But as they control all capitalist economies, where does that leave people like you who do want a free market?
In the opposition, of course.
Everywhere where the situation is normal. Some natural disaster or a serious illness not covered by an insurance is the exceptional situation. And the exceptional economy is the one which allows some members of the elite to get large credits for essentially no interest to pay, which may seriously distort their behavior.
Education, a car, a house, a coat, heating fuel, and most catastrophically, a serious illness.
Education and a house are reasonable investments. A car possibly too - there are jobs which require to have a car. If you take credits for consumption, you are a stupid victim of advertising. Reasonable people don't take credits for consumption. Credits for exceptional circumstances are, instead, a reasonable thing, and behind it is usually also the hope that one can pay it back completely after the exceptional circumstances are over.
That's the aim. But there is no guarantee that the expensive education will yield a profit in the form of earnings high enough to cover the borrower's living expenses, plus continually rising payments on the loan. In a shrinking or 'stagnant' economy, it's pretty well guaranteed not to happen.
In this case, it becomes stupid to take credits for education. BTW, it is wrong that education gives nothing in a shrinking or 'stagnant' economy - it is a competitive advantage on the labor market. You will get higher wages given that you can do things other people cannot do. If the overall wages decline, this does not change the advantage.
The car will only depreciate in value, while its cost increases with the addition of interest payments. If you're using it to make a living, you have to earn that much extra (more, surplus, above) your living needs.
Indeed. This is what distinguishes buying a car as a reasonable investment (you get a job which gives you more extra wage than you have to pay interest) from stupid consumption credits. (There may be other good reasons to buy a car on credit, say, it allows you to live in a region where you really need one to live but where it is cheap to live).
The house may appreciate in value, even beyond what you have to pay in capital and interest. But only in a growing economy.
No. Houses are a useful investment in shrinking economies too. You can live there without having to pay rent, you can rent it. During war times many have survived renting some rooms in their own
apartment or house.
Medical bills, of course, are what most often wipe out the assets of normal people in normal economies.
Don't forget that the US is in this relation far from normal. Almost everywhere in the world people facepalm if they hear how much one has to pay there for medical bills.
I understand that: to each according to his social worth. The guy who digs the coal of the ground for ten hours a day gets to live 45 years (if he's very lucky) in a row-house and send his kids to public school. The foreman who organizes the digging gets to live 70 years in a detached bungalow, put a decent amount into a savings bank and send his kids away to college. The mine owner who signs paychecks gets to live in a mansion for 85 years and leave sizeable trust-funds to his grandchildren. The banker who lends the foreman's money to the mine-owner doesn't need to show up for work, can stay at any of his houses for as long as state-of-the-art medical science can keep him breathing and has a secretary to remember which exclusive academy in Switzerland he packed his brats off to.
I understand you don't like this. Unfortunately, a society which would fit your ideals would be predictably a very poor society. Moreover, its actual realization would, instead of realizing your ideals of justice, simply have other forms of injustice.
So, first of all, a free society would be unjust in many things. Those who are, without any own fault, ugly, stupid, weak, ill or otherwise handicapped would be socially disadvantaged, protected only by moral restrictions. Free market capitalism gives advantage to those who can give the society more output, without taking into account the amount of work done. Then, free market capitalism allows the owner of a property to do what he likes with this property - which includes giving it to heirs, lovers, and other people who may not deserve it given the ideals of justice.
On the other hand, the actual situation is much more unjust than such a free market society. Because it is a corporatist society, where the established big firms have a large advantage in comparison with everybody else. In particular those bankers now on the top of society profit from this extraordinarily. So, a transformation away from corporatism toward a free market would reduce the injustice of the actual world, in particular on the very top.
The two concepts, profit and steady state are incompatible.
They are compatible. All you need is that the profit is used by the profit owners for consumption.
BTW, anti-monopolistic laws are also in the interest of some of the big firms. Namely those who favor political means to fight competitors which don't use political means (don't pay for lobbies) but care about creating better products. Firms attacked using such laws usually learn their lesson and start to pay for a lobby too.