Any stable, free market countries?

Quote from a_person:

But that's exactly the point, countries swinging between booms and busts, between full employment and 30% unemployment, between 20% growth years and years of depression, between thriving banking industry and the collapse of 50% of the banks, between $0.20 gas and $10 gas etc - these countries can't possibly be politically stable.

I understand your point, but wouldn't people learn from the periodic pain over time and not go to such extremes of boom and bust eventually ........... LOL of course not. Stosh
 
Quote from Cutten:

There are no stable free market countries, basically. You are looking at a tradeoff between the following:

1. Financial freedom (low tax & regulation)
2. Social freedom (vices are legal)
3. De facto freedom (lax law enforcement)
4. Stability (low crime, reasonable political stability)

Tax havens have more financial freedom, liberal democracies have more stability and social freedom, and some corrupt or ineffectual countries have more de facto freedom.

I have considered this issue at length, and IMO the best solution is to base yourself legally in a tax haven and then spend your leisure time in countries with decent political & de facto freedom along with stability. Or, if you don't mind the negative stability issues, live in a country that is corrupt or ineffectual and thus has high de facto freedom.

Many European countries have pretty high social and de facto freedom, along with stability, so if you can avoid their taxes then you will have a relatively free existence. I think the closest to a libertarian existence is to have legal/tax residence in Monaco, work there during the week, then party at weekends and holidays in Europe.

Each person has different priorities. I would not find my liberty compromised by not being able to own a brothel, being prosecuted for drug use, or being prevented from organising political demonstration marches, because I have no interest in doing any of those things. I would feel my liberty was restricted by not being able to own a firearm (one reason I am going to emigrate from the UK), being prevented from gambling, being prosecuted for watching porn, or being taxed at more than about 10%. Someone else might not care about being banned from owning a gun, but might require the ability to take LSD or fuck whores without going to jail.

Thanks very much for the informed response.......sounds as if we have similar values (probably a little unusual since you are from UK and I'm in Texas). Actually, Texas has had a lot of advantages but they are going away. At least we can still have our guns. Australia sounds pretty good, but I gotta have my sidearm so that's out. Guess I'll just live and die in Texas and gripe all the way. Stosh
 
Quote from Stosh:

I understand your point, but wouldn't people learn from the periodic pain over time and not go to such extremes of boom and bust eventually ........... LOL of course not. Stosh
Well people would not learn but that's just half the picture.

Generally speaking people don't like this kind of lifestyle, they don't want 5 job offers one year and zero job offers next year, they want stable employment, they don't want "free banking industry", they want to be sure that their savings are safe, they don't want stock/housing market booms and busts, they prefer a relatively stable even if slow growth, they don't want to see people dying on the streets from curable diseases even if they can't afford health care, they want some kind of social protection...That's just the way humans are.
 
Quote from a_person:

Well people would not learn but that's just half the picture.

Generally speaking people don't like this kind of lifestyle, they don't want 5 job offers one year and zero job offers next year, they want stable employment, they don't want "free banking industry", they want to be sure that their savings are safe, they don't want stock/housing market booms and busts, they prefer a relatively stable even if slow growth, they don't want to see people dying on the streets from curable diseases even if they can't afford health care, they want some kind of social protection...That's just the way humans are.

Thanks for the response, but I doubt that, in a free market, things would be anywhere near as bad as you describe. But you're right that voters don't want to try it so we will probably never know. Stosh
 
You could rephrase your question to: what are the least economically socialist countries?

While not completely free-market, Switzerland, Panama, Singapore, are currently much better than the EU and the US.

Out of these three I like Switzerland's political system, as it's much more democratic than the others. Unfortunately they're getting more and more socialistic recently: gun controls, bank bailouts and so on.

Another example: Liechtenstein. BTW This country was just bullied into signing a TIA with the US. A similar agreement with the EU seems next.

http://www.acton.org/commentary/431_liechtensteins_tax_war.php
Liechtenstein’s Tax War
by Samuel Gregg D.Phil.

As the ongoing global financial crisis continues to shake the world’s economies, it’s no surprise banks are under increased scrutiny. Few would have predicted, however, that the spotlight would turn to tiny Liechtenstein.

A war of words has just erupted between the small Alpine principality and Germany over German citizens placing assets in Liechtenstein’s banks in order to reduce their tax bills.

The skirmishing broke out when Berlin admitted that, as part of an investigation into some Germans’ alleged tax evasion, it had purchased data about a Liechtenstein bank’s clients from a former bank employee who allegedly stole the information and broke banking-confidentiality laws.

In other words, Germany purchased information obtained through what may have been a criminal violation of perfectly just, legitimate and — in Liechtenstein’s case — constitutionally-grounded laws. No wonder Liechtenstein’s Crown Prince Alois described German authorities as using “methods that defy the rule of law.”

