Markets Empower Women

Market-driven technological and scientific innovations heighten women’s material standard of living, promote individual empowerment, reduce sexism and other forms of collective prejudice, and foster cultural change…

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Over the last 200 years, economic progress has helped to bring about both dramatically better standards of living and the extension of individual dignity to women in the developed world. Today the same story of market-driven empowerment is repeating itself in developing countries.

Competitive markets empower women in at least two interrelated ways. First, market-driven technological and scientific innovations disproportionately benefit women. Timesaving household devices, for example, help women in particular because they typically perform the majority of housework. Healthcare advances reduce maternal and infant mortality rates, allowing for smaller family sizes and expansion of women’s life options. Second, labor market participation offers women economic independence and increased bargaining power in society. Factory work, despite its poor reputation, has proven particularly important in that regard.

In these ways, markets heighten women’s material standard of living and foster cultural change. Markets promote individual empowerment, reducing sexism and other forms of collective prejudice.

Women’s empowerment in many developing countries is in its early phases, but the right policies can set women everywhere on a path toward the same prosperity and freedom enjoyed by women in today’s advanced countries.

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The Most Prominent Arguments For Banning Cash — And Why They’re Wrong

The arguments for phasing out cash or confining it to small denomination bills are, when not entirely mistaken, extremely weak…

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Many have argued that banning or restricting use of cash will reduce criminal transactions within the underground economy. However, just how much underground economic activity constitutes truly harmful criminal acts, as opposed to productive activities that evade taxes or other regulations but nonetheless increase social welfare, is unclear. Further, the likely effects of a cash ban on genuinely predatory activities such as extortion, human trafficking, drug-related violence, and terrorism are extremely difficult to quantify. 

Economist Friedrich Schneider estimated that even a complete phasing out of cash would only shrink the underground economy by 10-20 percent. Yet high-denomination bills still account for a substantial volume of licit transactions, so even a ban limited to such high-denomination bills could harm many innocent persons.

Phasing out cash would have a particularly negative effect on the unbanked, including many poor and vulnerable persons, who might find themselves still further excluded from the modern economy. Anti-cash advocates who recognize this admit that any plan to phase out use of cash would have to include corresponding efforts to provide such persons with basic debit cards, if not with smartphones, at a cost that one estimate puts at $32 billion. Phasing out cash would particularly affect illegal immigrants, drastically cutting their labor contributions and creating additional deadweight loss for the U.S. economy. Internationally, a ban on cash would harm those who use U.S. dollars as a refuge for value, sheltering their savings from the influences of unstable currencies and corrupt governments.

Advocates of phasing out currency also see it as a means of allowing monetary authorities to implement negative interest rate policies. Negative rates could then be imposed on all money holders, acting as a direct tax on their money monetary balances. The necessity of this tool is questionable at best – there are only three instances in the past quarter century where negative interest rates could possibly have been helpful, hardly meriting the extreme measure of eliminating cash. Negative interest rates in a cashless economy end up giving an unelected regulatory body discretionary power to tax money and would require massive restructuring of financial institutions and norms.

Finally, most arguments for doing away with cash ignore the public-choice dynamics of the myriad regulations that such a reform would require. Even if banning cash produced benefits such as a reduction in crime, do those benefits offset the harms and costs to those who use cash for legitimate reasons? Consideration should be given to alternative means for preventing crime and tax evasion that do not cast their web so widely.

In short, none of the arguments favoring restrictions on cash withstand close scrutiny.

It is the advocates of restricting hand-to-hand currency who bear the burden of proof for such an extensive reshaping of the monetary system, no matter how cautiously or slowly implemented and no matter whether all cash is eliminated or just large-denomination notes. 

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Regulators Struggle to Identify What Exactly Cryptocurrency Is

Cryptocurrencies have moved from the fringes of financial market activity to a $300 billion asset class traded on exchanges and owned by mainstream investors. And, yet a great deal of regulatory uncertainty still surrounds them…

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In less than a decade, cryptocurrencies have moved from the fringes of financial market activity to a $300 billion asset class traded on exchanges and owned by mainstream investors. The technology underlying Bitcoin and Ethereum has spawned more than 1,600 new platforms designed to compete with established providers.

