There is no such thing as
free lunch.” This statement is one of the most famous in modern
economics. Is it correct? Economics is a science, and so you can challenge the
claim with evidence. Did you have a “free lunch” last week? Does that lunch qualify
as evidence that refutes the claim? Maybe economist mean some thing a little
different by the term than the ordinary person might. Let’s look at a situation
in which a free lunch might not be really free.
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“ Barter is the exchange of one good for another without the
use of money”
But is there no such thing as a free lunch? Is there no case
on record where someone has eaten a free lunch with no expectation of a return
favor or anything else? Of course. We have all had a free lunch with no return
favor expected. But “no free lunch” is a little “in” joke for economist.
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