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What Kevin O'Leary Gets Wrong About Business

Kevin O'Leary has created an entire persona around a sort of modern-day Gordon Gekko. O'Leary is fond of and famous for employing phrases like "it's all about the money," "people only care about money," and "money makes the world go round." To put it mildly, this is a superficial, even one-dimensional understanding of markets.
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Each week, millions of Canadians learn about the trials and tribulations of entrepreneurship while being entertained by one of the country's most successful television shows, CBC's Dragon's Den. Each week, entrepreneurs pitch their ideas and companies to successful Canadian businesspeople in the hopes of securing both financing and proven, strategic partners.

The show has pulled back the curtain on finance and entrepreneurship to help Canadians better understand how difficult it is to build and grow a business to the point where people are interested in investing. This adds to the commercial success of the show since it provides a tangible benefit to Canadian society to better understand the difficulties of entrepreneurship.

There is, however, a downside to the program that could easily overwhelm this benefit, which is that Canadians will assume the private business interests on display in the show are the same as how markets work more generally. Simply put, too many people confuse the interests of business with markets.

In one episode, for instance, former Dragon Robert Herjavic applauded a playground equipment manufacturer for using government-imposed regulations to block foreign competition. This allowed the entrepreneur to enjoy a near monopoly and the higher profits monopolists enjoy.

Herjavic as well as the other Dragons saw monopoly profits as good and were unsurprisingly interested in the company. Remember, the Dragons are motivated to secure investment in profitable businesses or ideas with substantial promise so that they can benefit financially from their investment and the risk it entails. They are not concerned with competition and general welfare.

There is nothing wrong with this pursuit and indeed as Adam Smith taught in his most famous work The Wealth of Nations, such pursuits can benefit society enormously. The problem -- and what viewers need to understand -- is that when businesses use the power of the state to enhance their competitiveness it benefits the business, its employees, and its investors but hurts everyone else. That's because the gains of the business are not generated by creating a better product, lowering the price, or otherwise innovating to out-compete other firms but by getting the government to restrict competition. The result of such special treatment is higher prices, lower quality, and/or less choice for consumers.

A more important insight from Smith, however, and one lost on the most visible of the Dragons, Kevin O'Leary, is the very nature of markets. O'Leary has created an entire persona around a sort of modern-day Gordon Gekko (for those under 30, Google the 1980s movie Wall Street). O'Leary is fond of and famous for employing phrases like "it's all about the money," "people only care about money," and "money makes the world go round."

To put it mildly, this is a superficial, even one-dimensional understanding of markets. O'Leary's principal failure is that he perpetuates a superficial, greedy caricature that feeds into too many people's instinctive views of businesspeople and investors. In doing so, he reinforces a false sense of what a market-oriented society means.

Market-oriented economies rely on voluntary exchange between millions of people to decide how best to allocate investment capital, labour effort, people's ingenuity, and even our aspirations. Such societies still need governments, and indeed any successful society needs a certain level of government. Such societies are also characterized by extraordinary generosity in the form of charitable giving, volunteerism, community involvement, and what Smith termed empathy.

Consider the wonderful ad by the U.S. insurance company Liberty Mutual Insurance, which shows individuals helping others for no apparent reason, except that as the ad continues, it illustrates how those beneficial acts are reciprocal.

In other words, people do them not only because they're "morally right" in the words of Smith, but because they create the type of society in which others will do the same for us. In other words, such beneficial acts will be returned to us. Things like opening the door, holding an elevator, putting a quarter in someone's parking meter, etc. all seem like small, meaningless acts but actually contribute to the very nature and fabric of society.

O'Leary's weekly paeans to the power of the buck fly in the face of Smith's concept of a market-based society and the richness it entails, which exceeds the narrow profit-driven motives that O'Leary portrays as the driving motive for all human behaviour. The success of Dragon's Den should be applauded but Canadians need to understand the difference between narrow business interests and broader markets.

MORE ON HUFFPOST:

