Comment by dbspin

Comment by dbspin 2 days ago

14 replies

It means that markets rely on the rule of law. From monopoly regulation to the prohibition on outright theft, markets literally cannot exist without governance.

robertlagrant 2 days ago

I think law and order needs to exist, or enforced rules, but that's not "government intervention".

  • lostlogin 2 days ago

    It’s rather vague as to where the line is, but as you say, ‘government intervention’ is a term with political baggage in financial theory.

    https://policonomics.com/government-intervention/

    • robertlagrant 2 days ago

      Yeah, even there:

      > beyond the mere regulation of contracts and provision of public goods

      Building roads or enforcing rules: not intervention, according to that.

      • eru 2 days ago

        Roads are not public goods.

        > In economics, a public good (also referred to as a social good or collective good) is a good that is both non-excludable and non-rivalrous.

        If you ever sat in a traffic jam, you will have experienced that road use is rivalrous. And toll roads show that it's rather easy to exclude people from using roads.

        Building roads with general taxpayer money and making them available without payment by the users might or might not be good policy. I don't know. But roads ain't a public good.

      • MichaelZuo 2 days ago

        How is stopping trucks on the road to check their papers, and holding up the delivery for some period of time, on a semi-random basis, not ‘intervention’ of some kind?

  • consteval 2 days ago

    > but that's not "government intervention"

    I would argue it 100% is. You can make MUCH more money if you steal or perhaps keep slaves. We're just so used to these preventative measures that we don't really consider them, but this is, in essence, a huge "tax" on the private sector.

    Playing by the rules is very expensive as compared to not.

eru 2 days ago

Even if you buy that argument (and I'm skeptical), that's at most an argument for a minimal nightwatchmen state; not for further government intervention.

  • dbspin 2 days ago

    If you're skeptical about whether governance is required for markets to function, launch your next startup on the darkweb or in a failed state. I fail to see how one could imagine any kind of healthy market operating without basic governance, reliable infrastructure etc. It's a religious idea (anarchocaptialism or something similar) at that point.

    Past that, actually engaging with business (as a customer or employee) should be a rapid reminder of how much we have regulation to thank for. From not being poisoned (immediately or over the course of a lifetime) by our food, burned alive by non-fire retardant furniture (and the absence of a fire service), to having weekends off, our wages reliably paid, to being free from physical and the more obvious forms of psychological abuse. It's right there - you engage with the rights and privileges afforded by legislation daily.

    Just astonishing to me that this kind of market fundamentalism is still actively engaged in. People can disagree on the extent and fundamental structure of government, but to deny it's role in the basic functioning of business in a society as complex as ours seems outright absurd.

    • eru 2 days ago

      As people get richer they demand better quality stuff and can afford it.

      That includes taking weekends off.

      It's perfectly legal where I live to work on the weekend. There's also no minimum wage here. Yet, most people get weekends off and get paid more than zero.

      It's also entirely legal here to offer jobs without reliable pay (as long as the contract doesn't promise reliable pay).

      There's plenty of long term poisonous food available in all countries: you can mainline eg pure sugar to your heart's content. Most people in most countries opt for tastier and healthier fare, because they can afford it. There's also plenty of immediately poisonous substances available, like strong alcohol.

      People also regularly opt for more than the legal minimum in terms of furniture safety. Eg Ikea sells you kits to bolt your cabinet to the wall, so it doesn't fall on your child trying to climb up on it. So the legal minimum's don't seem particularly binding: people voluntarily exceed them.

      > Just astonishing to me that this kind of market fundamentalism is still actively engaged in. People can disagree on the extent and fundamental structure of government, but to deny it's role in the basic functioning of business in a society as complex as ours seems outright absurd.

      Governments do stick their hands into many pies, but that doesn't mean that them doing that is required by some physical or natural law.

      > If you're skeptical about whether governance is required for markets to function, launch your next startup on the darkweb or in a failed state.

      Yes, governments control some of the best real estate on earth. That doesn't mean they necessarily contributed much to that happy state of affairs; often just the opposite.

      Btw, many companies are trying to escape even basic functions provided by government, and are going for private arbitration instead, because it's more efficient.

refurb a day ago

Clearly not true as markets exist outside the government (black markets).

But that’s beside the point. Even if most markets rely on government intervention, it tells you nothing about how much intervention is optimal.

It’s like saying “no human survives without food”, which is true but tells you nothing as to how much food is good.