Point of order: calling the current system a free market system does not make it a free market. Especially when it is heavily corporatised and regulated, based on government trade deals that reduce value from local development, and is designed to make only the socialist elites in politics, business, and the civil service rich AF.
Indeed. It's a little recognised fact that the current system is about as communist as its possible to get. The fact that there is a public sector at all speaks to that
Point of order: calling the current system a free market system does not make it a free market. Especially when it is heavily corporatised and regulated, based on government trade deals that reduce value from local development, and is designed to make only the socialist elites in politics, business, and the civil service rich AF.
Indeed. It's a little recognised fact that the current system is about as communist as its possible to get. The fact that there is a public sector at all speaks to that