The issue pointed out by these two comments come from a conflation of vocabulary (which is typically intentional at least at some point in the education). A truly "free market" would ensure that things like WeWork wouldn't happen because the ultimate material inputs and outputs of the company don't square. "Capitalism" is the seeking of profit at the expense of all others, where having a viable company no longer is an objective in itself but simply is a means to increase personal wealth. In such a system, WeWork makes a lot of sense because the long term solvency of the company does not impact how the market measures it's success.Thank you for coming to my Ted Talk
edgyquant|2 years ago
JohnFen|2 years ago
No, that's not what defines capitalism at all. That's a degenerate form more usually called "predatory capitalism".
phone8675309|2 years ago
In what was is predatory capitalism not the rule of the day?
canadianfella|2 years ago
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xcdzvyn|2 years ago
I don't see where the logic of your comment comes from either way though - capitalists are typically in favour of a free market, no? And typically the "purpose" of a free market is accruing wealth as part of a private enterprise?
SQueeeeeL|2 years ago
That's why we see so many mergers and intensive lobbying for government regulation in things like healthcare, telecoms, and air travel, it's way easier to make money if you can restrict competition in your market and it's something essential to consumers
jszymborski|2 years ago
E.g.: Democracy, oligarchy, dictatorships are forms of government.
Capitalism, socialism, etc... are economic systems.
I point this out because people in my country sometimes forget that it's a system of elected officials that govern us, not capitalism.