52
FREE TO CHOOSE
: A Personal Statement
on trade. They will seek to evade economic pressures from com-
petitors that threaten their profitability or their very existence by
resorting to political pressure to impose costs on others. Interven-
tion by one government in behalf of local
enterprises leads enter-
prises in other countries to seek the aid of their own government
to counteract the measures taken by the foreign government. Pri-
vate disputes become the occasion for disputes between govern-
ments. Every trade negotiation becomes a political matter. High
government
officials
jet around the world to trade conferences.
Frictions develop. Many citizens of every country are disappointed
at the outcome and end up feeling they got the short end of the
stick. Conflict, not cooperation, is the rule.
The century from Waterloo to the First World War offers a
striking example of the beneficial effects of free trade on the rela-
tions among nations. Britain was the leading nation of the world,
and during the whole of that century
it had nearly complete free
trade. Other nations, particularly Western nations, including the
United States, adopted a similar policy, if in somewhat diluted
form. People were in the main free to buy and sell goods from
and to anyone, wherever he lived, whether in the same or a differ-
ent country, at whatever terms were mutually agreeable. Perhaps
even
more surprising to us today, people were free to travel all
over Europe and much of the rest of the world without a passport
and without repeated customs inspection. They were free to emi-
grate and in much of the world, particularly the United States,
free to enter and become residents and citizens.
As a result, the century from Waterloo to the First World War
was one of the most peaceful in human history among Western
nations, marred only by some minor wars—the
Crimean War and
the Franco-Prussian Wars are the most memorable—and, of
course, a major civil war within the United States, which itself
was a result of the major respect—slavery--in which the United
States departed from economic and political freedom.
In the modern world, tariffs and similar restrictions on trade
have been one source of friction among nations. But a far more
troublesome source has been the far-reaching intervention of the
state into the economy in such collectivist states as Hitler's Ger-
many, Mussolini's Italy, and Franco's Spain, and especially the