Do you believe that we are being killed by one another?

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Replies

  • Ledgehanger
    Ledgehanger Posts: 125 Member
    I'm very much Libertarian minded.
    Sorry, but it has to be said...

    f67334bc58f2468bad15312669d5edaa0afe4c44de4eb56039994a47f00d296b.jpg
  • AllanMisner
    AllanMisner Posts: 4,140 Member
    It really bothers me when people say that corporations are inherently evil. In fact, most of the things we are talking about (GMO, additives, flavorings) were all developed to solve real world problems (distribution, shelf life, etc.). Yes, most of it is crap food, but it is what the consumer demands. The information is there to allow the consumer to know what they are eating. If it isn't, then the consumers have the right to ask or to avoid the product outright. It is called personal accountability.
  • homesweeths
    homesweeths Posts: 792 Member
    Personal accountability is all well and good, but how about when government limits our choices to what we see as healthy? I'm thinking of all who have to buy raw milk illegally, not to mention the state with a ridiculous law that would make it illegal for a cow owner to drink raw milk from his own cow?

    In this case it's Big Dairy colluding with government to limit choice and "risk" and, as a by-product, drive the small, organic farmers out of business.

    Our family can't digest pasteurized milk -- pasteurization destroys the enzyme in the milk that allows us to digest the milk protein. I finally gave up on raw milk because it's just too hard to get.

    So Big Dairy didn't gain us as a customer... they just drove us to making our own nut and coconut milk.
  • strychnine7
    strychnine7 Posts: 210 Member
    Personal accountability is all well and good, but how about when government limits our choices to what we see as healthy? I'm thinking of all who have to buy raw milk illegally, not to mention the state with a ridiculous law that would make it illegal for a cow owner to drink raw milk from his own cow?

    In this case it's Big Dairy colluding with government to limit choice and "risk" and, as a by-product, drive the small, organic farmers out of business.

    Our family can't digest pasteurized milk -- pasteurization destroys the enzyme in the milk that allows us to digest the milk protein. I finally gave up on raw milk because it's just too hard to get.

    So Big Dairy didn't gain us as a customer... they just drove us to making our own nut and coconut milk.

    Big dairy didn't limit any choices. Government outlawed something that should never have been outlawed. Yeah, big corporations who use the club of government to get what they want, are scumbags. But they would never be able to do that if government didn't exist. Or, if governments at least weren't tacitly given permission, by people, to regulate the (specific) market in question (the food market, in this case).
  • homesweeths
    homesweeths Posts: 792 Member
    It's my understanding that Big Dairy' s lobbying efforts ($$$) were a big part of it.
  • strychnine7
    strychnine7 Posts: 210 Member
    It's my understanding that Big Dairy' s lobbying efforts ($$$) were a big part of it.

    That's kinda what I just addressed.
  • Akimajuktuq
    Akimajuktuq Posts: 3,037 Member
    I'm very much Libertarian minded.
    Sorry, but it has to be said...

    Since when do I keep using that word? Um, yes, I'm pretty sure I know what it means. I don't believe in Government interference in my life. I do not expect government to protect me. I don't see a need for government to run all aspects of our lives. But I also don't want governments to protect corporations from being held responsible for their actions.

    Seriously?
  • Akimajuktuq
    Akimajuktuq Posts: 3,037 Member
    And..... the above discussion sums up why corporations aren't held accountable for harming health or misleading customers. Because we don't think they should be held accountable (speaking for some of us). Anything goes when it's to earn a buck. The right to earn profits trumps the responsibility of providing safe products, that are adequately labelled and do what it's supposed to do.

    I'm very much Libertarian minded. I don't think it's the job of government to protect us and micromanage our lives. BUT corporations that harm people or misrepresent their products should also not be protected by the governments that WE ELECT and support with our tax dollars.

    Remember the melamine poisoning of infant formula in China and how China dealt with the people responsible? Well, that's what should happen over here too. Instead you and me are expendible and corporate profits are protected.

    You misunderstand me. I think it's a damn shame that people don't pay attention. But they only don't pay attention because they assume that government is getting their back. Well, government does not, has not, and will not ever, get anyones back except their own (and their benefactors). In a free society, that is to say one where there was no FDA, independent companies would exist to keep an eye out on things. Think Consumer Reports for food manufacturers. And people wouldn't just assume that since something is on the shelf then it must be ok. Now if something is on the shelf, people think it must be ok otherwise government would have straight up outlawed it. Rarely is that the case.

    As for governments regulating corporations... Well, that's a ridiculous notion. As I pointed out earlier, there are 12,000 lobbyists in Washington. You can bet that the politicians know where their bread is buttered.

    I completely agree that you are pointing out the current reality and that nothing is going to change it. Personal responsibility is everything. However, it's still useful to point out the things that are wrong in our society and refuse to turn a blind eye and just accept it. The only real power we have is to vote with our dollars and most people will whine and complain but still buy whatever they want in the moment.
  • Dragonwolf
    Dragonwolf Posts: 5,600 Member
    It really bothers me when people say that corporations are inherently evil. In fact, most of the things we are talking about (GMO, additives, flavorings) were all developed to solve real world problems (distribution, shelf life, etc.). Yes, most of it is crap food, but it is what the consumer demands. The information is there to allow the consumer to know what they are eating. If it isn't, then the consumers have the right to ask or to avoid the product outright. It is called personal accountability.

