The free market was never a natural state. It was a political artifact requiring the deliberate maintenance ofspecific structural frictions. David Ricardo's theory of comparative advantage (1817) is the foundational theorem justifying free trade. Itpresupposes three boundary conditions: capital immobility between nations, asymmetric labour mobility, andbounded national economies as the operative unit of comparison. The liberal market tradition has treatedthese conditions as contingent frictions to be dismantled. This paper demonstrates that they are formalrequirements without which the theorem collapses: remove capital immobility and comparative advantagedissolves into absolute advantage; remove bounded economic units and the theorem loses its referent. Thetradition spent two centuries dismantling the scaffolding while standing on it, in the confident belief that thestructure would remain standing without support. It did not. The paper then examines the People's Republic of China, which has artificially reconstructed all threeRicardian conditions at continental scale through sovereign planning: capital immobility throughstate-directed banking and Five-Year Plan credit allocation (Chen, Li, and Xin, 2017; IMF, 2024); controlledlabour mobility through the hukou household registration system, which maintains approximately 300-376million workers in a state of economic mobility but social immobility (KNOMAD, 2024; NDRC, 2024); andbounded specialisation units through engineered industrial clusters functioning as quasi-Ricardian "nations"within a single sovereign whole, from provincial scale (Shenzhen/electronics, Guangzhou/textiles) throughcity scale (Yiwu/small commodities) to town scale (Datang/socks, Qiaotou/buttons, Huiyang/guitars) (Gao,2020; China Briefing, 2024). The result is a historical inversion of considerable diagnostic significance: the most operationally completerealisation of classical market theory's structural ideal exists not under decentralised private exchange butunder centralised state-capitalist planning. The tradition's idealised outcome (efficient specialisation throughcomparative advantage) has been achieved by the means the tradition most abhors (sovereign command of theconditions of exchange). The paper concludes that the conditions for what Hayek called Kosmos (spontaneousorder) were themselves Taxis (made order): the invisible hand required a visible hand to set the table.Note on method. This paper is a companion to The Conditions of the Invisible Hand, Part I: Free MarketsWithout Markets — A Formal Critique from Within the Libertarian Tradition (Nourizadeh, 2026), whichdemonstrates that the Western economic structure no longer satisfies the formal conditions the libertariantradition identifies as constitutive of a free market. The present paper extends the analysis by examining whathappens when those conditions are artificially reconstructed by sovereign power. The thesis is formal and
Moreno Nourizadeh (Mon,) studied this question.