- Details
- Author: New Economic School – Georgia
I was still a Soviet citizen when I first read some of the international documents on human, economic, and political rights. I was amazed to learn how weak private property was and how government restrictions were strangling entrepreneurship. Labor laws and regulations on finance and energy were violating property rights and slowing economic growth. But trapped by political incentives, the nations of the world were finding it difficult to radically change their policies.