The Freeman: July 1988 Volume 38, 1988

This issue defends the service sector, critiques population-control proposals, and examines how mandated benefits turn firms into agents of the state. Other essays expose protectionism’s economic and ethical costs, analyze bureaucracy’s expanding power, and explore Hong Kong’s uncertain future under Chinese rule. The issue also considers the morality of business regulation, competition in taxi markets, and the economics of video-store decline in the face of library lending.