http://www.capitalismv3.com/?p=3184We don’t disagree on objectives. We disagree on methods and externalities.
Source date (UTC): 2011-07-10 00:18:00 UTC
http://www.capitalismv3.com/?p=3184We don’t disagree on objectives. We disagree on methods and externalities.
Source date (UTC): 2011-07-10 00:18:00 UTC
http://nihcm.org/images/stories/NIHCM-CostBrief-Email.pdf5% of the US population spends 50% of healthcare dollars. 50% of the US population spends only 3% of healthcare dollars.
Source date (UTC): 2011-06-30 20:42:00 UTC
http://www.capitalismv3.com/?p=2616Here is how to translate accusation of ‘market failure’ into rational language.
Source date (UTC): 2011-05-06 15:24:00 UTC

“Why Aid Is Not Working And How There Is A Better Way For Africa.” We know: Aid is bad. It creates corruption. It harms the economy. It makes nice happy Christians, and nice happy DSH’s (( Democratic Secular Humanists )) feel good about themselves. But it is terribly harmful for Africans and their civilization. Because I agree with everything she says, I’d like to say something meaningful and supportive, but everything I read in the book is old news. In the Austrian school we’ve been talking about this problem forever. Other than the fact that the author is a successful woman of African origin, this book is a easy read that is very hard to criticize for having uncomfortable motives. Good book. Good cause. Smart woman. But nothing new. What I can say is this: there isn’t any difference between the problem of giving aid to Africa, the Spanish and Portugese import of gold from the new world, and easy credit for american citizens and their expansionist government. It’s all bad.
No. But increased liability would. I found the Straight Dope forums and they’re full of fairly good libertarian thinking. So I’m going to add them to my crawler’s roundtable. This is the second or third posting I”ve made there. And in it I’m making a bold claim in response to this statement:
And I think you’ll find it makes a difference to the wider community, too. It’s hard to imagine a worker-owned oil company, with broad shopfloor participation in decisionmaking, making the kind of decisions that led to the BP oil spill — and got several BP workers killed.
That’s an interesting statement. The problem is, that such an organization would never be able to exist at any size in order to make that kind of decision, and without that size could not concentrate enough capital to create and combine sufficient technologies to get into the position in the first place.
[callout]**In general there will be no case that you can contrive of where the above sequence of logic does not apply.**[/callout]
Why? Because of the very reason we have markets, corporations, organizations, political systems: because while people can agree upon the sentimental ends, they cannot agree upon the requisite means, cannot do so in time to sieze opportunities, and they cannot do so in large numbers, and as the complexity of the division of labor increases, necessary ignorance intervenes on the part of all people involved such that additional opinions actually REGRESS back to the mean. This fact in turns results in the “Iron Law Of Oligarchy” wherein decisions making is delegated in every form of voluntary organization to an elite, which upon attaining the ability to make decisions, always seeks to preserve it, expand it, and to expand it to the point of their necessary ignorance and incompetence.
