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Friday, January 25, 2008
Capitalism Doesn't Work, Mr. Gates?
By Lawrence Kudlow
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Bill Gates, bloviating at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, is issuing a clarion call for a "kinder capitalism" to aid the world's poor. Gates says he has grown impatient with the shortcomings of capitalism. He thinks it's failing much of the world. This, of course, from a guy who's worth around $35 billion (give or take a billion).

Don't you just love it?

A guy without a college degree who invented a new technology process in his garage that literally changed the entire world, a guy who took advantage of all the great opportunities that a free and capitalist society has to offer and got filthy rich in the process, is now trashing capitalism and telling us it doesn't work. What chutzpah.

For all his do-good preaching, Gates is ignoring the global spread of free-market capitalism that has successfully lifted hundreds of millions of people out of poverty and into the middle class over the last decade. Think China. Think India. Think Eastern Europe. (Maybe even think France under Nicolas Sarkozy.) Gates wants business leaders to dedicate more time to fighting poverty. But the reality is that economic freedom is the best path to prosperity. Period.

The latest stats out of China are revealing. Here's a country that was a basket case not so long ago and today is the world's fourth largest economy -- hot on the heels of Germany, the third largest economy. China just reported 11.2 percent fourth-quarter GDP, its fastest growth rate in 13 years. Total output for China is now 24.7 trillion yuan, or $3.42 trillion at current exchange rates.

At $14 trillion, the U.S. economy is still four times the size of China's. But we've had free-market capitalism for more than 300 years. China's only had it for about 15. China is still an undemocratic, authoritarian and repressive society that lacks the benefits of political freedom. But it was the late Milton Friedman who argued that the onset of free-market capitalism was the precursor to full-fledged democratic capitalism. China's on the right track.

Gates says he has witnessed steep income and cultural inequities in his travels around the world, in particular to Africa. But for this he should blame the absence of capitalist principles, not capitalism itself. Even the most compassionate corporate executives are not going to bring prosperity to impoverished countries with statist economies. Until Africa's nations undertake the market-oriented reforms that have boosted China and the other Asian Tigers -- like South Korea and Taiwan -- they will continue to rank at the bottom of the world prosperity scale.

The Heritage Foundation/Wall Street Journal 2008 Index of Economic Freedom reveals how free-market economics is spreading like wildfire, while state-run socialism is on the decline. And it's no wonder why. The free-market countries are prospering mightily, while the least-free economies are mired in poverty. We're talking North Korea, Cuba, Zimbabwe and Iran. Also noteworthy is Venezuela. As the neo-socialist Hugo Chavez attempts to adopt Fidel Castro's failed economic model, he's sinking his nation toward Cuba-type poverty. Continued...

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About The Author

Lawrence Kudlow is host of CNBC's Kudlow & Company

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Ah, Uncle Bill
What to do about old Uncle Bill? Has he become one of those doting family members (nice hat) we all know shouldn’t be ignored, because he just might remove us from his last will and testament. Yeh, I hardly give it much concern anymore.

Thank you Mr. Kudlow, I’ve often wondered what someone with a qualified free market mentality thought of Monsieur Gates. He with the source code doth hold the keys to a kingdom we’d all like to see.

While the Clinton administration was waxing inept in its attempt at proving collusion, Uncle Bill went on developing his antitrust lust for control of information flow. Soros only dreams of having such power.

Web 2.0 has proven the operating system mostly ubiquitous, needed minimally for access to servers running code, applications and relevant media. It has become a web of information, not a conduit, pipeline or superhighway that can be regulated by toll booths.

Google is on the incline and dominance of Redmond culture is declining. It makes one wonder of if what Uncle Bill is really seeking is more government mandates to maintain control of his Soviet style Borg.


Once the wealthy bed with politicians...
It usually follows that once the wealthy become involved with politics, they will try to maintain dominance by limiting the competition through government influence.

I believe it's may be the "ivory tower" syndrome.

Actually, we should be very afraid considering we're up against Gates, Buffet and Soros.

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