Chattanooga Times Free Press

Economist to tout advantages of capitalism at UTC lecture

- BY DAVE FLESSNER Contact Dave Flessner at dflessner@timesfree press.com or 423-757-6340.

“It’s time for us to re-evaluate many of the criticisms that have been leveled against the free enterprise system in recent years.”

— PETER BOETTKE, PROFESSOR OF ECONOMICS AND PHILOSOPHY AT GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY

Responding to Democratic concerns about income inequality from American capitalism and Republican opposition to greater immigratio­n and internatio­nal trade from a free market trading system, conservati­ve economist Peter Boettke will highlight the virtues of capitalism and free trade during the annual Burkett Miller lecture at the University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a on Thursday night.

Boettke, a professor of economics and philosophy at George Mason University, will speak at a free and public event at 5:30 p.m. at the UC Auditorium. In his first-ever visit to Chattanoog­a, Boettke said he will discuss the current conversati­ons around capitalism and socialism.

“It’s time for us to re-evaluate many of the criticisms that have been leveled against the free enterprise system in recent years,” Boettke said in an interview with the Chattanoog­a Times Free Press. “We need a stronger defense of those ideas that have generated the kind of innovation and growth that we need to address the social problems that we have today.”

Boettke, who serves as the BB&T Professor for the Study of Capitalism and the director of the F.A. Hayek Program for Advanced Study in Philosophy, Politics and Economics, said free markets and global trade have boosted economic growth around the world.

“In 2015, for the first time in human history, less than 10% of the world’s population was living on $2 a day, which is only a fraction of the share of those living in such extreme poverty a half century ago,” Boettke said. “What generated that improvemen­t was not government largesse, it was the expansion of trade, innovation and opportunit­y for people throughout the world. I fear we’ve now lost faith in that.”

Capitalism is under attack by many Americans, Boettke said.

“We have politician­s that are in positions of power today who have more favorable attitudes about big government and are highly critical of globalizat­ion and free trade,” he said.

U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont Democratic socialist who finished second in the Democratic presidenti­al primary contests in 2020, is out with a new book claiming “It’s OK to be Angry About Capitalism.”

“The people on top, the billionair­es, are doing phenomenal­ly well,” Sanders said this week in an interview on CBS News about his new book. “Meanwhile, the middle class in America continues to shrink, and in the richest country in the world today, over 60% of the people are living paycheck to paycheck. We are the only major country in the world not to guarantee health care as a human right.”

But Boettke said basic economics still remain in place and need to be adhered to in order to avoid costly mistakes in labor and capital markets.

Increased government spending is escalating deficit spending and, unless unchecked, will ultimately lead to a government default on U.S. debt, Bottke said.

Raising the minimum wage may sound like a way to help low-income workers, but artificial­ly raising wages for lowskilled workers is likely to lead to more automation and other laborsavin­g measures that will take away many lowskilled jobs altogether, Boettke said.

Criticism of free markets, free immigratio­n and trade policies is also coming from some nationalis­t conservati­ves who want to limit immigratio­n and free trade.

Former President Donald Trump took steps while in the White House to limit the number of immigrants coming across the Southern border because he said immigratio­n was boosting crime and stealing jobs away from Americans. Both of Tennessee’s U.S. senators have urged tougher measures be implemente­d to reduce the number of immigrants coming across the Mexican border.

“Until our border is secure, our entire nation’s security is at risk,” U.S. Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tennessee, has said.

But Boettke said free trade and globalizat­ion helped boost U.S. companies in the global export market while also allowing American consumers to buy lower-cost imports. Promoting more immigratio­n will also allow more people wanting a better life in the United States to come here and offer their talents to the U.S. economy, Bottke said.

“The ultimate resource for an economy are human beings, so we should be welcoming people who want to come to this country with open arms for them to bring their dynamism, energy and ideas,” Boettke said. “Just take a look at the Nobel laureates teaching at universiti­es in the United States and their country of origin. The minds and ideas that are attracted to our economy are amazing.”

Since 1901, there have been 148 Nobel laureates who were foreign-born individual­s who either immigrated permanentl­y to the United States or were at a U.S. institutio­n of higher learning at the time they received the award.

Boettke said lowerskill­ed workers also help provide needed workers to fill job vacancies and promote economic growth that benefits all Americans.

Boettke is the latest among a long list of top economic scholars who have spoken at the Burkett Miller lecture series at UTC in defense of free market capitalism. The lecture is funded by the Probasco Distinguis­hed Chair of Free Enterprise at UTC, which is headed by Claudia R. Williamson.

Persons interested in attending Thursday’s lecture are encouraged to register at bit.ly/3YSYXnI.

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Peter Boettke

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