[callout] while people can agree upon the sentimental ends, they cannot agree upon the requisite means, cannot do so in time to sieze opportunities, and they cannot do so in large numbers, and as the complexity of the division of labor increases, necessary ignorance intervenes on the part of all people involved such that additional opinions actually REGRESS back to the mean. This fact in turns results in the “Iron Law Of Oligarchy” wherein decisions making is delegated in every form of voluntary organization to an elite, which upon attaining the ability to make decisions, always seeks to preserve it, expand it, and to expand it to the point of their necessary ignorance and incompetence.[/callout]
The problem isn’t the corporation’s size, or the worker interest, it’s the limits of liability granted to the executives, and the limit of liability given to the insurers. These limits were GIVEN by GOVERNMENT with KNOWING INTENT to these companies precisely to avoid the principle of responsibility inherent in Capitalism, to ensure that we would have oil supplies. In other words, the state became the insurer, and did a bad job of quality control, and the insurer, the state (the people) have to pay for taking that risk. WHen they should have maintained liability of all involved. This would have dramatically increased the costs, and made the drilling unprofitable, and it would not have occurred. We transfer risk all over society. Between age groups, between classes, between races. IN fact, that has become the purpose of 20th century government. Transfer. We grant people all sorts of special rights as a means of mutual insurance. THe most controversial is free speech. Much free speech is theft of abstract forms from one person or another (libel and slander). Much of it is erroneous, deceptive, ignorant or intentionally harmful, for the purpose of transferring property from one group to another (Political). We allow one group rights of expression but deny another group the same expression. (Political) Most news opinion for example, upon analysis, is patently false. (Profitable) Most advertising is targeted at the proletariat and middle class, for the purpose of selling the consumer fantasy by appealing to human status senses. We have not (as an absurd example) sued the Bank Of Sweden for awarding Nobel prizes to purveyors of the use of probabilistic Gaussian mathematics in economic theory, which in turn was used to create this debacle of an economy over the past half century or more. So the Nobel Prize was issued and used as a political lever and caused vast harm. The Academy ‘insured’ these theories, and then marketed them. Yet we do not hold them accountable for this damage to society, as we do any other product like hot coffee or ladders. Because we grant them the freedom to err, under the assumption that we are better off this way than the opposite. Capitalism and markets exist to provide calculative capacity to the mediocrity of human minds. Socialist should focus on redistribution and avoid the fallacy of believing their own opinion. Ignorance is mandatory for all human beings. And it is nothing but a childish vanity to think otherwise, and is demonstrable in all fields of human activity. it is even MEASURABLE in most fields of human activity. (in particular, the horrid errors in academic research.) Property rights allow for accountability, because they require risk in order to obtain the rewards from the use of them. It is when we do not respect those rights and their liabilities, and grant limits to the liability for those rights that we have oil spills. **In general there will be no case that you can contrive of where the above sequence of logic does not apply.** That is why the world has adopted capitalism. TOtalitarian capitalism. But capitalism none the less. It’s democracy that’s being abandoned as a goal. Worldwide.
Over on the IEA Blog, Eric Masaba asks the question: Why do black cabs cost more than Concorde? I couldn’t point out ALL the holes in this article, because the IEA blog limits the number of characters per comment. I find the argument for the virtue of brevity a ‘cute’ one because affirmations are the most brief of comments, while refutations are the longest. The state subsidizes the ‘Black Cabs’ of London.
Hackney cab drivers inexplicably enjoy a rule stating that no one else can describe a taxi service as a “taxi” in their marketing, and the important restriction that no one else can pick up passengers on the street. These regulations have deep historical foundations, dating back to the days of Dick Turpin. In today’s world, they are anachronistic, anti-competitive and pointless.
London cab drivers are a pleasure to deal with. They are an intrinsic part of the tourist trade. The Danes pay an entire social class to stay home so that the average clerk in a train station is educated, literate, well mannered, and a pleasure to deal with.
When there are price comparison sites for insurance, airlines, hotels, holidays and office supplies, where we can buy the same product from a myriad of suppliers at different prices, how is it that there are very strict rules requiring that Hackney drivers receive a minimum wage for every mile driven yet private hire drivers do not?
Because the market is an unlimited physical space and the streets of London are a limited physical space (and the tube is a monopolized space. And therefore Cabs require a very simple set of regulations in order to maintain quality.
Why is it good for certain stripes of taxi driver to be able to oblige people in London to pay higher rates than the market would support if such a law was not in place?
Why is it a good for the state to regulate any kind of competition?
Why do the same drivers, who expect to be able to choose what clothes they wear (and how much they pay for them) and which airlines and car insurance firms they use, want to deny travellers in London the basic freedom to choose another vehicle service they can hail at the airport or on the street?
They don’t. You can hire a car from the airport. You just can’t pick someone up on the street.
If people want to pay for the superior knowledge that the Hackney drivers clearly possess, they will do so. If they do not care, they will find cheaper alternatives until the market has informed the black-cab community what customers really think and what price they are willing to pay.
They are not paying for the knowledge. The state is using a knowledge criteria to create a hurdle for market entry. Just like they do for just about every kind of specialist.
