Free-competition means freedom from physical force to produce for ones own
profit.
What is free-competition?
Free competition is the freedom to produce, and the freedom
to trade what one has produced, for ones own self-interest,
i.e., in the pursuit of ones own happiness.
What is the foundation of free-competition?
Politically, free-competition is a consequence of the political right to life, liberty,
property and the pursuit of happiness applied to the economic sphere of
production and trade.
Morally, competition among producers is founded not on service to
consumers -- which is a result; but, upon the pursuit of rational self-interest, i.e. the profit motive.
Economically, its result is a free-market, i.e. free trade.
Observe that free-market competition presupposes a social system based on individual
rights -- and cannot exist without the protection of rights by government,
e.g. what good is the right to produce (right to liberty) if one does not have
the right to keep what one has created (right to property), the right to
advertise what one has produced (right to free speech), the right to trade ones
goods one ones own terms (right to property) and the right to benefit from what
one has produced (right to the pursuit of happiness)?
Free-competition without individual rights is a
contradiction in terms, it is an oxymoron.
Of course, if one is a communist, fascist or socialist (all are different forms
of a single evil principle: collectivism) and
does not believe in individual rights then competition has an entirely different
meaning.
What is the difference between competition under capitalism and
competition under all other kinds of societies (collectivist societies)?
All social systems have competition, the only difference is that in capitalism,
all such competition for economic power results in the creation of wealth,
whereas in collectivist societies such competition for political power results
in the destruction of wealth.
Under capitalism, competition is an economic process where men do not compete to
put down others, but to raise their self up by creating values which are
potentially unlimited, and raising their competitors up in the process.
Under all collectivist systems competition is a political process where men
compete not to create values, but to lobby or kill for positions of political
power which they can use to legally extort the wealth of their fellow men.
What is the key to the success of Capitalist competition?
The key to the success of capitalist competition is that it limits competition
to the economic sphere of production, and removes it completely from the
political arena of compulsion. Where capitalist competition leads to a free
market; political competition leads to a mixed economy of warring pressure
groups and if continued for long -- a dictatorship.
Are not competition and cooperation opposites?
Contrary to those who prattle about "competition versus cooperation",
capitalism is the only system where voluntary cooperation can actually exist, as
it banishes force from all relationships, making all exchanges voluntary.
Contrast this with the "cooperation" of collectivist societies, where
one man must "cooperate" with another, lest he desires to be fined,
thrown in prison, or have a lead bullet pumped into his skull.
Capitalist competition is the one of the most economically practical forms of social cooperation, where every producer
competes to see who can best cooperate with each other, and with the consumer.
Such is the nature of capitalist competition.
Do individuals lose their rights once they become businessman?
Ones rights do not disappear when one becomes a successful businessmen. Ones
rights are still inalienable. One does not gain rights by being successful, one
does not lose them by becoming rich. Before the law all men are to be held equal
in rights.
How does one determine if a given action is anti-competitive or not?
As competition is simply the application of the principle of individual rights
to the economic sphere of production and trade, its is the principle of rights
that determines if any action is anti-competitive or not. If no rights rights
are being violated, then neither is the principle of competition.
Free-competition only has a single requirement: the protection of individual
rights.
Do consumers have extra "consumer rights" in additional to
individual rights?
No. One does not gain or lose rights by becoming the member of a group. One does
not lose one's rights when one becomes a producer; one does not gain rights by
becoming a consumer. The only right the consumer has is the freedom to refuse or
accept what producers offer them. The consumer has no right to force the
producer to sell something, no more then the producer has the right to force the
consumer to buy something. Only when the two mutually agree does an exchange
take place. Neither party has to make a deal if they do not like their terms,
they are free to go elsewhere.
As the consumer sets the terms on how his money is spent (i.e., on how his
property is sold), as does the producer set terms on how his property is
bought/sold. The producer's job is not to serve the consumer's interests, no
more then it is the consumer's job to serve the producer's interests, both must
serve their own interests. It is only when their interests coincide that a
trade -- a voluntary exchange of a value for value -- takes place.
Doesn't competition mean an "equal playing field"?
Competition does not mean "equal ability" (just like the right to life
does not mean you will live as long or as prosperously as your neighbor). When
any company uses its property in a way that does not benefit its competitors, it
is not being anti-competitive. Competition does not mean that you do things to
promote your competitors, but that you do things to improve your own
position -- if necessary at your rival's market share; but never by violating your
rival's, or anyone else's, rights. Equality under free- competition only means
an "equal protection of rights".
Suggested Reading:
America's Persecuted Minority: Big Business by Ayn
Rand
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