Government Regulations Create Monopolies and Stifle Competition
Free Markets
05/02/2026
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Mises Wire
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Jorge Besada
From our freedom to use or transform our private property emerges the freedom to trade it with anyone we choose. This freedom to trade inadvertently transforms mankind into a global supercomputer where private sector companies are always engaged in the process of economic competition which motivates companies to innovate and copy the innovations of competitors.
Economic competition inadvertently causes companies to cooperate in the creation and spread of superior information and subsequent socioeconomic order. Power door locks, power steering, anti-lock brakes, and countless other automotive innovations originated in one company and quickly spread to competitors due to people’s freedom to trade their life and order-sustaining wealth with the companies that provided them their cars at competitive prices.
Morals are ways of acting; they too are information which also emerges and spreads via economic competition to considerable degrees. It is hard-working, courteous people that treat customers and coworkers with mutual respect who—thanks to competition—motivate everyone else to be likewise. As Hayek writes:
https://mises.org/mises-wire/government-regulations-create-monopolies-and-stifle-competition