This Sandwich Costs $1,500 and Takes 6 Months to Make

Economy |
By Michael Q. McShane | Read Time 2 minutes minutes

No, I didn’t relinquish my title as Director of Education Policy at SMI to become the Institute’s new food critic, but the teacher in me loved this video series I recently stumbled across in which an enterprising YouTuber decided to make his own chicken sandwich from scratch.

And when I say from scratch, I mean, from scratch.

He harvests the vegetables, he kills (fair warning, graphically) the chicken, and he even evaporates his own salt from the ocean! Really, what he did was a millennial-focused version of I, Pencil, the famous free market lesson popularized by Nobel-Prize winning economist Milton Friedman in his Free to Choose television series.

In both videos, the incredible organizing capacity of the free market is brought into stark relief. If we didn’t trade with each other or specialize in raising chickens or harvesting vegetables, most of the modern conveniences we take for granted would be completely impossible.

We often like to talk about the power of the free market in macro terms, using it to explain why Myanmar is rising while Venezuela is falling. But the benefits of the free market are much more prosaic. From the writing utensils we use to the food we eat, the mutual cooperation that the free market enables is on full display, if we choose to see it. 

About the Author

Michael Q. McShane is Senior Fellow of Education Policy at the Show-Me Institute.  A former high school teacher, he earned a Ph.D. in education policy from the University of Arkansas, an M.Ed. from the University of Notre Dame, and a B.A. in English from St. Louis University. McShanes analyses and commentary have been published widely in the media, including in the Huffington Post, National Affairs, USA Today, and The Washington Post. He has also been featured in education-specific outlets such as Teachers College Commentary, Education Week, Phi Delta Kappan, and Education Next. In addition to authoring numerous white papers, McShane has had academic work published in Education Finance and Policy and the Journal of School Choice. He is the editor of New and Better Schools (Rowman and Littlefield, 2015), the author of Education and Opportunity (AEI Press, 2014), and coeditor of Teacher Quality 2.0 (Harvard Education Press, 2014) and Common Core Meets Education Reform (Teachers College Press, 2013).

Similar Stories

Support Us

Headline to go here about the good with supporting us.

Donate
Man on Horse Charging