"Prosperity or egalitarianism - you have to choose. I favor freedom - you never achieve real equality anyway: you simply sacrifice prosperity for an illusion"
About this Quote
The subtext is a scar from Latin America’s 20th-century ideological knife fights. Vargas Llosa watched revolutions promise justice and deliver shortages, censorship, and party-state privilege. So “you never achieve real equality anyway” isn’t merely empirical skepticism; it’s a preemptive strike against the left’s aspirational language. By calling equality an “illusion,” he reframes redistribution as theater: emotionally satisfying, politically useful, materially destructive.
What makes the line rhetorically effective is its asymmetry. Prosperity is measurable; “real equality” is set up as unattainable, a standard no society can meet. That rigging lets him portray any egalitarian policy as failure in advance, while casting prosperity as the only honest metric. Still, the quote’s force comes from what it leaves unsaid: that actual market societies also trade off freedom for order (monopoly, inherited advantage, coercion by necessity) and that egalitarianism isn’t always about perfect sameness, but about reducing domination. The brilliance and the gamble are the same: he turns a messy continuum into a moral fork in the road.
Quote Details
| Topic | Freedom |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Independent on Sunday quotation source (Mario Vargas Llosa, 1991)
Evidence: Prosperity or egalitarianism – you have to choose. I favour freedom – you never achieve real equality anyway: you simply sacrifice prosperity for an illusion.. The strongest traceable primary-source attribution I found points to The Independent on Sunday (London), dated 5 May 1991. Multiple secondary reference works and quote indexes independently cite that exact newspaper/date attribution, including LibQuotes, Creative Quotations, and later reference compilations. However, I was not able to retrieve the actual 5 May 1991 Independent on Sunday article page itself, so I cannot yet confirm the article title, section, or page number from a directly scanned newspaper image. The wording also appears in British spelling ('favour') in sourced references, suggesting the commonly circulated Americanized version ('favor') is a later normalization. Based on the evidence found, this is likely from an article or interview by Vargas Llosa published in The Independent on Sunday on 5 May 1991, but the exact first-print context remains unconfirmed without access to the original issue. Other candidates (1) QFINANCE: The Ultimate Resource, 4th edition (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2013)97.2% ... Prosperity or egalitarianism - you have to choose . I favor freedom - you never achieve real equality anyway : yo... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Llosa, Mario Vargas. (2026, March 13). Prosperity or egalitarianism - you have to choose. I favor freedom - you never achieve real equality anyway: you simply sacrifice prosperity for an illusion. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/prosperity-or-egalitarianism-you-have-to-choose-133685/
Chicago Style
Llosa, Mario Vargas. "Prosperity or egalitarianism - you have to choose. I favor freedom - you never achieve real equality anyway: you simply sacrifice prosperity for an illusion." FixQuotes. March 13, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/prosperity-or-egalitarianism-you-have-to-choose-133685/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Prosperity or egalitarianism - you have to choose. I favor freedom - you never achieve real equality anyway: you simply sacrifice prosperity for an illusion." FixQuotes, 13 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/prosperity-or-egalitarianism-you-have-to-choose-133685/. Accessed 31 Mar. 2026.








