The essential role of capitalism is not allocation—it is creation. Life isn’t drastically better for billions of people today than it was in 1800 because we are allocating the resources of the 19th-century economy more efficiently. Rather, it is better because we have life-saving antibiotics, indoor plumbing, motorized transport, access to vast amounts of information, and an enormous number of technical and social innovations that have become available to much (if not yet all) of the world’s population. The genius of capitalism is that it both creates incentives for solving human problems and makes those solutions widely available. And it is solutions to human problems that define prosperity, not money.
Content: Quotation
Authors: Eric Beinhocker, Nick Hanauer
Source: McKinsey Quarterly
Subjects: Capitalism, Economics
Authors: Eric Beinhocker, Nick Hanauer
Source: McKinsey Quarterly
Subjects: Capitalism, Economics
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