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- Newsgroups: alt.philosophy.objectivism
- Path: sparky!uunet!shearson.com!snark!pmetzger
- From: pmetzger@snark.shearson.com (Perry E. Metzger)
- Subject: Re: Evidence for the market
- Message-ID: <1993Jan21.195325.9477@shearson.com>
- Sender: news@shearson.com (News)
- Organization: Partnership for an America Free Drug
- References: <C140Lo.C03@newcastle.ac.uk> <C14CK1.1CM@usenet.ucs.indiana.edu> <C17LHA.BEB@newcastle.ac.uk>
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 19:53:25 GMT
- Lines: 66
-
- Chris.Holt@newcastle.ac.uk (Chris Holt) writes:
- >violett@indiana.edu (Andrew J Violette) writes:
- >>Chris.Holt@newcastle.ac.uk (Chris Holt) writes:
- >
- >>>Hee hee. Then why do I have such faith in the free market, in
- >>>limited circumstances?
- >
- >>I am a little bit confused as to what your definition of free market is. A
- >>free market defined only under "limited circumstances" is not a free market,
- >>it is a regulated market.
- >
- >It is possible to have a free market in beans and a regulated market
- >in medical care, side by side.
-
- Yes, but its completely irrational to run an economy this way. There
- is no reason to believe that the market that could allocate beans
- efficiently couldn't allocate health care efficiently. This is like
- saying "I'll believe that evolution could alter plants, but animals
- are obviously created by God and not subject to the whims of the
- world."
-
- >The point is that modelling a
- >free market, one makes assumptions (sufficient diversity among
- >suppliers and buyers for supply/demand curves to be continuous and
- >monotonic, sufficient information about a product that the buyer
- >can act rationally); the less likely the assumptions are to hold,
- >the less accurate the model, and the more it is necessary to add
- >other constraints.
-
- I've never seen anyone insist that the curves must be continuous and
- monotonic or that there be more than a trivial number of suppliers of
- a good. There are luxury goods, for instance, for which the demand
- curve rises with the price and then falls again after a certain point,
- and the market models seem to work perfectly fine with such goods.
- There is also little or no reason to assume that curves must be
- continuous -- the models seem to work fine with continuous models.
-
- Even ignoring this, however, I'd say that for any market socialists
- such as yourself care to regulate, such as health care, there are
- loads of suppliers and the curves are monotonic and continuous.
-
- Beyond this and ignoring models, there is the fact that all the
- evidence of the real world seems to show that there don't seem to be
- exceptions to the rule that the market allocates best. Even in the
- situations that seem to be "bad", it appears that no solution other
- than the market does better than the market.
-
- We thus have three reasons to believe that your position is irrational
- -- that your assertion that the models are flawed is false, that the
- markets which you wish to regulate are not the ones for which you
- claim that the models are flawed, and that ignoring the models the
- real world contradicts your view.
-
- However, as I've said before, this is all pointless. Its been obvious
- to me for years that you (and I am refering here specifically and Ad
- Hominiem to Chris Holt) start with your conclusions and work your way
- backwards, so there really is little point to this. You'll argue all
- day and all night, as long as we care to keep replying to you, and
- you'll deny everything thats shown to you. Why should we bother
- arguing with you when you are completely unreasonable and will ignore
- any amount of evidence you get handed?
-
- --
- Perry Metzger pmetzger@shearson.com
- --
- Laissez faire, laissez passer. Le monde va de lui meme.
-