    I don't think anyone has said that corporations are inherently evil, but rather that they exist for one reason - to make money - and that the American corporate ladder favors a particular type of person reaching the CEO/board level, especially when it comes to large conglomerates. The person can be "evil" (or at the very least, lack certain scruples), and, therefore, steer the company in a bad for consumers (and public health/safety), but good for profits, direction. (See also: Phillip Morris.)

    An unfortunate side effect of a free market economy in the real world is that a given industry, especially if it had high barriers to entry or very limited resources, is pretty much destined to become a monopoly. Government tries to pass laws to keep that from happening, but you still end up with oligopolies consisting of the handful of remaining players. The computer industry is a prime example of this, where you only have AMD/ATI and nVidia/Intel for desktop computer processors and graphics chipsets, because of the high barriers to entry, patent minefield, and very limited supply of highly skilled knowledge workers, and I'm rather certain that the only thing keeping the two companies from merging is the anti-monopoly laws (the same laws that busted them for colluding to raise graphics card prices for years).

    This happens because only one company have the best people, and once those best people come up with something that provides an advantage over the other company, you start reaching a tipping point where the competitor can no longer keep up (because it takes more money to come up with a counter solution, and the competitor is losing market share to the other), thus falling farther and farther behind. One by one, the competitors fall or get bought, until only the minimum (allowed by law) is left (if possible, though sometimes full monopolies still arise - utilities, state liquor stores in some states, the MPAA, etc).

    As far as this monopoly effect, it doesn't make a free market inherently evil (just flawed), but it is pretty easy to see how such a situation can corner consumers if the company leadership takes the company down a shady path. And, unfortunately, you don't need a full monopoly to run into the same issue. Duopolies (like the ATI/nVidia one) and oligopolies (usually 3 companies, sometimes as many as six) can control the entire industry - or at least enough of the industry to make finding the alternatives extraordinarily difficult, or even impossible in some areas and some industries). You can see this with cable companies, cellular phone carriers, video game console makers, and a host of other groups.

    Inevitably, of course, you end up with companies that are large enough to influence the lawmakers of the country. Many times, that influence is pretty solely in the best interest of maintaining the status quo, which, of course, favors the existing members of the oligopoly, and further increases the barriers to entry for any new competitors (such as the law that car manufacturers have to sell to dealerships and can't sell directly to consumers, which kills alternative and arguably superior sales models such as the direct-to-consumer model that Tesla wants to do). Sometimes, that influence does favor the consumer (such as some of the corporations involved in the Net Neutrality dispute, or Amazon's, Netflix's, and Google's fight against the cable companies). These are prime examples not only of various aspects of game theory in play, but also the fact that companies aren't inherently evil, but can swing either way on various matters or overall, but either way, you end up with extraordinarily powerful entities, and when their leadership cause them to swing toward the dark side, it's very bad for consumers.

    And yes, for a lot of things, you can simply "go without." You don't need cable TV. You don't need streaming videos. But what happens when it becomes your food supply chain that is 90% controlled by the large oligopoly, who clearly don't have the consumer in mind? Even disregarding what laws should or shouldn't be in place, the fact still stands that if you're not fortunate enough to live in farm country, you're left with two options - buy from the big companies whom you morally oppose, or source your food from farther away (which may then use other not-so-great companies, and the act of sourcing from that far away negates the ecological reasons for sourcing locally). Hunting is largely out of the question, because you can only hunt during certain times of the year, and you generally can't get enough tags to get enough meat to be your sole source of food for the entire year, even if you catch your limit in every season available to you. So, the best you can do is supplement, but that still leaves you with the above two options for the rest of your food.
  • AllanMisner
    AllanMisner Posts: 4,140 Member
    It seems like we're in a circular argument. It is the government that allows certain things to happen and prevents others. Those decisions are driven by the dollars coming from the lobby, which is funded by the companies we choose to buy our food from. It really only stops being circular when you A) stop buying their crap and B) don't vote for the asshats that pass bad consumer laws.

    As for sources, most people live within an hour of a farm (even if you live in a huge city - http://www.eatwild.com/products/index.html). And many local farms do delivery to the metro areas they are close to. Or you can always order via the Internet. Not optimal, it costs more, but your dollars don't go to the companies you don't want to do business with.

    Everyone has a choice. They just have to be willing to make the commitment.
  • Akimajuktuq
    Akimajuktuq Posts: 3,037 Member
    It seems like we're in a circular argument. It is the government that allows certain things to happen and prevents others. Those decisions are driven by the dollars coming from the lobby, which is funded by the companies we choose to buy our food from. It really only stops being circular when you A) stop buying their crap and B) don't vote for the asshats that pass bad consumer laws.

    As for sources, most people live within an hour of a farm (even if you live in a huge city - http://www.eatwild.com/products/index.html). And many local farms do delivery to the metro areas they are close to. Or you can always order via the Internet. Not optimal, it costs more, but your dollars don't go to the companies you don't want to do business with.

    Everyone has a choice. They just have to be willing to make the commitment.

    Amen to that.

