So That’s How That Works

So That’s How That Works

To suggest that those who have goods and services to sell have some sinister interest in keeping their potential customers too poor to buy is sheer nonsense! If the president of General Motors wants to sell you a Cadillac or a Buick or a Chevrolet—which he does—then he wants you to be rich enough to buy. In the free economy, everyone has a stake in the economic well-being of every other person.

It is in the immediate interest of business and businessmen that the masses of people be well off; people who are poor are poor customers, and business cannot survive without customers. Business has no stake in poverty; but there is a class of people who do need the poor, who do have an interest in keeping them poor. Permit me, in a slight digression, to offer you a few words on this point by the celebrated economist Thomas Sowell: “To be blunt, the poor are a gold mine. By the time they are studied, advised, experimented with and administered, the poor have helped many a middle class liberal to achieve affluence with government money. The total amount of money the government spends on its ‘anti-poverty’ efforts is three times what would be required to lift every man, woman, and child in America above the poverty line by simply sending money to the poor.”Edmund A. Opitz, “Ethics and Business”ba5fuj6cqaavse9_jpg_largeimages

3 thoughts on “So That’s How That Works

  1. Bravo to those first two parts !

    The last thing every realtor and car salesman want to hear is that the average income has declined by 5,000 since 2009. The actual best thing for civilization is the average joe’s paycheck to keep increasing, which increases the speed of improvement in products and quality of life because producers can make more profits for making better stuff.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.