The traditional case for private competitive markets goes back to Adam Smith (and even earlier writers). It is mainly based on abundant evidence that most of the time competitive markets work quite well, usually much better than government alternatives. The main reason is not that individuals in the private sector are intrinsically better than government bureaucrats and politicians, but rather that competitive pressures discipline market behavior much more effectively than government actions. The lesson is that it is crucial to consider whether government regulations and laws are likely to improve rather than worsen the performance of private markets. In an article "Competition and Democracy" published more than 50 years ago, I said "monopoly and other imperfections are at least as important, and perhaps substantially more so, in the political sector as in the marketplace. . . . Does the existence of market imperfections justify government intervention? The answer would be no, if the imperfections in government behavior were greater than those in the market."
Correcting misconceptions about markets, economics, asset prices, derivatives, equities, debt and finance
Thursday, September 1, 2011
Competitive Markets Look Darn Good In Comparison To Government Performance
Posted By Milton Recht
From The Wall Street Journal, "The Great Recession and Government Failure: When comparing the performance of markets to government, markets look pretty darn good" by Gary Becker, 1992 Nobel economics laureate:
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