(Note: I'm trying advanced new methods of linking quotes so as to avoid the whole "missing context" problem)
Good regulation does not stem from the government, it stems from market corrections that the government won't allow to happen.
Provably FALSE. There was no market correction to deal with blue milk. Or borax laced rotten meat sausages. The only thing that ended the intentional poisoning of people for profit was the establishment of the FDA, and as a result of that the cases of food born illness and poisoning have dropped from a universal occurrence to one rare enough to be news worthy in the US.
Oh dear. I'm already debating the Great Depression, regulation during the present recession, the merits of ending a bunch of agencies, and now you want me to point out the problems with the FDA?! Oh well, I guess I have to now.
So you think it was just the FDA that dropped food poisoning instances in the US? Not the invention and spread of modern refrigeration technology, not advances in antibiotics, just the FDA. Well, okay then.
Seeing as how you say "Provably FALSE" though, I'd like to see some actual evidence or sources here, rather than declarations that it is PROVEN.
The free market is an idealized model that can not exist in reality because it assumes that there is absolute information transparency and responsibility on the part of all actors and that all costs are paid.
Uh, no it doesn't. Uncertainty and a lack of information are inherently factored into the market. If there was no uncertainty, then there would be constant equilibrium in the market. On that note, the government has all the problems of the free market with the bonus of having no competition and being subject to no other controls except its own.
There are such things as fraud and so on, but those are crimes and rightfully so. Even in the perfect system there would be problems like that. It sounds like you're trying for a
Nirvana Fallacy.If a producer is allowed to misrepresent what his product is, he gains an economic advantage that breaks the theoretical underpinnings of the free market. If the buyer does not know what he is buying, he can not make an informed choice on the market.
Well, if he's lying outright, that's fraud. Enforcing fraud is no more regulation than enforcing laws against murder or other forms of coercion.
Besides that, you might notice that we have something called the internet these days. Companies that make even minor misrepresentations of their products are quickly called out, boycotted, embarrassed, etc even before or without government regulation. Misrepresentation isn't good business practice.
Even in the 19th century, companies that lied or produced shoddy products didn't do so well. You might notice that "Dr.Murphy's Miracle Elixir" was not dominating the market of medical products at any point.
If a producer is allowed to avoid paying some of the production costs, he gains an economic advantage that breaks the theoretical underpinnings of the free market. For instance by dumping waste in an unsafe manner, to be paid for by the cost in public health or harm to other industries. Or by simply choosing to not not honor a contract with a supplier.
Normally I would split this up, by the new quoting method takes an irritatingly long time so I'll do it in one go:
-Dumping waste in an unsafe manner constitutes property violation. Originally, companies that polluted the land of others (especially trains passing through farmland) were sued into becoming unviable economically. It was only when the government stepped in to set legal limits on pollution in the name of "progress" that such things became a major problem.
-Not honouring a contract with a supplier would, again, be known as "fraud". Even assuming there was no government, there WOULD be contract agencies that would cover such things. As is, enforcing laws against fraud is something that the government is actually supposed to do.
Now, onto the next,
if you want to see what unregulated laissez-faire capitalism looks like, go visit China. Yes, they're a Communist country (in name). And in large swaths of the countryside, it's still a command economy. But along the coasts in the ever-growing SEZs (Special Economic Zones) it's the Wild East. You can pretty much expect anyone and everyone to try and cheat you, every single product you buy is caveat emptor and regulation is a joke.
China? Where the government builds empty cities to boost its GDP and apparent growth? Where all property is "leased" from the government and can be revoked at any time? Where the entire financial system is run directly by the government? Where licensing and regulations are, in fact, prohibitively high for any non-Communist party members, and sufficiently large that the government can basically seize everything whenever it wants because you violated some insignificant regulation? The country ranked
125th in economic freedom? THAT China?
Ha ha ha ha!
Shanghai is one of the most utterly Randian dystopias I can think of. Dudes in gleaming Maseratis and three-piece tailored Italian suits literally stepping over dudes who lost all their limbs and half their face due to industrial accidents. The juxtaposition of uberwealth and utter poverty is so stark and so omnipresent. It really makes me wish more evangelists of Capitalism would go visit and see what their "invisible hand" hath wrought.
Again, China is a shining example of capitalism the same way Yeltsin's Russia was. But let me ask, do you think it was better under full Maoism in the 1970s? What do you think things were like then?
Well, there weren't three piece Italian suits, but there were comparatively wealthy Communist party members, technology was stuck in the 1940s, and everyone was starving. I'd say that for all of China's problems, they're better off now compared to previously.