Many people are disgusted with the special treatment bankers received, but through the price controls and regulations on taxis in London, transport markets are being distorted to favour one type of vehicle provider.
Bankers recieved special treatment because the state printed money without regulating it and forced banks either to compete for profits or to go out of business. This process of moral hazard created large banks that are pseudo governmental agencies, that were so responsible for subsidizing the national payroll and cash disribution and management system that if they were not rescued then the crash would have been worse. On the other hand, the state CREATED the moral hazard. But it did not have to. The problem has been that creating the ‘rules’ of the fair game in banking (defining the properties of property and it’s rules of transfer) has become extraordinarily complex because the object of definition has become exceedingly plastic. Derivatives and new financial instruments were a new form of property that many of us decried at the time, but that was unregulated because both the state and the purveyors of these new devices foolishly bought the argument that it was possible to insure that kind of risk, and secondly, because So, I have to disagree with the IEA’s position. Travel to NYC, Chicago, LA and ask yourself if the London policy is better or worse for everyone involved. And if we subsidize transportation like subways why cant we subsidize Cabs. If price is a concern, then If you want another choice, call a less expensive cab company on your cell phone. Prices aren’t everything. In fact, low prices and full competition in a market often accomplishes the lowest cost service at the lowest quality that is tolerable by consumers, and bars quality from availability within a geography. (Home Depot and Walmart in the US, and superstores versus butchers, bakers and the like in Europe). I am happy that superstores exist to provide additional choice, but only if there is a replacement ‘tax’ for using them by distancing them. From this simple analogy of taxis and tubes versus superstores and specialty stores, we can illustrate that reduced prices and a free market within geographic boundaries produce commodities, and thereby prevent societies from capitalizing long term values of aesthetics, choice, and the ‘special’ environments we adore across all of europe in favor of a bland, disposable environment. We restrain competition in order to raise prices and therefore concentrate capital and we do it in many ways: political subsidy (money transfers like taxation, redistribution, and outright subsidy) constraining the market by qualification (lawyers, doctors and london cabbies), and constraining the market with monopolies (public transportation like Tubes and Buses). We unrestrain the market to reverse the concentration of capital and to reduce prices, and we do it in many ways: political subsidy of The natural order of man is to attempt to circumvent the market. The free market is a byproduct of the civic republican tradition’s advocacy of meritocratic equality. It is a rebellious movement against the control of markets and the expropriation of wealth by the state. Markets are a solution to corruption that asks us to create fair competition among equals and to maintain that set of ‘rules’ we call “competition in the market”. However, the natural behavior of man is to circumvent that market. The means by which he circumvents it are those tools we consider fair market competition: reducing prices, increasing choices, advertising and marketing. Not all cultures have taken this route. In fact, in history, the free market is an exception that concentrates wealth in hte hands of the monied, productive and creative minority. THis concentration benefits all by decreasing prices for nearly everyone. It limits the power of capitalists as long as there is enough money in circulation to create inexpensive competition. But since the culture or state determines the definitions of property (the means of calculating the use of opportunities to act) the rules for any ‘game’ are particular to that game. Rules are not universal to all games. They are plastic. And this comparison of Taxis to Tubes is perhaps one of the best ways to illustrate that these rules are inconsistent. But what may not be obvious is the DISTORTION that is created by the myth that rules must be equal for some things and unequal for others. Or, that lowest prices are the ultimate virtue to be sought by economsts and political economists. As a libertarian, I care that the choices available to me are not constrained by Concentrating capital attracts talent to the private sector where it is skimmed by private individuals, and those who lack talent to the public sector where it is skimmed by bureaucracy. Yet this is what most cultures seek to impose: expropriation by the bureaucracy. WE also constrain capitalists, and unconstrain capitalists. Capitalists can temporarily distort a market by applying capital that profits one company or anotther, requiring competitors to rely upon capital or depart. They can do this by simply extending debt, so that prices may be decreased in the anticipation of driving competition out of the market, and later increasing their share of the market as these competitors disappear. the problem with this technique is that talent accumulated in the industry is sometimes forced out. Niches are abandoned (the wall mart and home depot effect). The state acts