UK Equality Law Revamp Legislates Socialism

In recent years, many Western countries have introduced legal duties to promote equal outcomes or “equity,” under the auspices of anti-discrimination and human rights law. For example, Canada has an Employment Equity Act, which aims to implement “the principle that employment equity means more than treating persons in the same way but also requires special measures and the accommodation of differences.”

The Market Keeps Escaping: Private Credit, Real Risk, and the Infinite Regress of Financial Regulation

Every major financial regulation eventually produces the market it was trying to prevent. The Investment Company Act of 1940 was sensible enough in its original intent. Its practical effect, forty years later, was a capital drought: private equity and venture capital firms were legally capped at 100 investors, choking off funding for the growing businesses that needed it most.

Capital Theory and Liberty

[This article is based on an earlier essay published in German at “Wirtschaftliche Freiheit,” but has been abridged, revised, and adapted for an international audience.]

The catastrophic socialist experiments of the 20th century rest on a critique of capital. Economics should take this seriously and recall that capital theory is, at its core, also about questions of freedom and unfreedom. Economists would do well to re‑examine these issues in the tradition of Ludwig von Mises.