^Two gas stations on a street corner is not inefficient. If it were inefficient one or both would be out of business. Both of those stations help supply the demand that the public requires. Take away one of those and you'll have a gas line at the other station (much like the soviet style toilet paper lines).Inefficiency is not rewarded in capitalism. It requires a firm to shut down if it cannot meet its operating costs. The ONLY way that inefficiency exists in capitalism is if that firm is kept alive by a 3rd party (a government buyout, a subsidy, a tariff, etc). When the government introduces such things, inefficiency is created. If it werent' for the government, these firms would not exist. If they couldn't exist because they couldn't meet their operating costs, then obviously, there is no real public demand.
10/17/2006 1:09:23 PM
Onorio, look at it the inefficiency this way:IF one gas station would charge the market clearing, economically efficient price for gasoline, then there would be complete efficiency. Instead, we have a second gas station, which costs us time, effort, and materials to build and operate. So even if we get to the economically efficient price for gasoline in our 2-station town, we have wasted resources to get there. The reason we don't treat it as inefficient in our general vocabulary is because we know full-well that the single gas station won't charge the economically efficient price if they have 100% market power and little substitutability. So, Kris is right about it being inefficient in the economic sense, but he's DEAD wrong about thinking it can be corrected by a government-controlled monopoly.That is the fatal flaw of communism in practice, and I would argue, also in theory.
10/17/2006 2:09:34 PM
No no no no, if one station were to have control of the price of gas in this little town, then market forces would be acting on it in that they could charge whatever they want.The premise of capitalism: man is a rational thinker. If I can get away with charging $4.00/gallon, I will. THen you also have to look at the amount of peopel who may no longer buy gas. Finding the maximization point of this will also maximize your profits.The existence of, or as economics teaches us, the mere potential of a competitor will be enough to deter this station to gouge the price. When you have 2 stations and 3 stations, etc, you are fulfilling the public need and also creating the competition required to keep the cost of gas AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE POINT to a) attract more customers and b) undersell your competitors and c) make enough profit to make it worthwhile.It is not inefficient to have 3 gas stations or 4. You have a point where you reach market saturization where you have too many gas stations and guess what capitalism does? It shuts the excess stations down too because they would not be able to afford to stay in the black.It's a beautiful system. And guess what else? No one planned it, no one drew the map for it, no one dictated it... it just works.[Edited on October 17, 2006 at 2:30 PM. Reason : .]
10/17/2006 2:29:28 PM
10/17/2006 2:37:55 PM
Onorio, you're misunderstanding what we mean by inefficiency.Trust me, when Loneshark, Kris, and I agree on an economic point, its correct.Look, we know that markets act on 1 gas station owner so that he charges the profit maximizing price. Thus, he will be led to charge a monopoly price if left to his own devices. BUT, if he could, by some means, be compelled to charge the economically efficient, market-clearing price that competition brings, then he would be MORE economically efficient than the system whereby a number of competitors force themselves into equilibrium.Its not that ANY of us think that 1 gas station is more efficient than 2 or 3 if left to their own devices. The point is simply that IF 1 gas station WOULD charge the market-clearing price on his own, then he would be more efficient than any other setup.The disagreement isn't on the inefficiency that, under this hypothetical case, is caused by competition. The disagreement is on whether 1 station could be compelled to charge the market-clearing price in a manner that isn't at least as inefficient as the competitive case.Kris, Loneshark, amirite?
10/17/2006 2:39:01 PM
no^can't happen in a society based on freedom....[Edited on October 17, 2006 at 2:45 PM. Reason : d]
10/17/2006 2:42:45 PM
Arab, you are correct, IMOBut that's what the disagreement is about. Its about whether or not it is plausible. The point remains that IF IT DID WORK THAT WAY, it would be more efficient than any other form of economy.
10/17/2006 2:46:43 PM
^^^Pretty much. This is one of those problems like externalities that simply aren't debatable by anyone.We're pretty much on opposite ends of the economic philosophy spectrum, so I'd say if we agree on anything, there's probably not much room for debate on the issue.Oh, and I'd agree that no is the answer to the question posed by this thread. America won't be switching to communism for quite a while.[Edited on October 17, 2006 at 2:48 PM. Reason : ]
10/17/2006 2:46:56 PM
I'm using the word efficiency in the classical term of the word and what Adam Smith meant when he wrote Wealth of Nations.Efficiency only exists with competition. That is lesson #1
10/17/2006 2:51:54 PM
Actually Onorio, we're using it in the classical economic version as well. You're just thinking that competition is the only way to reach economic efficiency, which isn't the case.What Adam Smith (Invisible Hand) all the way through Freidman have preached is that competition is the best way for us to approximate efficiency. No one mistakes capitalism for a perfectly functioning system. It has externalities and other market failures to dampen it a bit.The two sides of the coin are:You and me and Loneshark: In a general sense, capitalism-fueled economies are as close as we can get to efficiency that have desirable outcomes.Kris and other communists (<~~not using the term as an insult here): There are more efficient forms of economic systems, they just haven't been seen yet.