    The only part that probably wouldn't be possible is not voting for people who pass bad consumer laws. In Canada, you can only vote for certain parties when it comes to choosing a Prime Minister. Every ballot I've ever seen only has people representing well known Parties. Even if one did elect an independent in their riding, they would have ZERO influence at a Federal level. I think our current political system provides an illusion of choice, but does not present a real choice. It's choosing the lesser of the evils, so to speak.
  • strychnine7
    strychnine7 Posts: 210 Member
    An unfortunate side effect of a free market economy in the real world is that a given industry, especially if it had high barriers to entry or very limited resources, is pretty much destined to become a monopoly. Government tries to pass laws to keep that from happening, but you still end up with oligopolies consisting of the handful of remaining players. The computer industry is a prime example of this, where you only have AMD/ATI and nVidia/Intel for desktop computer processors and graphics chipsets, because of the high barriers to entry, patent minefield, and very limited supply of highly skilled knowledge workers, and I'm rather certain that the only thing keeping the two companies from merging is the anti-monopoly laws (the same laws that busted them for colluding to raise graphics card prices for years).

    This happens because only one company have the best people, and once those best people come up with something that provides an advantage over the other company, you start reaching a tipping point where the competitor can no longer keep up (because it takes more money to come up with a counter solution, and the competitor is losing market share to the other), thus falling farther and farther behind. One by one, the competitors fall or get bought, until only the minimum (allowed by law) is left (if possible, though sometimes full monopolies still arise - utilities, state liquor stores in some states, the MPAA, etc).

    I'm only quoting these two sections because the root of everything that is incorrect about what you are saying is contained here.

    Never, in the history of the planet, has a monopoly rose from a free market. Never. You go on to cite current institutions that hold monopoly status to back your claim. This is so utterly unbelievable that I can barely contain myself. The US has the biggest, riches, most powerful government in history. They legislate literally thousands of new laws, pertaining to the economy alone, every year. Never mind that they control a central bank, the Federal Reserve which has 100% control (i.e. an ACTUAL monopoly) of the money supply - which, for those keeping score, is one half of every single transaction that occurs. These patents that you speak of, are also a creation of government legislation. And your assertion that companies can't compete, even in this centrally planned fascist economy, is demonstrably false. Google is one of the biggest companies on the planet. They barely existed ten years ago, when they finally when public, despite the likes of Microsoft, Apple, and IBM being in business for much longer.

    So, having said all that: How can you possibly say, with any degree of seriousness, that the free market is flawed? The US does not have anything even remotely resembling a free market. Ultimately, you keep blaming these corporations for all these problems, but the fact is, NONE of these problems could exist without government involvement.


    To quote Murray Rothbard, "It is no crime to be ignorant of economics, which is, after all, a specialized discipline and one that most people consider to be a ‘dismal science.’ But it is totally irresponsible to have a loud and vociferous opinion on economic subjects while remaining in this state of ignorance."

    If you want to learn about how economics really work, visit www.mises.org. They have thousands of free books and other materials.
  • Dragonwolf
    Dragonwolf Posts: 5,600 Member
    An unfortunate side effect of a free market economy in the real world is that a given industry, especially if it had high barriers to entry or very limited resources, is pretty much destined to become a monopoly. Government tries to pass laws to keep that from happening, but you still end up with oligopolies consisting of the handful of remaining players. The computer industry is a prime example of this, where you only have AMD/ATI and nVidia/Intel for desktop computer processors and graphics chipsets, because of the high barriers to entry, patent minefield, and very limited supply of highly skilled knowledge workers, and I'm rather certain that the only thing keeping the two companies from merging is the anti-monopoly laws (the same laws that busted them for colluding to raise graphics card prices for years).

    This happens because only one company have the best people, and once those best people come up with something that provides an advantage over the other company, you start reaching a tipping point where the competitor can no longer keep up (because it takes more money to come up with a counter solution, and the competitor is losing market share to the other), thus falling farther and farther behind. One by one, the competitors fall or get bought, until only the minimum (allowed by law) is left (if possible, though sometimes full monopolies still arise - utilities, state liquor stores in some states, the MPAA, etc).

    I'm only quoting these two sections because the root of everything that is incorrect about what you are saying is contained here.

    Never, in the history of the planet, has a monopoly rose from a free market. Never. You go on to cite current institutions that hold monopoly status to back your claim. This is so utterly unbelievable that I can barely contain myself. The US has the biggest, riches, most powerful government in history. They legislate literally thousands of new laws, pertaining to the economy alone, every year. Never mind that they control a central bank, the Federal Reserve which has 100% control (i.e. an ACTUAL monopoly) of the money supply - which, for those keeping score, is one half of every single transaction that occurs. These patents that you speak of, are also a creation of government legislation. And your assertion that companies can't compete, even in this centrally planned fascist economy, is demonstrably false. Google is one of the biggest companies on the planet. They barely existed ten years ago, when they finally when public, despite the likes of Microsoft, Apple, and IBM being in business for much longer.

    So, having said all that: How can you possibly say, with any degree of seriousness, that the free market is flawed? The US does not have anything even remotely resembling a free market. Ultimately, you keep blaming these corporations for all these problems, but the fact is, NONE of these problems could exist without government involvement.


