Las Vegas Review-Journal

Part II: Capitalism makes society better off

- JOHN STOSSEL John Stossel is author of “Give Me a Break: How I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media.”

LAST week, I debunked three myths about capitalism. Here are four more: Myth No. 4: Capitalism creates unsafe workspaces.

“Greedy capitalist­s” will risk workers’ lives to increase production if government, through agencies such as the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion, doesn’t stop that.

It’s logical to assume that government regulation saves lives. Workplace deaths dropped after OSHA was created. Government officials like showing a graph of the decline. But if you bother to also look at data from before OSHA’S creation, you see that deaths fell at the same rate before regulation began. Why? “As we become richer, we become safer,” said Dan Mitchell of the Center for Freedom and Prosperity.

Wealth created by capitalism lets us afford safety devices and build machines to do dangerous work. OSHA is like someone jumping in front of a parade and claiming he led the parade. “We need more capitalism because when people get rich, they can afford more safety!” Mitchell added.

Myth No. 5: “Unfettered” capitalism created evil “robber barons” who got rich by “exploiting” workers and consumers.

It’s true that more than

100 years ago, a few entreprene­urs, such as John D. Rockefelle­r, amassed a huge amount of wealth. But Rockefelle­r was neither robber nor baron. He was not born rich, and he didn’t rob. He got rich by offering consumers better deals.

Rockefelle­r developed ways to deliver oil for less. He won customers by lowering the price of kerosene from 26 cents per gallon to about 6 cents.

For the first time, average people could afford fuel for lanterns so they could read after dark. Rockefelle­r may have even “saved the whales” by making oil so cheap that killing whales to get whale oil was no longer practical.

Still, I’m told that even if capitalism brings us cheaper or better products, it just isn’t “good for us.”

That’s Myth No. 6. Of course, capitalism can breed nasty materialis­m.

Fox News’ Tucker Carlson sneers, “Does anybody believe cheaper iphones or more Amazon deliveries of plastic garbage from China will make us happy?”

Mitchell responded, “We’re not buying iphones and plastic garbage unless we think it’s better for us than the dollars that we have!”

That’s a very important point. No capitalist gets our money unless we voluntaril­y choose to exchange it for whatever he’s selling. As Mitchell puts it, “Capitalism is the only system that gives people the liberty to make their own choices.”

Myth No. 7: Capitalism’s pursuit of profit drives businesses to create robots that will eventually take away most everyone’s job.

It could happen. Artificial intelligen­ce is powerful. Maybe this time is different. But again and again, experts predicted that employment was about to decline — and again and again, they’ve been wrong.

Some people do lose jobs. Capitalism promotes creative destructio­n. It’s terrible for the fired employee. But it’s good for most everyone else. It’s what allows for innovation.

Capitalism has continuall­y generated more jobs. When America began, 90 percent of workers worked on farms. Now fewer than 2 percent do. And there are millions more of us.

“As long as our economy has the dynamism that free markets allow,” Mitchell said, “we’re going to see more job creation and higher income levels. That’s what makes the children and grandchild­ren of typewriter makers so much better off. No other system anywhere in the world has ever come close to capitalism’s ability to generate mass prosperity.”

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