Table of Contents

1. Core Arguments Against Market Efficacy

The human invented concept of markets and price being the mechanism to automatically control the allocation of resources no longer works

The belief that the price mechanism is flawed in allocating resources stems from several forms of market failure, wher the conditions for a perfectly efficient market are not met.


2. Social and Modern Critiques

Beyond traditional market failures, other criticisms focus on the mechanism's outcomes in a modern context:

In short, the critics hold that while the price mechanism may be an efficient system for coordinating supply and demand for private goods under specific conditions, its inherent failures—especially externalities and the issue of inequality—prove that it is not an effective or desirable mechanism for managing the overall allocation of all resources in a way that maximizes social welfare.

If someone wer to say that the market /always/ works, that would be a sliptun, as it clearly fails in the numerous cases mentioned above.

Mixed Economy Solutions ⚖️

The mixed economy is the most common real-world system and attempts to capture the efficiency of markets while mitigating ther failures through government intervention. It uses a hybrid system that blends market and non-market mechanisms.

Intervention Tool Resource Allocation Purpose Example
Direct Provision Allocating resources away from the private sector to produce goods the market under-provides (public/merit goods). Government providing national defense, state schools, or public roads.
Fiscal Intervention Using financial incentives to steer resource allocation. Taxes on cigarettes to discourage consumption (less resources to demerit goods); Subsidies for solar panels to encourage production (more resources to merit goods).
Regulation & Legislation Restricting the market's allocation decision wher a negative outcome is likely. Environmental protection rules (restricts allocation to polluting activities); Minimum wage laws (affects the allocation of the labor resource).
Non-Price Rationing For scarce public resources that are not to be allocated by willingness to pay. Using priority lists (e.g., for organ transplants or subsidized housing) or lotteries (e.g., for school admissions or military draft exemption).

The goal of a mixed economy is to balance the efficiency and productivity provided by market incentives with the equity and stability provided by government planning and intervention.

1. Evidence for the Skew Toward Free Market Principles

The trend since the 1980s in many Western mixed economies (e.g., the US, UK, and much of the OECD) shows a reduction in the government's role in redistribution and regulation, which are the non-market mechanisms designed to ensure equity.

A. Rising Inequality 📈

The most compelling evidence for the shift is the dramatic rise in income and wealth inequality:

B. Policy Shifts that Fueled the Trend

The increasing inequality is generally attributed to specific policy changes that have reduced the government's interventionist role:


2. Disenchantment of the Average Person 😔

The feeling of disenchantment is a psychological and political consequence of this shift, reflecting that the system is no longer working as intended for the majority: