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Re: Economic Laws
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2.) Bottled water doesn't run showers, toilets, or clean plates, further 1 dollar per liter is price gouging Water should be sold where supply equals demand when all externalities are adjusted for. Without government regulation this will never be the case. So the Water companies have to charge less money then a dollar a gallon, 75¢ per gallon is still exploitation. And do you realize how incredibly inefficient shipping water by truck would be? Capitalism is the best system because it is the most efficient system. Laissez-Faire Capitalism is what happens when people completely forget about the idea of efficiency because its just too hard for them to understand. Quote:
They're no different then Marxists. Quote:
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Re: Economic Laws
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And why is $1 a litre gouging? This seems to be the market-clearing price. If people thought it was too high, they would not buy it, the supplier would have a surplus and either go out of business or lower his prices. You might think that $1 a litre is gouging, but your oppinion is of no relevance in an exchange between two people. No, those economists are not hacks. They are tenured economists at four year schools. Block even has an endowed chair. These are not hacks. You are right about their methodology. While other economists look at data and expect a theory to pop up, Austrians use logic. As you have argued, people behave outside of nice neat equations. Austrians don't pretend to be able to predict the exact future of an economy. Which of their theories do you think are bad? When has a monopoly arisen in the way you desribe.
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"Sometimes it is said that man cannot be trusted with the government of himself. Can he, then, be trusted with the government of others? Or have we found angels in the form of kings to govern him? Let history answer this question." -Thomas Jefferson in his first inauguration address |
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Re: Economic Laws
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$1 isn't where supply equals demand but because a person needs water to live they'll be forced to pay it. When you hold the only means of the survival of the citizens of a city, it should be charged as if there was a competitive market, as a result of being allowed by the people to hold such a position. Quote:
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Real economists can and do predict the future fairly accurately, and when they fail they reanalyze and fix there theory. the Mises Institute and the Austrian School of Economics simply repeat the same mantra regardless of the results. Quote:
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Re: Economic Laws
Cities will be built where there is a water source. History shows us this. Many cities are built near rivers because this is where the water is.
You realize that the most efficient pricing is when supply equals demand correct? Quote:
But, as I said, I don't think demand is inelastic. When the price rises above a certain level, people will begin to look for alternitives. For example, they might have a well dug, or they migh have water delivered. Will these things cost more than the city supplied (or controled) water? Probably. But this is not, in any way, a failure of the market. People that live closer to water are going to enjoy lower prices for water. People that live far away from a source of water are going to have to pay more for a water. I don't see why this is such a market failure. And if this is a market failure, many other things are also market failures. Are we going to invite the state to regulate everything because some people must pay more for a particular good because they live far from where the good is produced? Quote:
And the Austrian School does not repeat the same mantra, they have changed and updated ideas several times. If Austrians, as you say, are hacks that must group together in one school to protect eachother, how do you account for the fact that there are Austrians all over the world in colleges (tenured and not tenured)? Further, how do you account for the fact that F.A. Hayek, and Austrian Economist, won the Nobel Prize?
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"Sometimes it is said that man cannot be trusted with the government of himself. Can he, then, be trusted with the government of others? Or have we found angels in the form of kings to govern him? Let history answer this question." -Thomas Jefferson in his first inauguration address Last edited by liberty1776; 06-20-2007 at 05:58 AM. |
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Re: Economic Laws
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Austrians are not considered hacks by most economists. The founder of the school, Menger, is one of three people who were the founders of the marginal revolution. The other two are Walrus and Jevons, all three of these men are respected by most economists. Further, the fact that many Austrians might congregate at one school (and, as I said, there are Austrians around the world) does not mean that they are 'hacks.' The Chicago School congregates at the University of Chicago, are they hacks?
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"Sometimes it is said that man cannot be trusted with the government of himself. Can he, then, be trusted with the government of others? Or have we found angels in the form of kings to govern him? Let history answer this question." -Thomas Jefferson in his first inauguration address |
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Re: Economic Laws
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Surely, if it worked nations which implemented would be far more economically advanced then the moderate systems of the OECD. Oh I know you're going to use the old marxist cop-out that its never been really tried. |
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Re: Economic Laws
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__________________
"Sometimes it is said that man cannot be trusted with the government of himself. Can he, then, be trusted with the government of others? Or have we found angels in the form of kings to govern him? Let history answer this question." -Thomas Jefferson in his first inauguration address |
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