    To quote Murray Rothbard, "It is no crime to be ignorant of economics, which is, after all, a specialized discipline and one that most people consider to be a ‘dismal science.’ But it is totally irresponsible to have a loud and vociferous opinion on economic subjects while remaining in this state of ignorance."

    If you want to learn about how economics really work, visit www.mises.org. They have thousands of free books and other materials.

    It seems you and I may be using different definitions of the word "monopoly." The one that I use is "a monopoly exists when a specific individual or an enterprise has sufficient control over a particular product or service to determine significantly the terms on which other individuals shall have access to it. Monopolies are thus characterized by a lack of economic competition for the good or service that they provide and a lack of viable substitute goods." There is no need for the government to grant such status to an organization for it to exist (I never once denied the existence of government sanctioned/appointed monopolies - in fact, that was my point when I mentioned utilities and whatnot in situations where monopolies still arise - because they do exist, but such sanctioning is not required). Also, this is slightly different from Mises' and Rand's "evil monopoly" or oppressive monopoly, because a real-world monopoly won't necessarily set a price high enough to invite competition (thanks to game theory principles). Additionally, there has never been a monopoly in a truly free market, because a truly free market has never existed, because the human factor flaws the ideal in the implementation.

    Google rose to power because its primary domain is on the Internet, which has pretty much zero barrier to entry. The companies that I used as examples are not Internet based companies, but companies that work very much in real-world commodities (ATI/AMD and nVidia/Intel). Additionally, Google did not originally directly compete with Microsoft, Apple, or IBM. In the 90s (when Google started), those three companies were primarily in the hardware and operating system domain. Everything else they did (web search, web browsers, etc) was secondary, if it existed at all at the time. Google was solely a search engine in the beginning. Of the other three, they were only slightly competing with MSN, who had also just released a search engine. Google's primary competitors at the time were not Microsoft, Apple, or IBM, but rather Lycos, Yahoo, and Ask Jeeves (and AOL search when they went public). It's only been relatively recently that it's competed with the companies you mentioned (and even then, only in relatively small, and arguably tangential to their core competencies, divisions).

    There's a very specific reason that I specifically stated that oligopolies and monopolies arise in free market economies in industries with high barriers to entry and limited resources, because those are the determining factors of the odds of the competitors ultimately becoming a monopoly or oligopoly. Limited resources means that there's only so much to go around, and as demand goes up, so do prices (hey look! I do know a thing or two about economics!).

    Let's say you start with ten companies that do the same thing - make CPUs. They all start out on roughly equal level.

    Players 1, 3, 5, and 7 come up with different breakthroughs that sell more, making them more money. This means Players 2, 4, 6, 8, 9, and 10 lose market share and, therefore, money. With all the competition from this industry and others (and the increased demand from the successful players), the prices for silicon, copper, and gold (three resources needed for electronics manufacturing) increase.

    Players 8 and 10 decide to run at a deficit to find and make a new product. They find it, and the breakthrough allows them to get out of debt and pull ahead of the others. Players 2, 4, 6, and 9 played more conservatively, but continue to lose market share (and, therefore, revenue and profits).

    Players 2 and 4 decide to merge (becoming 2a). Player 1 buys Player 9. Raw materials prices stay roughly the same, but are high enough to prevent some new players from coming in. Players 11 and 12 join while the other barriers to entry is still rather low. Number of players: 10

    Player 11 finds a game-changing breakthrough and buys 12 and 2a. Player 3 counters with an equal breakthrough released later that year and finds similar success. Players 5 and 7 merge (becoming 5a). Number of players: 7.

    The cycles of breakthroughs, buying, and merging continues for several years. Some new players join, but are eventually bought by existing players as raw materials cost rise, as the demand for more knowledge rises, and as Moore's Law turns over a few times and physical size, and heat, limits start getting reached on the current architecture. Players 1, 5, 8, and 11 are left. Player 20 rises up in a separate, but related sector. Player 5 sees this new sector as a lucrative opportunity to branch out and does so. They sink a good deal of money into it and start seeing enough return that they can drop the prices of their primary product to that it barely makes any profit, in a move to drive other competition out of that market. The other players choose other routes of saving money and advancing the technology. Number of Players: 4 (+1 in a related sector)

    A few more cycles go through, and Player 5 has succeeded in bankrupting, and taking over, Players 1 and 8. Player 11 has also seen that Player 20's sector is on the rise - and sees that without some breakthrough in how CPUs are made, the current conditions will bankrupt the company - and decides to buy them for a hefty price. Number of Players: 2

    The primary sector still has high demand, and now that most of the competition is gone, both remaining Players raise prices slightly in order to provide more revenue for further advancement of the secondary sector and to keep R&D up for the primary, but not enough to tempt new players.

    From here, things can go a number of different directions, depending on government, economic prowess of the Players, resources, etc.

    The first option is what Mises assumes will happen in all cases - one Player will buy or bankrupt the other, then jack up the price to the point that new players come into the game (the "evil monopoly"). This very well can, and does, happen (though there is the pretty glaring footnote that until someone can get into the game and become a true threat to the status quo, there is still a monopoly situation - such as what happened with Internet Explorer until Mozilla was able to get a foothold as the rules of the game itself changed).