like a disruptive capitalist creating temporary price decreases in return for decreased niche services, and in doing so makes it impossible to concentrate capital in niche excellences. It makes it impossible to subsidize a public good: choice of the more expensive, better, prettier. The purpose of the London cabbie is largely to create a public ‘good’. It enforces quality so that quality personnel can afford to work in the industry (rather than the horrid service, delivered by the filthy, ignorant and incompetent in US cities). Prices would drive down quality, and all that will happen is that you will need additional regulation to managed an impoverished and corrupt network of marginal businesses that deliver cheap but intolerable service that prevents quality competition from competing in the market. If you are willing to spend money on the tube. You have no argument against spending money to maintain a quality system of taxis. Just because market mechanics are POSSIBLE for taxis and IMPOSSIBLE for tubes, that doesn’t mean that taxis are not serving the same function as tubes. Lowest costs does not generally create a good. It creates a marginal enterprise. Aesthetics are forms of capital that are perhaps, the best investment that any civilization can make. For a country like the UK, whose history is an industry, you’d think that such a principle would be better understood. For a country that is creating demand through immigration, cash by selling off it’s assets, and the illusion of prosperity by dilution, inflation and redistribution, rather than by increases in productivity, it is understandable why a myth of exceptionalism would be a useful distraction from the fact that the UK is selling off its exceptionalism and it’s heritage, and would do even more so along with it’s taxi subsidies. Prices alone do not a world make. The purpose of the market is exploration. The purpose of unbridled market is prevent government exploitation. THe purpose of the regulated market is to capitalize SOMETHING for a social good. And not all social goods are consumables. Some social goods capitalize distortions to create beauty, which is a high return for a society, as all monuments, arts and architecture demonstrate. So, instead of universally pursuing consumption as an ultimate good. Instead of the keynesian virtue of spending. Perhaps we should balance our capitalist strategy with the art of saving. It took english civilization a very long time to create a culture of saving, and the institution of interest, so that the middle aged could save until they were old, and the old could lend to the young, in a virtuous cycle of investment that distributed the risk of long term calculation across a vast number of people, and wherein retirement security was an insurance scheme for the underclass rather than a mandate of the majority. This virtuous cycle was undermined. Perhaps we should return to it, and to other forms of capitalizing our civilization, so that we leave something behind for our heirs rather than the record of a visitation by locusts. Subsidizing quality is the entire point of aesthetics and the arts. And capitalizing everything from street signs, to cabbies to historic buildings to libraries and museums is an antidote to anti-historicism.
What is it about an office that promotes so much illness? I know that offices where people interact frequently and move between locations lot, and have greater density are natural distribution centers for affection, and I know that the more time children spend in day care and in school, the more they become distributors, and I know that closed-ventilation buildings are better grounds for bacteria and viruses, but knowing that is not the same as having to lose so much time to illness. I mean, it just seems like between my son, the office and airports my immune system is exhausted. It reminds me of a conversation I had with a chinese national a few weeks ago. There is this wealthy Chinese urban activist whose name I don’t know, but he wants to design and build very dense housing for people. What I told him was that it has been thought about and tried over the past century. But the problem is that HUMAN BEINGS ARE TOXIC creatures, and second, that if you move shanty-dwelling-people to nicer circumstances, they just maintain their previous behavior and destroy it – inviting lots of relatives, and putting up sheet metal and cardboard. Now the counter argument is that chinese authorities can impose discipline that other nations can’t get away with. But Im skeptical. What bothers me as a political economist is that all civilizations to convert to urbanism die. (Jarred Diamond has it wrong. It’s an information problem not a resource problem. He has it backwards.) We don’t know how to run a largely urban society for very long because law, which is our primary social technology after religion, simply ceases to work in large cities without extraordinary costs of repression. Money and credit may change that but only if we change policy from taxation to credit the way we changed from religion to taxation as a means of maintaining social order. Human density is not the panacea our planners and utopians think it is. Density is toxicity, it decreases the disease gradient, and it leads to political tyranny and instability, and it becomes increasingly difficult to concentrate capital and therefore productivity. The problem is to balance birth rates and productivity. Not density. And no matter what we do, ‘He Who Breeds Wins.’
On Environmental Economics, the authors take note that Krugman appears to be reading their blog. They then state that the market will fail to protect the environment. Not that the government literally, by reserving powers to itself, FORCES the failure to protect the environment. As soon as something that is useful becomes a scarcity, it needs market PROTECTION. Not market consumption, but market PROTECTION. What does that mean? Lets start with their erroneous complaint:
But what if a deal between consenting adults imposes costs on people who are not part of the exchange? What if you manufacture a widget and I buy it, to our mutual benefit, but the process of producing that widget involves dumping toxic sludge into other people’s drinking water? When there are “negative externalities” — costs that economic actors impose on others without paying a price for their actions — any presumption that the market economy, left to its own devices, will do the right thing goes out the window.
This is only because we allow the violation of property rights. If rivers, oceans and air were ‘owned’ then we could . Ownership need not include infinite rights to use. We do not have infinite rights to use flammable things, nor even infinite rights to play music or engage in speech. So it is possible to regulate the use of rivers, oceans, forests and air, as well as endangered species, so that people have the incentive for responsible protection of resources. It is the enforced-ignorance that the state places upon men by denying them the ownership of resources and with it the construct and protections of property. Ownership is a necessary part of the division of knowledge and labor. The state mandates knowledge-incompetence by reserving to itself administration of the ‘property’ we call commons, instead of defining the limits on the use of that property and putting it in private hands, so that individuals have the knowledge and incentive to protect it. Privatize stewardship of air, water, nature. The market will correctly distribute costs of doing so. And the owners of these resources will vehemently protect their ‘interests’ while protecting ours. Otherwise, there will continue to be the ongoing illusion that political forces who compete for government attention are the same as commercial forces who seek to avoid it, and our bureaucracy will continue to be a self-aggrandizing waste of the efforts of the citizens, while our resources continue to be ruined. While the market has weaknesses: in particular, it cannot CREATE property without state intervention (as in determining the rules by which property is used), and it cannot PRESERVE objects without state intervention (as in determining the conditions by which the property is transferred, or the limits on it’s use), the market is far superior at protecting those interests and making use of scarce monetary resources to do so without the waste of government. Since government employees can have special consideration because they are outside the market, they gain special rights that the market would not endow them with. In particular, protection against risks that we call unemployment (the drop in demand for our skills and labor). As such, this is the driving factor behind all political organizations. Whereas, the market would protect the long term resource over the short term desires of government employees. In other words, failing to make ‘public goods’ or ‘commons’ into ‘property’ is simply the willful and mandated theft and redistribution of those goods and the redistribution of those goods to government employees. The commons is the theft of resources by the state so that individuals may profit by the use of ‘commons’ to fund their political advocates. The tragedy of the commons is that ownership leads to over-consumption. But there is another tragedy of the commons, and that is the state-ownership tragedy of the commons, wherein the state uses it’s assets to reward or create advocates. Instead we should avoid the over-consumption tragedy of the commons as well as the bureaucratic tragedy of the commons, and eliminate the commons as a form of property and stewardship, and instead, make it a market matter of the regulated use of and transfer of property, thus enabling individuals and organizations to protect and use it without the participation of the state except as an enforcer. Sell off the air, seas, rivers, lakes, forests, preserves. Directly redistribute money to these ‘owners’ in order to subsidize any ‘common use’. But leave protection of the resource to the owners, who will, universally, do better than the state at doing so. Regulate the use of those ‘goods’. The division of labor, knowledge and incentive is humanity’s greatest accomplishment, because it is the method and means by which we break the universe up into knowable entities. The market is the means by which we allocate the use of those resources. And the state is the organization that creates the ENVIRONMENT that is the market, as well as the means of resolution of differences in property. The state is CREATING THE WRONG ENVIRONMENT when it manages something, rather than when it defines the rules for something, and leaves it to the market to actually do the labor. And thinking otherwise, is to attribute to human beings, knowledge and incentive that they cannot have in a division of knowledge and labor of any degree of complexity. And therefore a fools errand.