Kevin O'Leary's Photography
Self Portrait 1975(01 of30)
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Self Portrait 1975"A self portrait I took in 1975 while at college. At that time I experimented with different portrait lighting, black and white films and development processes." Read more here. (credit:Kevin O'Leary)
Greenland River, 2007(02 of30)
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Greenland River, 2007"I took this photo from a Sikorsky helicopter flying into the centre of Greenland in late summer. The intense sunlight causes the surface ice to melt. The blue water absorbs more heat than the white snow and massive river systems grow within hours. The contrast of the blue water against the white ice is spectacular. Its pure pristine beauty." Read more here. (credit:Kevin O'Leary)
Air Show 1, 1988(03 of30)
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Air Show 1, 1988 This negative was on the same roll of film I lost for a decade and then processed. The deterioration of the silver nitrate introduced the unusual effect. It was a crisp fall day so that the marker exhaust smoke from the bi plane kept its resolution for an extraordinarily long time. Read more here. (credit:Kevin O'Leary)
Pelican, 2008(04 of30)
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Pelican, 2008"The pastel colors of the dock scene in New Orleans make this pelican look like he was painted into the frame as an after thought." Read more here. (credit:Kevin O'Leary)
Life Guards, 2013(05 of30)
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Life Guards, 2013"I am constantly asked if I photoshopped out the head of the second life guard in this image. No. He simply bend down to take a bite out of his sandwich at the moment I happened to be walking down the beach in Nantucket." Read more here. (credit:Kevin O'Leary)
Penny Island, 2002(06 of30)
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Penny Island, 2002"There comes a moment in the late fall on a northern lake when the surface freezes. It happens in a split second. One moment you can hear the water lapping at the dock and the next complete silence." Read more here. (credit:Kevin O'Leary)
Kiev, 1986(07 of30)
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Kiev, 1986'In the 1980's I visited the Soviet Union. It was several years before the Berlin Wall was torn down but trade with the west was opening up especially for PC software which I was selling. I took this image in the Ukrainian city of Kiev. There was always a sense of "big brother" is watching and people kept to themselves eyes down when they walked. A man is suspiciously watching me through the open archway door as I pulled out my Leica and started taking pictures." Read more here. (credit:Kevin O'Leary)
Jim Morrison, 1977(08 of30)
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Jim Morrison, 1977"Jim Morrison of the Doors died in a Paris bathtub on July 3rd 1971. He was only 27. Morrison was buried in a simple wooden coffin in eastern Paris at the famous Le Pere Lachaise Cemetery. I am a Doors fan so while in Paris in the 1970's I visited the grave with my camera." Read more here. (credit:Kevin O'Leary)
Spiral Staircase DNA, 2006(09 of30)
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Spiral Staircase DNA, 2006"A back alley in Boston becomes a play of light as a fire escape spiral staircase has its way with the setting sun. There is beauty in everything the sun shines on. It's why you should carry a camera wherever you go. You never know when the light will give you a gift." Read more here. (credit:Kevin O'Leary)
Original Zenit E, 1970(10 of30)
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Original Zenit E, 1970"A Zenit-E Russian built SLR Camera. I bought this camera with the money I earned washing trucks in 1970. It was my first camera. It was rudimentary by todays standards but it helped me learn the basics of exposure, aperture and focus that have served me well for decades." Read more here. (credit:Kevin O'Leary)
Armenian Church Worshipers, 1987(11 of30)
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Armenian Church Worshipers, 1987"I took this image in an ancient Armenian church in Russia. The light from the candles was sufficient to illuminate the faces of the worshipers. I used a Leica M3 and a 35mm lens with TriX Kodak black and white film." Read more here. (credit:Kevin O'Leary)
Archway, 2001(12 of30)
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Archway, 2001"This is one of the first images I ever took with a digital camera. The technology was rudimentary at that time but somehow these arches in Puerto Rico transferred into digital memory with beautiful tonality." Read more here. (credit:Kevin O'Leary)
Target Practice, 2007(13 of30)
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Target Practice, 2007"A spent metal shooting target sits in storage at a RAF military base in Northern England. His nickname is "Herman the German" or Figure 11 (fig.11) The light from a window struck the tarnished metal in a way that brought the imaginary soldier to life. I remember thinking that he must be immortal." Read more here. (credit:Kevin O'Leary)
Cape Town, 2008(14 of30)
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Cape Town, 2008"Cape Town South Africa. The sun was setting and burst through the clouds for a moment lighting up the buildings around this beach with a rich orange hue. I only captured one frame before the light completely changed again." Read more here. (credit:Kevin O'Leary)
Arctic Waste, 2007(15 of30)
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Arctic Waste, 2007"The centre of Greenland is like the moon. It's a vast lifeless nothingness and as such has its own beauty. The cost of transporting equipment to its interior is often more than it costs to replace it. Here an abandoned relic of a past exploration stands guard as a lonely testament to the men and women who stood there at an earlier time." Read more here. (credit:Kevin O'Leary)
Canadian Average: $26,297(16 of30)
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Canadian students expect, on average, to graduate with $26,297 in debt. Here's a look at student debt expectations across Canada: (credit:Shutterstock)
Atlantic Canada: $30,725(17 of30)
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Quebec: $13,180(18 of30)
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(credit:Shutterstock)
Ontario: $29,520(19 of30)
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(credit:Flickr:NormanMaddeaux)
Manitoba/Saskatchewan: $28,296(20 of30)
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(credit:Flickr:francisco_osorio)
Alberta: $27,334(21 of30)
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British Columbia: $34,886(22 of30)
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(credit:Flickr:arvin asadi)
Top Sources Of Stress For Students:(23 of30)
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Finances (28 per cent)(24 of30)
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Achieving Academic Success (24 per cent)(25 of30)
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Finding A Job After Graduation (24 per cent)(26 of30)
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(27 of30)
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Canadian students expect to pay off the debt they graduate with in 6.4 years. (credit:Shutterstock)
(28 of30)
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Compared to last year, students are relying less on the 'Bank of Mom and Dad' than in 2012 - down eight per cent (44 per cent versus 52 per cent.) (credit:Shutterstock)
(29 of30)
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They are less likely to depend on their own savings (58 per cent versus 62 per cent) and more likely to rely on loans (55 per cent versus 49.) (credit:Shutterstock)
(30 of30)
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Women believe they will accumulate more debt than men ($30,210 versus $22,465) and predict it will take longer to pay it off (6.9 versus 5.9 years.) (credit:Shutterstock)
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