    However, the very fact that it's known to happen means that it won't happen in all real-world cases, because monopolies aren't inherently evil, and the Players will change their tactics to prevent that from happening (this is where game theory comes into play). Instead, they'll do other things:

    1. Bankrupt or buy the other Player, but don't jack up the price enough to tempt new players. Regardless of whether they get complacent, the revenue margin for a new Player to be competitive isn't high enough to be able to feasibly enter the game without taking a huge risk. At that point, the only ones that can compete are giants from other industries, who have other ways of funding. Whether this is good for the consumers is a mixed bag and depends entirely on what happens in the aftermath. (This is more or less what happened with Microsoft and Apple in the desktop market, though the comparison is imperfect, because it didn't completely bankrupt Apple and they were able to come back into the desktop market once they got their foot in the door in the handheld device arena. Regardless, the price of Windows and Windows computers, despite being the controlling option on the market, did not have prices that were that much different from the times where there is viable competition, because Microsoft didn't jack up the prices that much.)

    2. The Players can cooperate with each other and collude on prices of the products and/or the resources. This keeps the illusion of competition intact (and perhaps a small amount of actual competition), while still ensuring a command of the resources for the market, preventing new players from joining. For the consumer, the two Players are different, but their methods and product are essentially the same. (See also: Nash Equilibrium, Prisoner's Dilemma, and Stag Hunt) This is exactly what ATI and nVidia have historically done, and were both sued for in 2008 (GPU Antitrust Litigation).

    3. The Players can work together, or one can bankrupt the other, and jack the price up enough to bring in new players, then engage in tactics to forcibly eliminate those players through one means or another.

    4. The Players can choose to not cooperate with each other at all and still compete as though there were other competitors. The odds are good, though, that this would result in them both going bankrupt (as they try to funnel R&D money into the product to outpace the other) and getting bought by companies from other sectors. (The usual outcome of the Prisoner's Dilemma - both defect and both end up with the longer sentence, in an effort to get the higher reward of going free.) However, there is a chance that one or both could succeed in staying in business and essentially reaching an equilibrium. (The "both defect" option of Stag Hunt.)

    Additionally, Mises' theory isn't the only way to break a monopoly, nor is government intervention. The game itself can change in such a way that it opens up to new Players. The Browser Wars are a prime example of the rules of the game itself changing. Microsoft was able to bankrupt Netscape, because browsers, at the time, carried a dollar value and were installed via disk. Microsoft, themselves, changed the game (thus "winning") when they bundled IE with Windows. However, as the Internet matured to the point that download several megabytes of data became feasible, the game changed again, and allowed the nonprofit Mozilla Foundation to release Firefox and break the monopoly of IE6. Microsoft attempted to undermine Mozilla using similar tactics to what were successful against Netscape, but failed due to the free/non-profit/open source nature of Firefox.

    Regardless of what happens, the above is what can happen in any free market economy, even absent government intervention (for good or ill of the economy). Yes, patent law can make monopolies happen more easily by raising barriers to entry, however, I also specifically mentioned that in conjunction with real world free markets - i.e. the ones that are actually in place, complete with government laws that they have to deal with. They may not be perfect laizze-fair free markets, but a perfect free market (free of government regulation) does not exist in the real world. As such, patents and other laws are, therefore, part of the reason that "free market" systems (because you are correct, they aren't truly free, and are probably better described as interventionist markets, or at least interventionist-leaning markets), as they are implemented, are flawed. The ideal of a free market is far more robust than the actual implementations.

    Why is it that the actual implementations are flawed, even when the theory is robust? And why is it that Mises' outcome is only one of many? Because we're human. Humans are not solely rational beings, and neither are we solely self-interested opportunistic. We're also not perfect (and, therefore, don't always have a perfect picture of the path that is in our best interests). Because of this, we'll do things for reasons other than rationality or self-interest. That's what it's all about. Mises' outcome assumes that the monopoly company will take the purely opportunistic route of increasing the price to get as much money as the demand will allow. However, other options exist that are rational, but not entirely opportunistic or self-interested. Sharing the market in an oligopoly is rational, but not fully self-interested. After all, you have to share the market, and therefore, cannot generate as much revenue as if you were alone. However, it is still somewhat self-interested, in that it maintains the status quo with regard to new players, and allows many of the monopolistic benefits with fewer of the risks.

    Likewise, even consumers make decisions based on reasons other than rationality or self-interest. Ethical reasons (which are at least sometimes rational, but not necessarily self-interested in an efficiency and resource-maximizing sense) are a huge factor in consumer decisions, and such decisions can only affect the corporations if there are enough consumers making the same decision, so in a large enough population, it's not necessarily rational or self-interested for the company to change their ways based on some consumers' ethical decisions.

    And, finally (once again), does any of the above necessarily make a company "evil"? No. Is the company going to, by default, do things that run counter to maintaining its status? Not likely, but possible, all depending on the individuals who are running and directing the company. Does any of the above mean free markets are bad? Not at all. Does it mean they're not robust? Certainly not. The free market economy, even when the implementation is flawed, is more robust than most of the alternatives we've come up with (there is argument that a deliberate blend of free market with carefully-considered government oversight could be more robust, but that is a discussion for a different forum).

    That said, I'm not interested in debating the ideals of a free market. I stated what I did based on the implementation of such markets. If you want to debate the implementation (ie - the state of the "free" market as it exists in the real world/interventionist market, be it in the US or elsewhere), by all means. Debating the ideal, however, will likely result in a circular debate that probably won't get anywhere, regardless of who (if anyone, after all, we're all human and, therefore, are not omniscient) is "right."

    http://faculty.lebow.drexel.edu/mccainr/top/eco/p/freemarket.html (Written by Roger McCain - http://www.lebow.drexel.edu/academics/departments/economics/faculty/rogermccain )
    http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=344352 (interesting discussion regarding monopolies in the free market, and TheStatutoryApe holds largely the same views that I do and seems to be better able to explain)
  • Dragonwolf
    Dragonwolf Posts: 5,600 Member
    It seems like we're in a circular argument. It is the government that allows certain things to happen and prevents others. Those decisions are driven by the dollars coming from the lobby, which is funded by the companies we choose to buy our food from. It really only stops being circular when you A) stop buying their crap and B) don't vote for the asshats that pass bad consumer laws.

    As for sources, most people live within an hour of a farm (even if you live in a huge city - http://www.eatwild.com/products/index.html). And many local farms do delivery to the metro areas they are close to. Or you can always order via the Internet. Not optimal, it costs more, but your dollars don't go to the companies you don't want to do business with.

    Everyone has a choice. They just have to be willing to make the commitment.

    Indeed, regarding your first paragraph.

    The second I partially agree with. Your first statement is only true (at least in the US) for people living in the midwestern/central states, beyond that, it gets sketchy, at best, and the farmland is increasingly being converted to residential land. Additionally, being near farms doesn't necessarily mean you can source from them. For example, many states prohibit the sale of raw milk to consumers (the only transaction of raw milk is from farms to processors). Other farms may be commercial or otherwise not sell directly to consumers, but rather to the large distributors.

    Likewise, regarding sourcing from farther away, it again comes back to where your ethics lie and where you're willing to concede. Many people refuse to use FedEx and/or UPS for various reasons, for example. And, again, one of the reasons to source locally is ecological, which is defeated when you source from farther away. At that point, which is better - sourcing locally from a conventional farm (and perhaps for food that isn't supposed to be something you consume, such as corn), or sourcing remotely from an organic farm for compliant food? Your priorities will determine which choice you make, none of which may be all that great.

    http://www.farmland.org/resources/fote/states/
  • SteamClutch
    SteamClutch Posts: 433 Member
    Wow! This post has some legs... I didn't think it would go more than a day.
  • strychnine7
    strychnine7 Posts: 210 Member
    It seems you and I may be using different definitions of the word "monopoly." The one that I use is "a monopoly exists when a specific individual or an enterprise has sufficient control over a particular product or service to determine significantly the terms on which other individuals shall have access to it. Monopolies are thus characterized by a lack of economic competition for the good or service that they provide and a lack of viable substitute goods." There is no need for the government to grant such status to an organization for it to exist (I never once denied the existence of government sanctioned/appointed monopolies - in fact, that was my point when I mentioned utilities and whatnot in situations where monopolies still arise - because they do exist, but such sanctioning is not required). Also, this is slightly different from Mises' and Rand's "evil monopoly" or oppressive monopoly, because a real-world monopoly won't necessarily set a price high enough to invite competition (thanks to game theory principles). Additionally, there has never been a monopoly in a truly free market, because a truly free market has never existed, because the human factor flaws the ideal in the implementation.

    So it's a bait and switch? You bring up examples of evil illegitimate monopolies created by government intervention in one post, then in this post, inform me that you are talking about something completely different? Further, you seem to infer that government either explicitly grants monopoly or it doesn't. This is not necessarily the case. Mere intervention in the economy causes all manner of unforeseen consequences. Many times, this results in monopoly. In a free society, to start a food business you shouldn't need anything but food to sell and a place for folks to come buy it. In the US, however, you need thousands and thousands of dollars worth of licenses and permits - which takes weeks or months to get - before you can do anything. A taxi medallion (license) can cost over a million dollars. So, your point that a truly free market has never existed is entirely in contradiction to your assertion that, "There is no need for the government to grant such status to an organization for it to exist." If no free market has ever existed, how can you possibly know that a monopoly can exist without government?

    As Hans Hoppe wrote, "There can be no socialism without a state, and as long as there is a state there is socialism. The state, then, is the very institution that puts socialism into action; and as socialism rests on aggressive violence directed against innocent victims, aggressive violence is the nature of any state."

    Socialism, of course, being the opposite of a free market.

    Google rose to power because its primary domain is on the Internet, which has pretty much zero barrier to entry. The companies that I used as examples are not Internet based companies, but companies that work very much in real-world commodities (ATI/AMD and nVidia/Intel). Additionally, Google did not originally directly compete with Microsoft, Apple, or IBM. In the 90s (when Google started), those three companies were primarily in the hardware and operating system domain. Everything else they did (web search, web browsers, etc) was secondary, if it existed at all at the time. Google was solely a search engine in the beginning. Of the other three, they were only slightly competing with MSN, who had also just released a search engine. Google's primary competitors at the time were not Microsoft, Apple, or IBM, but rather Lycos, Yahoo, and Ask Jeeves (and AOL search when they went public). It's only been relatively recently that it's competed with the companies you mentioned (and even then, only in relatively small, and arguably tangential to their core competencies, divisions).

    There's a very specific reason that I specifically stated that oligopolies and monopolies arise in free market economies in industries with high barriers to entry and limited resources, because those are the determining factors of the odds of the competitors ultimately becoming a monopoly or oligopoly. Limited resources means that there's only so much to go around, and as demand goes up, so do prices (hey look! I do know a thing or two about economics!).

    Who cares how a company starts? If a company sells lemonade and grows to be a massive business who is also selling computers and construction equipment, how does this matter to the discussion? Maybe HP had a monopoly on computers, and John Deere a monopoly on construction equipment, in this hypothetical. So what that Lemonade Inc. started in the lemonade business? They are still competing int he monopolized area now. Kind of like who cares that Amazon started in the book-selling business but is not competing with Netflix in the streaming media business? And who cares that Disney started in the cartoon business and now competes with Busch Gardens in the amusement park business and Carnival in the cruise ship business?

    And again, you talk about (abusive, or otherwise) monopolies arising in a free market when you have previously conceded that free markets don't (and haven't) existed. And for the record, abusive monopolies (the only ones that really matter to anyone anyway) cannot arise in a free market.

    http://fff.org/explore-freedom/article/the-misplaced-fear-of-monopoly/

    Let's say you start with ten companies that do the same thing - make CPUs. They all start out on roughly equal level.

    Players 1, 3, 5, and 7 come up with different breakthroughs that sell more, making them more money. This means Players 2, 4, 6, 8, 9, and 10 lose market share and, therefore, money. With all the competition from this industry and others (and the increased demand from the successful players), the prices for silicon, copper, and gold (three resources needed for electronics manufacturing) increase.

    Players 8 and 10 decide to run at a deficit to find and make a new product. They find it, and the breakthrough allows them to get out of debt and pull ahead of the others. Players 2, 4, 6, and 9 played more conservatively, but continue to lose market share (and, therefore, revenue and profits).

    Players 2 and 4 decide to merge (becoming 2a). Player 1 buys Player 9. Raw materials prices stay roughly the same, but are high enough to prevent some new players from coming in. Players 11 and 12 join while the other barriers to entry is still rather low. Number of players: 10

    Player 11 finds a game-changing breakthrough and buys 12 and 2a. Player 3 counters with an equal breakthrough released later that year and finds similar success. Players 5 and 7 merge (becoming 5a). Number of players: 7.

    The cycles of breakthroughs, buying, and merging continues for several years. Some new players join, but are eventually bought by existing players as raw materials cost rise, as the demand for more knowledge rises, and as Moore's Law turns over a few times and physical size, and heat, limits start getting reached on the current architecture. Players 1, 5, 8, and 11 are left. Player 20 rises up in a separate, but related sector. Player 5 sees this new sector as a lucrative opportunity to branch out and does so. They sink a good deal of money into it and start seeing enough return that they can drop the prices of their primary product to that it barely makes any profit, in a move to drive other competition out of that market. The other players choose other routes of saving money and advancing the technology. Number of Players: 4 (+1 in a related sector)

    A few more cycles go through, and Player 5 has succeeded in bankrupting, and taking over, Players 1 and 8. Player 11 has also seen that Player 20's sector is on the rise - and sees that without some breakthrough in how CPUs are made, the current conditions will bankrupt the company - and decides to buy them for a hefty price. Number of Players: 2

    The primary sector still has high demand, and now that most of the competition is gone, both remaining Players raise prices slightly in order to provide more revenue for further advancement of the secondary sector and to keep R&D up for the primary, but not enough to tempt new players.

    From here, things can go a number of different directions, depending on government, economic prowess of the Players, resources, etc.

    The first option is what Mises assumes will happen in all cases - one Player will buy or bankrupt the other, then jack up the price to the point that new players come into the game (the "evil monopoly"). This very well can, and does, happen (though there is the pretty glaring footnote that until someone can get into the game and become a true threat to the status quo, there is still a monopoly situation - such as what happened with Internet Explorer until Mozilla was able to get a foothold as the rules of the game itself changed).

    However, the very fact that it's known to happen means that it won't happen in all real-world cases, because monopolies aren't inherently evil, and the Players will change their tactics to prevent that from happening (this is where game theory comes into play). Instead, they'll do other things:

    1. Bankrupt or buy the other Player, but don't jack up the price enough to tempt new players. Regardless of whether they get complacent, the revenue margin for a new Player to be competitive isn't high enough to be able to feasibly enter the game without taking a huge risk. At that point, the only ones that can compete are giants from other industries, who have other ways of funding. Whether this is good for the consumers is a mixed bag and depends entirely on what happens in the aftermath. (This is more or less what happened with Microsoft and Apple in the desktop market, though the comparison is imperfect, because it didn't completely bankrupt Apple and they were able to come back into the desktop market once they got their foot in the door in the handheld device arena. Regardless, the price of Windows and Windows computers, despite being the controlling option on the market, did not have prices that were that much different from the times where there is viable competition, because Microsoft didn't jack up the prices that much.)

    2. The Players can cooperate with each other and collude on prices of the products and/or the resources. This keeps the illusion of competition intact (and perhaps a small amount of actual competition), while still ensuring a command of the resources for the market, preventing new players from joining. For the consumer, the two Players are different, but their methods and product are essentially the same. (See also: Nash Equilibrium, Prisoner's Dilemma, and Stag Hunt) This is exactly what ATI and nVidia have historically done, and were both sued for in 2008 (GPU Antitrust Litigation).

    3. The Players can work together, or one can bankrupt the other, and jack the price up enough to bring in new players, then engage in tactics to forcibly eliminate those players through one means or another.

    4. The Players can choose to not cooperate with each other at all and still compete as though there were other competitors. The odds are good, though, that this would result in them both going bankrupt (as they try to funnel R&D money into the product to outpace the other) and getting bought by companies from other sectors. (The usual outcome of the Prisoner's Dilemma - both defect and both end up with the longer sentence, in an effort to get the higher reward of going free.) However, there is a chance that one or both could succeed in staying in business and essentially reaching an equilibrium. (The "both defect" option of Stag Hunt.)

    Additionally, Mises' theory isn't the only way to break a monopoly, nor is government intervention. The game itself can change in such a way that it opens up to new Players. The Browser Wars are a prime example of the rules of the game itself changing. Microsoft was able to bankrupt Netscape, because browsers, at the time, carried a dollar value and were installed via disk. Microsoft, themselves, changed the game (thus "winning") when they bundled IE with Windows. However, as the Internet matured to the point that download several megabytes of data became feasible, the game changed again, and allowed the nonprofit Mozilla Foundation to release Firefox and break the monopoly of IE6. Microsoft attempted to undermine Mozilla using similar tactics to what were successful against Netscape, but failed due to the free/non-profit/open source nature of Firefox.

    Regardless of what happens, the above is what can happen in any free market economy, even absent government intervention (for good or ill of the economy). Yes, patent law can make monopolies happen more easily by raising barriers to entry, however, I also specifically mentioned that in conjunction with real world free markets - i.e. the ones that are actually in place, complete with government laws that they have to deal with. They may not be perfect laizze-fair free markets, but a perfect free market (free of government regulation) does not exist in the real world. As such, patents and other laws are, therefore, part of the reason that "free market" systems (because you are correct, they aren't truly free, and are probably better described as interventionist markets, or at least interventionist-leaning markets), as they are implemented, are flawed. The ideal of a free market is far more robust than the actual implementations.

    Why is it that the actual implementations are flawed, even when the theory is robust? And why is it that Mises' outcome is only one of many? Because we're human. Humans are not solely rational beings, and neither are we solely self-interested opportunistic. We're also not perfect (and, therefore, don't always have a perfect picture of the path that is in our best interests). Because of this, we'll do things for reasons other than rationality or self-interest. That's what it's all about. Mises' outcome assumes that the monopoly company will take the purely opportunistic route of increasing the price to get as much money as the demand will allow. However, other options exist that are rational, but not entirely opportunistic or self-interested. Sharing the market in an oligopoly is rational, but not fully self-interested. After all, you have to share the market, and therefore, cannot generate as much revenue as if you were alone. However, it is still somewhat self-interested, in that it maintains the status quo with regard to new players, and allows many of the monopolistic benefits with fewer of the risks.

    Likewise, even consumers make decisions based on reasons other than rationality or self-interest. Ethical reasons (which are at least sometimes rational, but not necessarily self-interested in an efficiency and resource-maximizing sense) are a huge factor in consumer decisions, and such decisions can only affect the corporations if there are enough consumers making the same decision, so in a large enough population, it's not necessarily rational or self-interested for the company to change their ways based on some consumers' ethical decisions.

    And, finally (once again), does any of the above necessarily make a company "evil"? No. Is the company going to, by default, do things that run counter to maintaining its status? Not likely, but possible, all depending on the individuals who are running and directing the company. Does any of the above mean free markets are bad? Not at all. Does it mean they're not robust? Certainly not. The free market economy, even when the implementation is flawed, is more robust than most of the alternatives we've come up with (there is argument that a deliberate blend of free market with carefully-considered government oversight could be more robust, but that is a discussion for a different forum).

    That said, I'm not interested in debating the ideals of a free market. I stated what I did based on the implementation of such markets. If you want to debate the implementation (ie - the state of the "free" market as it exists in the real world/interventionist market, be it in the US or elsewhere), by all means. Debating the ideal, however, will likely result in a circular debate that probably won't get anywhere, regardless of who (if anyone, after all, we're all human and, therefore, are not omniscient) is "right."

    http://faculty.lebow.drexel.edu/mccainr/top/eco/p/freemarket.html (Written by Roger McCain - http://www.lebow.drexel.edu/academics/departments/economics/faculty/rogermccain )
    http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=344352 (interesting discussion regarding monopolies in the free market, and TheStatutoryApe holds largely the same views that I do and seems to be better able to explain)

    This whole thing is speculation and completely inadmissable. I could write my own speculation about all these hypothetical companies and come up with a completely different scenario.


    http://youtu.be/-q1fSNzYNhg
    http://youtu.be/76pWdExqfkY