – ever.
Now (2021) just one year after capitalism dramatically triumphed over socialism, politicians are once again arguing about the merits and drawbacks of these opposing economic systems. Why are we still having this debate? Andy Puzder, former CEO of the parent company of Hardee’s and Carl’s Jr., explains the misconceptions that keep the debate alive.
This video is part of the Robert W. Plaster Foundation Playlist: Free Enterprise Will Set You Free
Capitalism versus socialism. We can sum up each economic system in one line:
Capitalism is based on human greed. Socialism is based on human need.
Right?
No. Wrong.
So wrong, it’s exactly backwards. And I’ll prove it to you.
Been on Amazon lately? Each of the thousands of products Amazon offers represents the work of people who believe they have something you want or need. If they’re right, they prosper. If they’re wrong, they don’t.
That’s how the free market works. It encourages people to improve their lives by satisfying the needs of others. No one starts a business making a thing or providing a service for themselves. They start a business to make things or provide services for others.
I speak from personal experience.
When I was the CEO of the company that owns Carl’s Jr. and Hardee’s restaurant chains, we spent millions of dollars every year trying to determine what customers wanted. If our customers didn’t like something, we changed it–and fast, because if we didn’t, our competitors would (pun intended) eat us for lunch.
The consumer–that’s you–has the ultimate power. In effect, you vote with every dollar you spend.
In a socialist economy, the government has the ultimate power. It decides what you get from a limited supply it decides should exist.
Instead of millions of people making millions of decisions about what they want, a few people–government elites–decide what people should have and how much they should pay for it. Not surprisingly, they always get it wrong. Have you ever noticed that late-stage socialist failures always run out of essential items like toilet paper?
Of course, this isn’t a problem for those who have the right connections with the right people. Those chosen few get whatever they want. But everyone else is out of luck.
Venezuela, once the richest country in South America, is the most recent example of socialism driving a prosperous country into an economic ditch. Maybe you think it’s an unfair example. I’m not sure why, but okay. We’ll ignore the fact that leftist activists celebrated it as a great socialist success–right up until it wasn’t.
But what about Western European countries? Don’t they have socialist economies? People seem pretty happy there. Why can’t we have what they have–free health care, free college, stronger unions?
Good question. And the answer may surprise you.
There are no socialist countries in Western Europe. Most are just as capitalist as the United States. The only difference–and it’s a big one–is that they offer more government benefits than the U.S. does.
We can argue about the costs of these benefits and the point at which they reduce individual initiative, thus doing more harm than good. Scandinavians have been debating those questions for years. But only a free-market capitalist economy can produce the wealth necessary to sustain all of the supposedly “free stuff” Europeans enjoy. To get the “free stuff,” after all, you have to create enough wealth to generate enough tax revenue to pay for everything the government gives away.
Without capitalism, you’re Venezuela.
In a 2015 speech at Harvard, Denmark’s prime minister took great pains to make this point: “I know that some people in the U.S. associate the Nordic model with… socialism, therefore I would like to make one thing clear. Denmark is far from a socialist planned economy. Denmark is a market economy.”
So when you point to Denmark as a paragon of socialism, you’re really singing the praises of capitalism.
My cmnt: I need to point out that the Nordic countries (including Canada) can only maintain their extravagant social welfare states by producing and selling fossil fuels (i.e., gas and oil). Without this natural resource (which is also the only thing keeping communist Russia afloat) they would be bankrupt and in chaos. And communist China would have NO economic miracle without six things: 1) the know-how and investment from the West; 2) the stealing of our intellectual property; 3) dirt cheap and often times slave labor; 4) the help of traitorous democrats (like the Clintons); 5) unbridled pollution and dirty coal-fired power plants; and 6) Big Tech companies like Apple turning a blind-eye to all of this.
The more capitalism, the less “socialism” you need. Look at America since 2017. A policy of lower taxes and less government regulation (that’s more capitalism) has led to a robust economic expansion, something thought impossible just a few years earlier. Unemployment, notably among minority groups typically most at risk for poverty, is at a generational low. Economic expansion gets people off welfare and into work (that’s less “socialism”).
None of this requires a degree in economics. Common sense is all you need. That’s why it’s so frustrating to see young people praising socialism and criticizing capitalism. It’s bad enough that they’re working against their own interest–better job prospects, better wages, personal freedom–but they are also working against the interest of the less fortunate.
Capitalism leads to economic democracy. Socialism leads to the economic dictatorship of the elite. Always. And everywhere.
So beware what you ask for. You just might get it.
I’m Andy Puzder, author of The Capitalist Comeback, for Prager University.