Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Trade as a path to social harmony and peace
Trade as a path to social harmony and peace
Jan 28, 2026 2:30 AM

In 1980, PBS first aired Milton Friedman’s series, “Free to Choose,” which chronicledthe glories of liberty across a range of areas, from welfare policy and education to healthcare, monetary policy, and beyond.

In a new 19-minute documentary, Johan Norberg revisits Friedman’s famous episode on trade, applying its core arguments to our modern economic context and debate, summarizing the key arguments with refreshing concision.

Friedman’s episode rested heavily on the story of Hong Kong, which he visited in the original series. Norberg returns to the city, even tracking down and interviewing a business owner who has adapted his enterprise throughout the economic changes ofthe past few decades.

The episode highlightsthe arguments for trade as it relates to efficiency, economic dynamism and diversification, innovation and creative destruction, and equal opportunity. Yet as I argued rather recently, the material features offer but a hint of other baseline benefits, which are ultimately social and spiritual.

On this, Friedman connects the dots accordingly, noting the benefits of trade when es to fostering harmony and collaboration among workers, trade partners, foreign countries, and petitors. “The operation of the free market is so essential, not only to promote productive efficiency,” Friedman explains, “but even more, to foster harmony and peace among the peoples of the world.”

Further, in an age where free and open exchange is now ridiculed as benefiting only a conspiratorial global elite, Friedman reminds us that it is trade, not protectionism, that ultimately benefits the least powerful in a society. Indeed, the more “protections,” the more cronyism.

As Friedman explains, “the major beneficiaries are always the small man”:

When people are free, they are able to use their own resources most effectively and you have a great deal of productivity, a great deal of opportunity. The major beneficiaries are always the small man. The man who has power who is at the top of a society, he’s going to do well whatever kind of society you have. It’s the society which gives the small man the opportunity to go his way, which is going to benefit him the most.

The more basic economic arguments are important, and they will always be worth revisiting and reexamining and re-articulating. Norberg reminds us how well Friedman covered those bases, but more importantly, of his enduring contributions on the deeper and more profound social value of liberty itself.

Photo: The Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice, CC0 1.0

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Jesus loves… the welfare state?
Via Best of the Web Today, an ment from Senator John Kerry: Democratic Sen. John Kerry called the Republican budget approved by the U.S. Senate “immoral” and said it will hurt cities like Manchester. “As a Christian, as a Catholic, I think hard about those responsibilities that are moral and how you translate them into public life,” the Massachusetts senator said at a rally Saturday in support of Democratic Mayor Bob Baines, who is running for re-election. “There is not...
Saving small-town America
For those of us who harbor some nostalgic sentiment for this country’s agrarian past… I’ve written previously about the corrosive effect of subsidies on American agriculture. Now, Denis Boyles, in a thoughtful piece on NRO, notes from a similar perspective the importance of entrepreneurial thinking in preserving the agricultural towns of rural America. Here’s one piece: When I asked Genna M. Hurd, the co-director of the Kansas Center for Community Economic Development at the University of Kansas and an expert...
The moral legacy of Rosa Parks
Black Americans have enjoyed only a mixed record of progress in the fifty years since Rosa Parks took her seat on that Montgomery bus. Anthony Bradley examines her legacy and the nature of liberty in today’s America. “Truly free blacks are those who are free to make their own morally formed choices without government involvement,” Bradley writes. Read the mentary here. ...
Global warming and hurricanes
In the days preceding the arrival of Hurricane Wilma in Florida, Center for Academic Research Director Samuel Gregg joined host John Rabe on Fort Lauderdale radio station WAFG’s Vocal Point show to discuss what, if any, relationship exists between the increased frequency of hurricanes over the past few years and global warming. You can listen to the 20 minute interview below. (MP4) ...
German thought and the Vatican
In today’s Times of London, William Rees-Mogg writes about the Vatican and its apparent rejection of intelligent design. Rees-Mogg also makes this provocative claim about Pope Benedict and some possible surprises from this new pontificate: His critics had expected him to be more conservative than his predecessor. I tended to share this expectation myself, but refrained from expressing it because new leaders always surprise one; they move in directions no one had previously foreseen. We should have been more conscious...
Supernaturalist verse of the day
By faith we understand that the universe was formed at mand, so that what is seen was not made out of what was visible. Hebrews 11:3 NIV ...
Primitive genetic engineering
A long oral and written tradition about the mixing of species has been noted on this blog before, specifically with regard to Josephus. I just ran across this tidbit in Luther that I thought I would share, which points to a continuation of a tradition of this sort running down through the Reformation. Luther menting on the Old Testament character of Anah, and debating whether we might consider Anah to mitted incest. He writes: We could say that Anah also...
Avoid the ‘Ignorant Arithmetic’
Joe Carter, purveyor of the evangelical outpost (no longer active online), had a discussion last week worth paying attention to on the specifically Christian pursuit of knowledge. He argues that this applies even in something so apparently noncontroversial as mathematics. Regarding questions of math and science, “Even the concept that 1 + 1 = 2, which almost all people agree with on a surface level, has different meanings based on what theories are proposed as answers,” he writes. He also...
“…and then carry the one…”
Whoops. This week, GM retracts its earnings report from four years ago, saying it overstated its profits by somewhere between $300-400 million dollars. The tendency with a story like this is to cry “fraud!” and then denounce corporate America for its inherently corrupt nature. Now, who can say what the cause is of this slip-up (blunder, goof, unbelievably huge mathematical oh-oh?)? But in the absence of the whole story, how proper is pessimism? Is it possible to be ambivalent toward...
The ‘Royal Road of Liberty’
From Herman Bavinck: Even a freedom that cannot be obtained and enjoyed aside from the danger of licentiousness and caprice is still always to be preferred over a tyranny that suppresses liberty. In the creation of humanity, God himself chose this way of freedom, which carried with it the danger and actually the fact of sin as well, in preference to forced subjection. Even now, in ruling the world and governing the church, God still follows this royal road of...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved