Symmetry wrote:saxitoxin wrote:Symmetry wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Symmetry wrote:I'll ask you for the same example I asked of everyone else- for an important public service that works better and costs less under the completely free market, unfettered by regulations. The system that you seem to advocate.
That one's easy. Food. The most essential public service of all, the provision of food.
Owing to a relatively low level of government participation in food production, you have an enormous number of food choices available. Whether you're a rabid carnivore or a finicky vegan, whether your diet is restricted for medical or religious reasons, whether your tastes run to the blazing hot or the icy cold, some merchant is out there, pandering to your needs and wants. A worldwide network of millions of farmers, tens of thousands of wholesalers, and hundreds of thousands of retailers ensures that exotic foods from all over the world are delivered to your neighbourhood, sometimes even directly to your door. And the cost is so ridiculously cheap! Whereas our ancestors spent close to 90% of their efforts just staving off starvation, the average person in the industrialized world today spends less than 10% of his income on food, and the percentage falls further with each passing generation.
Even in the poor countries, although obviously the percentage is higher, it is rapidly falling. Real starvation is becoming rare even in the third world, and usually driven by political interference, as in Darfur, for instance. According to the WHO, in 2010 we passed a significant milestone: for the first time more people died from obesity-related illnesses than from starvation or malnutrition. (Not claiming that obesity is a good thing; but it is a telling measurement of how rare real starvation is becoming.)
Quality food everywhere, in abundance, delivered promptly and enthusiastically and at ridiculously cheap prices. That's what a (relatively) unfettered free market delivers.
But this goes against your definition of what a free market model is. Relatively unfettered is not unfettered. I can sort of accept your points, but I'm not sure it's the easy example of the free market you proposed. That and a lot of food production is heavily subsidised and controlled by governments.
Aside from the fact that - as breathlessly presented to you by 6 different commenters - your OP example is not one of "free market", it also is not one that's free of fettering so, by the standards you've just applied to Dukasur, we would have to proclaim "all inefficiency in British rail is the result of a regime of government regulation." (The Office of Rail Regulation must approve route changes, inspect safety standards and so forth.)
At this point it's unclear exactly what you're asking for, other than for everyone to agree with you whereupon you become extremely angry and frustrated when people do not. This seems to be the typical route most of your threads take.
Then your argument is with Dukasaur's definition, which was, to quote Dukasaur:Dukasaur wrote:A free market is a state of unfettered competition, where no participant is granted any special advantage by the state.
My argument is that his example of such a market doesn't even fill the requirements of his own definition.
No. You've just started asking that only Black/White, 100% in one column or the next, examples be used. There's nothing outside of a laboratory or thought experiment that meets this latest standard you've introduced in the revolving door of standards you've demanded (as one fails to sustain your argument you retreat and introduce another). Even in the face of your newest standard your own argument still fails. The extreme to which you've taken his definition - if applied to your OP - realizes that British rail is a regulated creature and any inefficiencies in it are the result of the state.
- By not accepting the very easy dismissal that your OP was simply based on a sophistic understanding of free market - which it was - you've created a path of complex convolution of infinitely self-negating arguments that would require you to sit here and present definitions and re-definitions to sustain your initial assertion for eternity - which seems to be what you're going for ... I'm sure this thread will easily continue for another 200-300 pages just like Scott's healthcare thread which depends on a similar level of fanaticism (albeit from the other side) to sustain it.