10/17/2006 2:56:50 PM
10/17/2006 3:07:14 PM
then you're both deluded. congratulations.
10/17/2006 3:08:38 PM
10/17/2006 3:10:07 PM
10/17/2006 3:13:23 PM
unfortunately for you, history has proven me right. And yet, you give no substance to back up your claim of my "morbid incorrectness."Go ahead... I imagine if it's so morbid and so grossly wrong, you should be able to easily refute it. Go for it.[Edited on October 17, 2006 at 3:18 PM. Reason : .]
10/17/2006 3:17:12 PM
yeah, it explains why government involvement in the economy exists in every civilized country in history.We have easily refuted it.[Edited on October 17, 2006 at 3:19 PM. Reason : ]
10/17/2006 3:19:12 PM
government involvement in an economy is due to much more sinister reasons than "maximizing efficiency." Perhaps power? No government has ever sought that...Why, that's how your comrades started in the CCCP. Oh here's a wonderful economic system... let us control it... millions upon millions dead... system collapses... people starve.[Edited on October 17, 2006 at 3:25 PM. Reason : .]
10/17/2006 3:20:13 PM
theoretically things can always be more efficient but people are not ants, so it's kinda hard to justify any of it being plausible...
10/17/2006 3:21:26 PM
Well you're clsoe to right Arab, except for complete economic efficiency is theoretically possible, so it can't ALWAYS be more efficient.The true question we can deal with when this debate is over is whether true economic efficiency is desirable or not. What I mean is, ceteris paribus, we'd all choose more efficiency, but it never is ceteris paribus. We have to come up with a good definition of "better off." The realm of normative economics is staggeringly subjective. In fact, when I get a chance, I'll be starting a thread on normative economics. Help me out here on methods of optimality we should debate in it.Utilitarianism, Pareto Optimality... (fill in the blanks for me)
10/17/2006 3:25:35 PM
Hey Kris I want to thank you for taking care of my "light work" up there.
10/17/2006 3:32:30 PM
Hey Kris I have no real ideas so I spend most of my time ATM'ing people in threads.
10/17/2006 3:39:40 PM
Both of you cut out the trolling.
10/17/2006 3:40:39 PM
Well maybe if his argument actually held water, he wouldn't be angry with me. It's merely human nature to not like being incorrect.[Edited on October 17, 2006 at 3:47 PM. Reason : .]
10/17/2006 3:46:49 PM
Well perhaps pointing out the leaks in the bucket is a better way to prove that his argument holds no water than by pointing out that the guy who is carrying the bucket is ugly, smells, can't spell, or is stupid.Don't you think?
10/17/2006 3:48:06 PM
My argument does hold water, dumbass. It's called, for a large part, the USA.^yes... I agree. I wish Earl would just contribute.[Edited on October 17, 2006 at 3:48 PM. Reason : .]
10/17/2006 3:48:14 PM
I just think you guys have spun way off topic. None of your inputs answer the question of the thread. You've lost sight now. Can we just stick with the germane here?
10/17/2006 3:56:40 PM
thus he concedes defeat. He can't poke holes at any argument.
10/17/2006 3:58:26 PM
Unfortunately Onorio, your argument doesn't really hold water.You're pretty close to right, in that capitalism is IMHO pretty close to efficient (or at least as close to anything else that is plausible) but the argument that it is perfectly efficient is just not the case.The holes in the bucket revolve around market failure. Inability to account for some externalities means inefficient outcomes. Inability to properly price a public good means inefficient outcomes. The debate comes in how we should fix those holes (and if they are worth fixing at all). My personal intuition is that they are worth TRYING to fix if and only if, we can come up with a plug that doesn't cause even more problems than we had before.
10/17/2006 3:59:52 PM
uh emmm... had a piece of flym in my nasal area.[Edited on October 17, 2006 at 4:04 PM. Reason : ^thanks for pointing that out.]
10/17/2006 4:03:37 PM
These "public goods" that are supposed to be fixed WOULD be fixed if market forces were allowed to direct them. There was a thread on here that salisburyboy shat on a few months back on privatizing the public school system. You should check that out as there were some very good arguments (most by me) given.If the market were allowed to function, supply and demand would always meet at equilibrium and no waste would occur.[Edited on October 17, 2006 at 4:06 PM. Reason : .]
10/17/2006 4:05:42 PM
10/17/2006 8:44:54 PM
That post took the words right out of my mouth.
