Adam Smith and the Invisible Hand Theory Explained - YouTube

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What drives the economy?
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According to economic philosopher Adam Smith, it’s you!
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All of the individual choices we make about what we (and corporations) buy and sell are
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thanks to what economists call the invisible hand that guides the capitalist economy forward.
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Now, before we start here, I’m going to point out that here, we’re talking about
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how the invisible hand is supposed to work in theory.
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We can discuss for hours how Smith’s theories are seen in real life today, but that’s
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beyond the scope of this video! 
 and hey, subscribe so you don’t miss anything in
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the future!
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Adam Smith is often considered to be the father of laissez-faire economics, or what we call
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capitalism.
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Many of these ideas came from his major work, published in 1776, titled An Inquiry into
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the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations – often just called, the Wealth of Nations.
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The idea here being that the government should leave markets as free as possible, and that
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the self-interest of individuals will ultimately grow the economy.
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The process by which this happens is the invisible hand.
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The metaphor of the invisible hand dictates that the sum of all the individual choices
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on the part of businesses and consumers inevitably guides economic growth.
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Let’s look at an example here.
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I love cheese, so let’s imagine two cheese shops - cheeseopolis and cheezeorama.
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Each of these is selling a pound of cheddar for $1.
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Well, if price and quality are equal, I’ll probably shop at the one most convenient.
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Maybe Cheeseopolis is on my way home from work, so that’s where I’ll go.
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Now, Cheezeorama decides to draw more customers – what can it do?
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Maybe have better quality?
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Maybe they’ll offer a larger variety of cheeses... some Brie or Roquefort to go with
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your cheddar...
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Or get some marketing out there?
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Hiring Kylie Jenner to snapchat her next grilled cheese recipe with cheezorama could go a long
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way!
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...Or maybe just drop the price.
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80c a lb.
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Now I’ll likely go a little bit out of my way for the cheaper option!
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Here, the choices I make on where to shop, and the choices these stores are making to
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get my business – that's the invisible hand at work.
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Now, what can cheesopolis do to get my business back?
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Lower their prices?
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Offer deals?
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Better quality or selection?
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This competition resulting from the invisible hand makes things cheaper and better for everyone!
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Woohoo!
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These stores don’t care about YOU – but they care about your money... but as a result,
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you get good, cheap stuff.
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Now imagine cheeseopolis is doing so well, they decide to open up another location.
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Now they need to hire workers, so they’re creating jobs!
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Again, all due to the effect of the choices we’re making about where to shop and how
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to spend our money.
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Right?
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So – self-interest, competition, and the profit motive are all driving our choices,
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and those choices are growing the economy... and those choices are the invisible hand at
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work.
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These ideas of Adam Smith’s are shown through a quotation from the Wealth of Nations: “It
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is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker that we expect our
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dinner, but from their regard to their own self-interest.”
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Right?
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So these businesses don’t care about you – they care about you spending your money...
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but as a result, you get good, cheap food, or whatever else you’re buying – and everybody
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wins!
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Again, this is all the theory behind it, not necessarily how it works in practice.
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In the world today, to what extent does the system work the way Smith believed?
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Let us know in the comments!