Being here at the Capitalist School has made me thinking. In true free market no single enterprise or customer can effect the markets alone, nothing should limit the market's freedom and anything concerning production, distribution and all between those two shouldn't be regulated.
Yet in free market enviroment every enterprise thrives to gain a monopoly. In monopoly the enterprise gains at the expense of the consumer and rivaling enterprises and this is real bad for free market, because once a monopoly is born in the market it soon leads to the decaying of the whole market causing either A) a stagnant situation, where the owner of the monopoly gains enormous profits and dulls the market or
![cool B)](./images/smilies/glasses.gif)
So free market is an economical system that's main principle is to not regulate it, but to keep it from collapsing it must be regulated? So is free market thinking (at it's purest) just a bubble with no real life chances of survival? This has been bothering me for a quite some while now, because even countries with policies very close to the true principles of free market economy are supporting things like minimum wages, tariffs and monopoly laws.
And another flaw of free market seems to be it's swinging (which is both it's weakest and strongest point, as it moves faster than any other) from one direction to another, especially the negative effects of such. Of course there are "safe nets" to overcome this, but considering that things like currency/exchange reserves are created on expense of the free market itself, what's the point? Not to mention that the strength of a major market crash or growth boom can easily roll out of these so called "safe nets", because supporting stable economy in a wild west enviroment such as the free market costs too much to keep the free market itself alive?
Discuss, no?