Are free markets history?
Governments are jettisoning the principles that made the world rich

Sometimes, in wars and revolutions, fundamental change arrives with a bang. More often, it creeps up on you. That is the way with what we are calling “homeland economics”, a protectionist, high-subsidy, intervention-heavy ideology administered by an ambitious state. Fragile supply chains, growing threats to national security, the energy transition and the cost-of-living crisis have each demanded action by governments—and for good reason. But when you lump them all together, it becomes clear just how systematically the presumption of open markets and limited government has been left in the dust.
This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “Are free markets history?”
Leaders October 7th 2023
- Are free markets history?
- Why Africans are losing faith in democracy
- The ousting of Kevin McCarthy: bad for America, worse for Ukraine
- Rising bond yields are exposing fiscal fantasy in Europe
- In an ugly world, vaccines are a beautiful gift worth honouring
- Rishi Sunak is wrong to amputate Britain’s high-speed rail line
More from Leaders

How to respond to the riots on Britain’s streets
The violence demands robust policing, but it also requires cool heads

Is the big state back in Britain?
The risk is not too much interventionism, but too little audacity

How to make tourism work for locals and visitors alike
Holidays don’t have to be hell
Genomic medicines can cost $3m a dose. How to make them affordable
The treatments are marvels of innovation. Their pricing must be inventive, too
Chinese companies are winning the global south
Their expansion abroad holds important lessons for Western incumbents
The Middle East must step back from the brink
That still means starting with a ceasefire in Gaza