Europe’s governments don’t like Liechtenstein’s low taxes or the fact that many European companies avail themselves of the principality’s low corporate tax-rates. But that hardly gives Berlin the right to allegedly act as what is commonly known as a receiver of stolen goods — a problem compounded by reports that Germany is offering the material to other countries.

Crown Prince Alois upped the ante, however, when he stated that, “Germany will not solve its problems with its taxpayers by attacking Liechtenstein. Germany has the worst tax system in the world.” Burdensome taxation is just one of the current economic problems facing “old Europe,” against which Liechtenstein stands as a living contrast. In many respects, Liechtenstein exemplifies what a successful free, integrated, prosperous, market-orientated and low-tax European society might look like.

Liechtenstein became a sovereign state in 1806 following the Holy Roman Empire’s dissolution. Until 1918, it was closely linked to the Austro-Hungarian Empire, but entered into a customs and monetary union with Switzerland following World War I. After inter-war instability and a successful effort to avoid being swallowed by National Socialist Germany, Liechtenstein began its rise to prosperity in the 1950s. The growth which made it one of the world’s richest countries had many causes, but central to Liechtenstein’s success were two factors.

The first was the decision to specialize in activities which Liechtenstein did extremely well: financial services and high-tech industries. The second was Liechtenstein’s adherence to Adam Smith’s famous observation, “Little else is requisite to carry a state to the highest degree of opulence from the lowest barbarism but peace, easy taxes, and a tolerable administration of justice.”

Thus not only have Liechtensteiners profited from the fact that the state takes relatively little of their wealth, but they are not burdened with the type of opulent welfare bureaucracies that characterize “Social Europe.” Hence Liechtenstein’s government regularly runs surpluses rather than deficits. Its unemployment rate is presently 2.7 percent.

Liechtenstein has also managed to avoid some of the social problems characterizing much of Western Europe. Thirty-four percent of Liechtenstein’s population is foreign-born. But it has pointedly rejected the multiculturalist ideology presently crippling many European countries’ ability to escape the shackles of political correctness. Instead Liechtenstein unapologetically focuses on integrating all resident foreigners, including requiring them to learn German, the country’s official language.

Likewise, though a largely Catholic country, Liechtenstein has a strong tradition of religious liberty. This doesn’t involve, however, any nonsense about incorporating shari’a law into Liechtenstein’s civil law.

In short, the rest of Europe could learn much from Liechtenstein. Instead of harassing Germans weary of Germany’s oppressive taxes, the German government would be better off investing its energies in trying — yet again — to reform Germany’s — yet again — faltering economy. Liechtenstein would be a good model.

Not that Liechtenstein is likely to be intimidated by Germany’s recent actions. The country has a proud reputation for defying some formidable bullies. In 1945, a group of Russians fleeing Communist tyranny crossed Liechtenstein’s border seeking refuge from the Red Army. Despite lacking an army and in the face of overwhelming force, little Liechtenstein refused to give up the refugees. In 1993, the Nobel Prize winner Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn called this act an “outstanding lesson in courage.”

Solzhenitsyn contrasted it with the behavior of the Western powers who handed over thousands of anti-Communist Soviet citizens to Soviet forces, who swiftly dispatched them to the degradation and death of Stalin’s Gulag.

Liechtenstein’s present challenges don’t quite fall into the same category of defying criminal regimes like the Soviet Union. But as long as Liechtenstein refuses to bow to Social Europe’s pressures to diminish its freedoms, we’ll know that liberty in Western Europe is alive, albeit not well.
 
The fundemental problem is control. Countries need government and at some point either one person, a few people, a bunch of people or pretty much everybody runs it. And sooner or later, they'll #@&^ it all up.

Liberty is inherently unstable. Once it's compromised, you never go back.

The people in charge'll start putting certain people in jail (if not killing them outright), taking money from others, going to war, enforcing some nutjob morality code and all the rest that our past clearly shows. We can do some things to slow it down like start with a bunch of people who'd mostly like to be left alone and institute strong rules limiting government but the end is as inevitable as a sunrise.

So the best idea is not to pick one country, but the best one at that time. Then when it goes to hell, relocate to a better one.
 
To TGregg: Very insightful (and cynical) response. I can tell you have given this subject a lot of thought. Unfortunately, as you say, the only solution is to vote with our feet. Thanks.

To Buzzy2: Sounds like Liechtenstein might be a good place to put our feet. Thanks.
 
Quote from a_person:

Well people would not learn but that's just half the picture.

Generally speaking people don't like this kind of lifestyle, they don't want 5 job offers one year and zero job offers next year, they want stable employment, they don't want "free banking industry", they want to be sure that their savings are safe, they don't want stock/housing market booms and busts, they prefer a relatively stable even if slow growth, they don't want to see people dying on the streets from curable diseases even if they can't afford health care, they want some kind of social protection...

And they want someone else to pay for it all.
 
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