Yet a great deal of regulatory uncertainty still surrounds cryptocurrencies, particularly when it comes to whether cryptocurrencies are securities — which affects who can buy and hold them, who can deal in them and keep custody of them, and what disclosure laws pertain to them.

An unresolved question that has recently gained prominence with the advent of ICOs (initial coin offerings) is whether new issues of cryptocurrency are disguised securities offerings operating outside of applicable laws.

For example, one former regulator from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has suggested that the second-most-popular cryptocurrency, Ethereum, is a security to which securities regulations should apply retroactively. However, this view has been recently contradicted by a top official at the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), who stated that the decentralized nature of the Ethereum network means its cryptocurrency does not fit the established definition of a security.

An overzealous application of securities laws to cryptocurrencies could raise barriers to investor access and capital formation, which would have a chilling effect on the development of cryptocurrency technology and markets. As a sitting regulator recently warned, cryptocurrencies’ many novel features can lead policymakers to focus excessively on their potential harm rather than on their likely benefits.

A clear, reasonable, and appropriate definition of what qualifies as a security would allow the market for cryptocurrencies to develop while also enabling securities regulators to properly fulfill their mission to protect investors; maintain fair, orderly, and efficient markets; and facilitate capital formation.

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Public Distrusts Wall Street Regulators as Much as Wall Street

Americans distrust government financial regulators as much as they distrust Wall Street… 

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A new Cato Institute national survey of 2,000 U.S. adults finds that Americans distrust government financial regulators as much as they distrust Wall Street.

“The data show that Americans are wary of Wall Street, but they don’t have much confidence in the regulators overseeing Wall Street either,” said Cato’s Director of Polling Dr. Emily Ekins. “When Americans say they want ‘more’ regulation of Wall Street, they don’t necessarily want more mandates or to give regulators more power—they want regulators to properly enforce the right kinds of rules.

Nearly half (48%) have “hardly any confidence” in either. Nearly three-fourths (74%) of Americans believe regulations often fail to have their intended effect, 75% believe government financial regulators care more about their own jobs and ambitions than the well-being of Americans, and 80% worry regulators allow their political biases to impact their judgment. While six in ten believe that regulations in the past have produced positive benefits (59%) and can make businesses more responsive (56%), nearly two-thirds (62%) worry that regulations too often cause more harm than good.

Americans don’t believe that regulators help banks make better business decisions (74%) or better decisions about how much risk to take (68%). Instead, Americans want regulators to focus on preventing banks from committing fraud (65%) and ensuring banks fulfil their obligations to customers (56%).

A plurality (41%) of Americans think the financial industry needs more oversight. However, only 18% think the problem is that there are “too few” rules on Wall Street. Instead, 63% say the government fails to “properly enforce existing rules” (40%) or enacts the “wrong kinds” of regulations on big banks (23%).

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sfliberty:

Happy Market Monday!

Forbes magazine recently published “Unless It Changes, Capitalism Will Starve Humanity by 2050,” by Drew Hansen. A businessman and regular contributor to Forbes, Hansen starts out by claiming that capitalism has “failed to improve human well-being at scale.”

Over the last few decades, however, hundreds of millions of people were lifted out of extreme poverty. In fact, the share of the world’s population, as well as the total number of people living in poverty, is at an all-time low, despite a population increase of 143 percent since 1960. The left-leaning Brookings Institution predicts that absolute poverty will have been practically eliminated throughout the world by 2030. If this is not good news what is?

Chelsea German, Managing Editor of HumanProgress.org, on the @sfliberty Tumblr…

(via sfliberty-deactivated20170210)

End the Export-Import Bank

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The ostensible purpose of the U.S. Export-Import Bank is to assist in financing the export of U.S. goods and services to international markets. So what’s not to like? Well, according to Cato scholar Daniel J. Ikenson, the U.S. Export-Import Bank does more harm than good

“For all the praise Ex-Im heaps upon itself for its role as a costless pillar of the economy, it is difficult to make sense of the collateral damage left in its wake. Thousands of U.S. companies would be better off if Ex-Im’s charter were allowed to expire, as scheduled, on June 30.”

Interested in learning more about the issue? Check out these links: