When Do Markets Work?
In 1776 the American colonies rebelled and Adam Smith published The Wealth of Nations, and both events caused revolutions that transformed the world. America and the free-market capitalism espoused by Smith rose to power together, in a successful partnership of society and ideology, and now that partnership has stumbled and is again being challenged.
During the Great Depression of the 1930s, capitalism's greatest crisis ever, its major ideological opponent was Marxism, which was its exact antithesis. Free-market ideology said that government should always leave markets alone, despite clear evidence that free markets often do not work. Marxism said government should always control markets, despite equally clear evidence that free markets often do work. The trial-and-error process inherent in democracy eventually produced a mixed result that functioned well, in which free markets that worked well were mostly left alone (e.g., manufacturing), and free markets that worked badly were tightly regulated (e.g., finance).
Despite the clear set of facts on the ground, however, the struggle between all-or-nothing economic ideologies has continued to this day. The left maintained its Marxist sympathies up until the fall of the Soviet Union, while the right developed a free-market critique of the welfare state that resonated widely with the public. After the fall of communism, the right had the ideological field to itself, and so it put in place the misguided policies that have led to the present economic collapse.
Just as the right went back to an extreme position when the regulatory state faltered, so now the left is acting similarly. The right failed in the 1930s and today because it was unable to say, "This is when markets do not work". Similarly, the left has failed to persuade the country because it has never been able to say, "This is when markets DO work". This is what the left must have, in order to be able to govern.
This leaves the question posed in the title, "When do markets work?" Here is a modest proposal, which I believe progressives should embrace: "Markets work when they are beneficially competitive. This means that markets work when the only way for firms to make profits is by outcompeting other firms in benefiting people, without harming others".
People on the left need a more clear understanding of how markets are beneficial, because when markets work well they serve progressive goals. Well-functioning markets are not only productive, they are also redistributive. The reason is that competition reduces profits. If an industry is unusually profitable, then firms will produce more of what is profitable, or other firms will enter the market, and the increased supply will cause prices to drop. The lower prices represent a transfer of income from producers to consumers, which redistributes income and wealth. It promotes equality.
When this happens it is very powerful. Computers are a good example. This is an extremely high-tech business, that produces a very sophisticated product of quite high value. And computers have been improved by producers very rapidly. But, due to competition, profit margins in the computer industry are pretty low. Most of the increased value that has been created by this very productive industry has gone to consumers, with shareholders getting a much smaller fraction. Many other industries have followed this pattern in the history of capitalist economies.
The key aspect of this process is open competition. When firms have to compete beneficially against all comers in order to make money, their activities then are tightly controlled by consumers. This is itself a very strong type of regulation, and one that can ultimately be extremely effective. When this type of regulation of business activity by consumers is operating naturally, then government regulation is superfluous.
Now, I imagine that many leftist readers will be immediately objecting that this pattern is often not followed in a lot of other industries. Well, of course not, that's the point. People on the right tend to focus their attention mainly on those cases in which markets work, and to overgeneralize from those cases. This limiting of attention and overgeneralizing from it is how the free-market ideology was created. Of course, people on the left do exactly the same thing. They focus attention mainly on those cases in which free markets do not work, and overgeneralize from those. This is how the left-wing anti-business ideology is formed.
Progressives should realize, however, that an anti-business ideology is politically very limited. It works politically only in bad economic times, and when times get better it will be discarded. But that is not the worst thing about it. The worst thing about it is that it is simply wrong, just as a blindly-pro-business ideology is wrong. Free markets do work sometimes, and the progressives desperately need an economic ideology that acknowledges that and does not needlessly alienate large sectors of the economy that are functioning well.
We are now at a point where free-market ideology has been discredited and the voting public would consider an alternative. I would love to see progressives offer something in that area that is economically sound, morally progressive, and politically appealing. I like the phrase 'beneficially competitive' because it combine a nice-person word with a tough-guy word, so it can't be emotionally pigeonholed by people as either too hard or too soft, and the dissonance between the two makes it interesting. But my major point is that progressives need to show the entire voting public that they understand markets and businesses as tools that society should use wisely to benefit people rather than as enemies to be subdued and subjugated. I feel that a moment of possible liberalization is at hand in America, and I would hate to see that opportunity for progressives go to waste.





Please don't take this personally because I applaud your efforts. That said...
It's sounds like you have bought into a stereotype. I have never heard of an anti-business progressive, conservative, or even socialist. Statistically, the US economy does better under democratic control than republican.
All progressives want is a functioning government that provides the things that the free market can't or won't. Things like access to health care, and quality education.
The free market is anything but free: large comporations lobby government for:
1) Lower taxes.
2) Less regulation that affects them adversely.
3) More regulation that affects them favorably.
The free market goes through great lengths to deny culpability in a pile of dead bodies, or patch of scorched earth, and that is why the need for regulations - the 3rd party problem.
Another place where the free market is not free is when it gets the taxpayer to foot all the risk and none of the reward. 48% of the cost to create a new drug is provided by the taxpayer, yet a single company is allowed to patent and trademark the product. In fact, the free market is an inefficient model for the pharmaceutical industry. The drugs that are most likely to get developed are those with high profit potential, not those with the greatest social impact.
The government does not allow a company to 'own' the design of a critical weapons system, nor should it allow a company to 'own' the cure for a disease.
What are the chances that Exxon and Shell will reimburse the US taxpayer for some percentage of any profits they make in Iraq?
The US government employs 30,000 people to assist in just the weapons offset trade. Offsets get priority treatment into markets and can be highly disruptive. There is no free-market approach to the offset trade, yet there it is. Here is a list of member companies in just the Global Offset and Countertrade Association.
There is also:
Defense Industry Offset Association
International Reciprocal Trade Association
National Association of Trade Exchanges
Corporate Barter Council
Investment Recovery Association
These are gateway agents into the vast government network to support weapons sales. The taxpayer pays for this, and I would bet my last dollar that taxes are not collected nearly in proportion of the trade amount.
Now, the banks are taking taxpayer money. They are taking your money, and if you are lucky, they might loan it to you at interest. Most likely not. That's not very free-markety.
They are too-big-to-fail, yet not a peep about breaking them up to stop that. I would call that a moral hazard.
The Fed itself is the lender of last resort only because of frational reserve lending. There is no qualitative difference between counterfeiting and FRL except for who gets to do it. There would be no such thing as inflation/deflation without FRL.
The Fed, by the way, doubled the balance sheet without so much as a meeting. The president and congress only dream of such power.
December 31, 2008 7:17 PM | Reply | Permalink
Just about everybody is gone. It is like people on this site have a life, unlike myself.
Good post Tom. Kacker has some real fine points.
I cannot add much or will not because it would take me three hours and nobody would read it anyway.
1. Efficiency can kill. Cave paintings 15-30 thousand years ago demonstrate that man liked to fish. After thirty thousand years we became so good at it that hundreds of species are dying out.
We just got too good at it.
We started drilling a couple of feet into the earth to catch some oil. At the same time geniuses like Ford began making cars at a rate not seen before. Now there are billions of cars on the planet and we dig a mile or two into the ground and into the ground under the sea and under the ice. We just got to damn good at it.
We have been using coal as a heating fuel for thousands of years. We scraped it off certain grounds at one time and now we have miles upon miles of mines--open pit and deep tunnel mines.
We got so good at it that we are not only killing the miners but people hundreds of miles away from the mine itself by polluting the ground waters and rivers and lakes and swamps.
We just got to damn good at it.
2. They were selling hamburgers or a reasonable facsimile thereof on the streets of Rome two thousand years ago according to the History/Discovery Channels. Back in the fifties when I was a child, there were all sorts of different hamburger joints all over Minnesota.
The biz genius' invented the franchise and now there are five or six brands of cheap and terribly tasting hamburgers all over the country that make people fat and sick and the franchises pay their employees next to nothing. The employees do not have enough money to pump up the economy and all the profits go into the pockets of pigs who own the franchises.
Same with Walmart. They buy their stuff from a labor market that pays people fifty cents an hour and bring it here to be sold by people making substandard poverty level wages. Again, the employees do not have enough money to pump up the economy and all the profits go into the pockets of the pigs who own the franchises.
That is enough for now from someone who only knows what he reads on the front pages of the nation's newspapers that are primarily owned by a few huge corporations interested in seeing that their other franchises earn money.
Happy New Year
s
December 31, 2008 11:29 PM | Reply | Permalink
Dickday, guess I don't have a life. "Beneficially competitive" isn't such a bad phrase. The problem is that Conservative dickheads think that competition is the answer to everything, that the market is self correcting, yadda, yadda, yadda. It's not self-correcting; it obviously needs to be regulated so that it is beneficial. And some things just aren't amenable to market solutions; medical care is one of them. There is no shopping around in the classical sense, hence no true competition, in the medical industry; what patients have to endure is a not so subtle kind of extortion. Pay us what we ask or suffer that migraine, spend the rest of your life as a drooler, or die. The reverse of the Conservative dickheads are the Progressive dickheads who think communal solutions are the answer to everything. They're not. Barack Obama appears to understand that. He is, as Martha Stewart might say, a good thing.
January 1, 2009 5:49 AM | Reply | Permalink
Another excellent post...and some very excellent comments as well.
Dickday...I haven't been around TPM for very long, but I must warn you that you are in danger of becoming one of my favorite crotchety old men.
I also do not have a life although at one point I did. I've misplaced it somewhere and am positive that one day I will accidently run into it. My only worry is that I hope I can still recognize it when I do.
January 1, 2009 1:48 PM | Reply | Permalink
I will tell you one thing Flower, this new blogging thing (three months and counting) is more fun than I ever thought it would be.
One day I might find Viagra, but it is fun to write something every day. It is pretend, I know, but I meet real people.
January 1, 2009 1:53 PM | Reply | Permalink
Nice post. To me, markets work when they reward and incentivize creativity and freedom and they fail when they don't. Markets fail when corporations grow so much in power that they can rival governments. And that's the real issue -- markets fail without boundaries. Boundaries protect corporations both from foreign competition and from themselves.
Regulation is a capitalist's best friend. Without it, the whole thing devolves into a "whose gun is bigger" contest.
January 1, 2009 2:00 PM | Reply | Permalink
I'd be happy to debate this Tom, but I think statements such as this pre-empt the discussion, by mis-stating where we are: "Just as the right went back to an extreme position when the regulatory state faltered, so now the left is acting similarly." It may feel centrist or moderate or "fair" to say things like this, but I can see little or no grasp on reality by this statement. The Left? Meaning who? How long have they been in power recently? I know everyone likes to make these kinds of "fair" statements... but there is NO "Left" in the US that in any way compares to the 30's or even 60's or 70's. The Government, the Press and the Private Corporation have been intertwined and DOMINANT for decades now under very clear Right/private agendas.
And their "extreme ideas?" I'd really need an EXAMPLE, a widely discussed Left" idea of today, that you would find extreme? Universal health care? Helping the Big 3? Taking equity positions in the financial sector? THOSE ideas are actually being floated across the political board, and in many cases, from within business itself.
In short, it's worth discussing the nature of the firm, markets, competition, trade, consumption etc. - but if we have to buy the earlier rhetorical stuff as though it were historically true, we probably won't get to the debate you want.
January 1, 2009 11:37 PM | Reply | Permalink