10/17/2006 8:57:11 PM
10/17/2006 9:11:07 PM
In some cases, such as an electric grid, we have a monopoly in the form of co-ops which are regulated by the government. This is perhaps the ONLY case where I can see where responsible government would be needed. Patents, IMO, are a part of the capitalist system. You can protect your rights. They are no more against capitalism than any other freedom guaranteed by the Constitution.And yes, Earl, when there is NO government interference, supply and demand WILL ALWAYS meet at equilibrium with the existance of competition. This is actually Econ 101. Plz read.
10/17/2006 9:21:08 PM
10/17/2006 9:22:42 PM
10/17/2006 9:40:45 PM
Ok, this is THEORY... and something I do not believe would happen in practice.If everything else was perfect and we were in a completely capitalist system, monopolies would not exist and if they did, their prices would still be set via MC=MR. Why? Because the mere potential of a competitor would be reason enough for a manufacturer to produce at the lowest cost and charge the lowest price to KEEP COMPETITORS OUT. It is beneficial for the monopoly to not have any competitors and the only way to achieve that would be to keep them out by MC=MR.
10/17/2006 9:53:19 PM
^^ Sorry, I guess I overstated my response. ^ The Monopoly has artificially restricted Supply. So, lets say at $10 a gallon the company would produce 10 billion gallons for sale in a competitive market. However, Demand at $10 is only 1 billion gallons. Therefore, the Monopoly owners artificially change their supply curve to cut production to 1 billion gallons at $10. Therefore, Supply at $10 is artificially 1 billion gallons; Demand at $10 is 1 billion gallons. Dis-eqillibrium is when suppliers want to produce more, or consumers want to consume more, at the given price, but are unable to. In this case of a monopoly the consumers do not want to consume any more than they are at $10 and the Monopoly does not want to produce anymore than they are, either. Technicality, sure enough, but Monopolies are sufficiently rare to allow for a special case.
10/17/2006 10:00:05 PM
modifying their supply would surely peak the interest of capitalists interested in making money; if they can produce more and sell at a lower cost and earn a profit, it would force the monopoly to do the same. It is not advantageous, in pure capitalism, for a monopoly to behave as such.
10/17/2006 10:02:18 PM
10/17/2006 10:02:31 PM
profit maximization is where the efficiency is created; make the most money by reducing costs and therefore increasing revenue. Apologies B, I was an econ minor... stuff was 2 and a half years ago... I'm surprised I'm remembering as much as I am.Still, my statement is not factually incorrect.[Edited on October 17, 2006 at 10:05 PM. Reason : .]
10/17/2006 10:04:24 PM
If I get abonorio right then he is correct in the efficiency sense. A monopoly should theoretically be as efficient as a competitive enterprise, it is just more profitable. For example, every dollar saved from costs is another dollar claimed as profit. But there is something to be said for how easily firms can find cost savings once bankruptcy begins to loom... But bgmims is right that a market in Monopoly will usually produce a lower quantity of goods than the same market in Competition.
10/17/2006 10:42:45 PM
no, because then I would leave for a country that didn't suck and leave the US behind to rot.
10/17/2006 10:48:32 PM
http://www.rh.edu/~stodder/BE/MonopAnal.htmDamn Loneshark. Either you guys are using different definitions of efficiency than the rest of the economic world, or you guys need to bone back up.Here's some help.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_weight_loss[Edited on October 17, 2006 at 10:55 PM. Reason : .]
10/17/2006 10:54:34 PM
^^ what were you responding to?[Edited on October 17, 2006 at 10:54 PM. Reason : ^]
10/17/2006 10:54:41 PM
^the thread title
10/17/2006 10:59:02 PM
bgmims, I was unaware efficiency was used outside production, oh well. A firm that manages to produce a widget for $10 is more efficient than one that spent $12 to produce the same widget. It makes sense for a Monopoly to be as efficient as possible, lets say $10 per widget, but it is going to charge whatever the market will bear. It spent $10 but charged $20 per widget, claiming $10 as profit. A Monopoly that charges $20 for a widget is not any less efficient that a competitive firm that charged $11 for a widget if they both spent $10 making it. The difference is not efficiency but Dead Weight loss to society's greater utility function. So, if I am using efficiency wrong, then you help me here:A Monopoly charges a price of $20 per widget, but manages to reduce costs such that it only costs $10 to produce a widget instead of $12 as before. The Demand curve is very steep so the price remains $20. What has changed? In my definitions, efficiency has increased. By your definitions, efficiency has decreased (Price is even further away from the cost of production). [Edited on October 17, 2006 at 11:05 PM. Reason : .,.]
10/17/2006 11:01:07 PM
10/17/2006 11:30:33 PM
10/18/2006 12:05:10 AM
So we do need government intervention?
10/18/2006 12:17:05 AM