A company would be retarded to get inovlved in such as situation unless they formed a racket. The tasks performed by the Coast Guard, Police, and Fire Departments are inefficient by nature.
5/28/2007 10:13:00 PM
5/28/2007 10:50:30 PM
5/28/2007 11:34:59 PM
5/29/2007 12:04:50 AM
5/29/2007 2:01:56 AM
First, Standard Oil still had a 64% market share of refined oil products in the US in 1911, down from 94% in 1904. The 11% you cited was the percentage of exploration and pumped oil, which Rockafeller elected not to try and monopolize (possibly because he retired in 1897). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_Oil
5/29/2007 12:30:21 PM
The Wikipedia article you refer to is full of slanted agenda. The comments on it are telling...
5/29/2007 1:14:06 PM
btw, there already is a private company that assists stranded boatersworks kinda like AAA
5/29/2007 1:25:27 PM
EarthDogg once again provides the unintentional comic relief.1) It's great to know that the free market will stamp out unfair business practices 20 years after a near total national monopoly is formed. 2) Roosevelt had started trustbusting prior to 1904. You can't tell me that TR's very public trustbusting activities didn't persuade Standard Oil to ease up on its monopolizing ways.3) You need to cite the "34% in 1898 to 11% by 1906" source. A) Standard Oil was a holding company-- it owned majority shares in many oil companies that didn't go by the name "Standard Oil." I can see how this could lead one to believe (if they wanted to) that "Standard Oil" only had a small share of the market B) You're probably just full of shit, as Erios has suggested.
5/30/2007 12:08:39 AM
Obama was just on Letterman
5/30/2007 12:26:23 AM
5/30/2007 12:59:08 AM
^^^^^ Interesting article. It makes sense, but I'd be interested in seeing how other economists would respond to it.^^^ I don't think he's full of shit. I do however contest the assumption that 100% privatization (or to the extent feasible) of services provided by the government is in the public's interest.More importantly, I cannot understate my objection to EarthDogg's statement that government interference deserves all or even a majority of the blame for creating monopolies. 100% laissez faire policies have historically created the social injustice from which socialism arose. Socialism was a reaction to free markets and their impacts on public life.Specifically, free markets can and have historically exploited their labor force. Black slaves were exploited by the cotton industry until the government outlawed slavery. Children were exploited by factories until child labor laws were passed. Women were exploited via lower comparable wages by a patriarchal society until government law stated such practices were illegal. The list goes on...The key is that private businesses are in fact accountable to the public, but only to the extent that the public is aware of their practices. In this day and age, information is much more accessible to the masses. As a result you can make the argument that businesses are more or less forced to behave ethically.Private businesses however are loyal only to one thing - the bottom line. History proves that, if a business can get away with murder in the pursuit of profits, it typically does. True, history also shows that these companies often accomplish this by abusing government laws.However, trying to claim that, in most situations of unethical business practices, the government had a primary role in carrying it out is not only bold.... it's flat out wrong.
6/1/2007 8:25:01 AM
^It seems you have two issues here.. one of which is the proposal that businesses are essential ammoral and need gov't regulation to restrict their evil means.The other issue is that of monopoly.My claim is that no monopoly can occur without some degree of gov't involvement. That doesn't mean that gov't is the sole source. A monopoly comes about from the collusion of one or more businesses and the gov't.For instance, one way that members of a industry use gov't to keep competitors from entering their market is through licensing. It's an age-old tactic that has been very effective.The industry, wanting to keep the market to themselves, announces that dangerous things could happen if anyone was allowed to practice their trade without proper training or credentials. We need a way to make sure the public is safe. So they reccommend that the gov't require entrants to the industry be tested or accredited before they can set up shop. And since the gov't isn't an expert in the field, who better to do that testing than the established members of the industry. So they get to decide who gets to compete with them. What could be better?This pratice is used by a wide variety of industries including doctors, lawyers, taxi cab companies, florists, and hair braiders. New York city has an official directory with 73 pages of occupations that require certification including VCR repairing and snow shovelling.In 1997, two men set up a casket selling company in Tenn. They were charging $800 for a casket that funeral homes were charging $3200 for. The Board of Funeral Direcots and Embalmers, a state agency ordered them to cease and desist on the grounds that they didn't hold a valid funeral director license.This is iditiotic. Are you required to buy a car from a mechanic? If you;re just selling caskets, why do you have to know how to embalm someone? Of course the state claimed that a defective casket once buried could harm the environment. But the company in question was purchasing their caskets from the same manufacturers as the licensed funeral homes. I stand by my claim that any and all monopolies cannot exist without some degree of gov't involvement.
6/1/2007 11:10:47 AM
6/1/2007 1:06:11 PM
6/1/2007 11:45:04 PM
6/16/2007 10:48:43 AM