Posted on 08/20/2008 4:33:17 AM PDT by JohnRLott
By taking a couple of courses in economic theory, we could immunize ourselves from nonsense spouted by politicians and pundits, but in the meantime check out professor John R. Lotts Freedomnomics: Why the Free Market Works.
His first chapter is Are You Being Ripped Off? It addresses myths about predation where its sometimes alleged that corporations will charge below-cost prices to bankrupt their rivals and then charge unconscionable prices. Theres little or no evidence that corporations would choose predation as strategy; there are too many pitfalls. A major one is that in order to recoup losses from charging low prices to bankrupt rivals, the predator would later have to charge higher-than-normal prices. That would attract new rivals who might have purchased the bankrupt assets of the predators prey and be able to undercut the predators prices.
A far more successful means to monopoly wealth is for businesses to enlist the aid of congressmen to form a collusion. Classic examples are the dairy industry, which uses the U.S. Department of Agricultures Federal Milk Marketing Orders to set statutory minimum prices, or the Gasoline Retailers Association using state law to do the same or the sugar industry using Congress to establish quotas on foreign sugar imports.
Professor Lotts chapter Government as Nirvana highlights examples of government predation. When the U.S. Postal Service raised the price of first-class mail in 1999, it reduced its price for domestic overnight express mail from $15 to $13.70, even though it was losing money at $15. The Postal Service was facing stiff competition from FedEx and UPS overnight services and wanted to keep its market share.
During the 1980s, private meteorology firms saw a chance to make money . . .
(Excerpt) Read more at sj-r.com ...
Did these "private meteorology firms" launch their own private satellites? I don't think so.
In fact, these firms were hoping to carve a "crony capitalism" sinecure by having the taxpayers pay their information-gathering costs and then sell the results to the taxpayers, double-charging them. Cutting out the parasitic middleman was the proper response.
The government's involvement in economic decision making can only cause problems... not solve them. that is to say ... it will make things less efficient, not more.
If you think a "middle man" is a parasite then don't buy their product. No one is going to hold a gun to your head.
Not really. This was one of the bits of petty corruption Rick Santorum got caught committing — he tried to give AccuWeather a monopoly on a large chunk of National Weather Service data.
There is an entire industry built up around the use of U.S. Census data and other similar information to provide detailed demographic reporting and forecasting for marketing purposes.
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