Competition is good


Nicholas Woode-Smith, an author, economic historian and political analyst, is a contributing author for the Free Market Foundation.

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This article was first published on Businesslive.co.za on
10 November 2022
 

Competition is good

Competition is a forge. It’s hot, full of flames and potentially dangerous. But if used correctly, will create something durable, precious, and valuable.
 
One of the foremost virtues of a free market is how it requires and nurtures competition between companies, workers, institutions, and entrepreneurs. This competition, if done peacefully, helps all parties involved become better. It encourages growth, quality, and better behaviour across the board.
 
When businesses are allowed compete, we see everyone benefit in the long-run. But in what specific ways does competition benefits businesses, workers, consumers, and the greater society? And how is competition being stifled and costing South Africa potential prosperity?
 
Consumers
One of the primary beneficiaries of competition are consumers. When businesses compete, they primarily do so in two ways: lowering prices, or upping quality. Both serve consumers.
 
The need to outsell a competitor to make a profit drives a business to often lower prices so they become more appealing to consumers. This allows consumers to buy more, save more and invest more. When lowering prices is not possible, or not prudent, businesses usually increase quality.
 
This could be in presenting a luxury, better quality version of a product (think Woolworths VS Pick N Pay), or by providing better customer service. In an effort to make a profit, competing businesses will race to appeal to consumers. And we win for it!
 
Workers
Despite what many socialists and communists may argue, competition between businesses is actually a boon for workers. A good worker is an asset to a company. And a company will want to hire a worker who will help their beat the competition.
 
While companies compete for consumers to sell their product, they must also compete for workers to produce their product. This means that companies will compete to provide better wages, increased benefits, and a better work environment for their employees.
 
The weekend wasn’t originally a mandated timeslot. It was invented by Henry Ford, who incentivised people to work for him by providing time off twice a week.
 
Competition over workers is stifled, however, by the unions who are meant to be working for the benefit of workers. While the ideal would be for employees to compete for higher wages between competing companies, unions enforce uniform wages across industries and ensure that companies can’t offer individual wages to stellar employees.
 
Removing these uniform, union enforced wages would allow for healthy competition between businesses to poach each other’s employees – and the worker would benefit.
 
Incentive to perform and innovate
The public sector tends to be incompetent, overpaid, and corrupt because it has no competition. When a minister fails to perform, he gets a bonus. When a private company fails to perform, they go bankrupt. This ensures they never grow lazy.
 
There is an incentive among competing businesses to perform well. Because that is the only way to stay ahead of the competition and ensure that you continue to make a profit and stay afloat.
 
Monopolies, notably government monopolies, have no incentive to perform well. They have no one to replace them, and get paid if they do or they don’t. That’s why Eskom can’t keep the lights on. They have no incentive to do so. They get their bonuses regardless.
 
There is also an incentive to innovate in the private sector. This can be in the form of creating more efficient means of producing a product or running a business, but also in creating new products and inventions that drive forward human progress.
 
The technological revolution, while often claimed to be the result of government intervention, is fundamentally as a result of competition between entrepreneurs. And continues to be led by the private sector.
 
Risk management
Competition also benefits consumers by providing alternative providers of a product of service in case their preferred company can no longer perform. If Pick N Pay closed, we could always go to Checkers. But we have no such option for electricity with Eskom.
 
We need many competing companies, because they pick up each other’s slack, and provide a mitigating effect to the risk of one company underperforming.
 
Learning
Competitors learn from one another. When they fail, they can see what their more successful competitors did and improve. And while companies compete, there is often a lot of collaboration in the spread of good business practices, technology, research, and skills development.
 
While competition can be a threat, companies can also become better for learning from their competitors and working together to enrich each other.
 
Threats to competition
It should be common sense that competition in the marketplace is good. But it is continually stifled by government regulations and intervention – holding back the benefits of the free market.
 
Government monopolies, like Eskom, prevent private companies from entering the industry and providing a superior alternative. Regulations in other industries make it harder for new businesses to enter and compete – ensuring the current businesses go static and grow lazy.
 
Protecting local industries from foreign competitors is also terrible. It not only stops local consumers from benefiting from cheap, high-quality goods from overseas, it also coddles our companies and prevents them from becoming as good as they can be.
 
Opening up a local market to the world ensures that not only are they benefiting from the forge of local competition, they are benefiting from competing with companies from around the globe. This means more of all the benefits mentioned above.
 
Yes, some local industries won’t be able to compete and may close. But if they did not have what it takes to compete, then keeping them alive through protectionism, subsidies and other regulatory means will only accomplish propping up an undeserving, weak industry that deserves to die.
 
Competition, above all else, ensures honesty. It ensures that the deserving survive and thrive to provide an ideal service or product to consumers.
 
And it is in competition that South Africans industries should and can find the means to make this country prosperous.


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