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Question:
The
other night on the business news, one of the pundits
said that the invisible hand might take care of the
market. They didn't stop to explain what that was.
Ted
S.
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Answer:
Dear
Ted,
It
does have a mysterious sound to it, doesn't it? Good
that you asked.
The
"invisible hand" is a philosophy devised by the Scottish
economist, Adam Smith. Smith, who lived from 1723
to 1790, wrote the famous treatise, "Wealth of
Nations" in 1776.
Invisible
hand describes the idea that a natural force guides
free market capitalism in a positive way.
According
to Smith, in a free market each participant will try
to maximize his or her self-interest. And as these
participants interact there will be an exchange of
goods and services.
Enter
the invisible hand...
Smith
also said that in a free market, no regulation of
any type is necessary to protect the individual. He
believed that a mutually beneficial exchange of goods
and services would always take place because the so-called
"invisible hand" would be there as a positive overall
force.
In
other words, self-interest guides us first and foremost
and public welfare follows -- but as a secondary byproduct.
Smith maintained that government efforts to promote
social good were ineffectual when compared to unbridled
market forces...the individual, acting for his own
good, tends to also promote good for everyone.
Here's
a direct quote:
Every
individual necessarily labours to render the annual
revenue of the society as great as he can. He generally
neither intends to promote the public interest, nor
knows how much he is promoting it... He intends only
his own gain, and he is in this, as in many other
cases, led by an invisible hand to promote
an end which was no part of his intention. Nor is
it always the worse for society that it was no part
of his intention. By pursuing his own interest he
frequently promotes that of the society more effectually
than when he really intends to promote it. I have
never known much good done by those who affected to
trade for the public good.
Bottom
Line...
The
metaphor of the invisible hand is an argument against
government regulation of the market. It could be that
the pundit you heard on the news was saying that the
government should not interfere -- that there should
not be price supports, embargos, quotas and the like
-- although that's merely an assumption on my part.
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