Jim Devine writes:

>> I don't know much about "Masonomics" (having thought that it was just
>> a more extreme and puerile version of the Chicago school). But the
>> slogan saying that  "Markets fail. Use markets" is like Stalin saying
>> "Central planning fails. Use central planning." It's crazy. If a GMU
>> insider thinks that represents their point of view, it's quite
>> telling.

I am not sure why you jump to such a harsh conclusion based upon a 
bumpersticker, especially when you show no inclination to understand what the 
bumpersticker is supposed to reflect,   If you had clicked on the link and read 
the short article, you would have read:  

---------
"Somewhere along the way, mainstream economics became hung up on the concept of 
a perfect market and an optimal allocation of resources. The conditions 
necessary for a perfect market are absurdly demanding. Everything in the 
economy must be transparent. Managers must have perfect information about 
worker productivity and consumers must have perfect information about product 
quality. There can be nothing that gives an advantage to a firm with a large 
market share. There cannot be any benefits or costs of any market activity that 
spill over beyond that market.

The argument between Chicago and MIT seems to be over whether perfect markets 
are a "good approximation" or a "bad approximation" to reality. Masonomics goes 
along with the MIT view that perfect markets are a bad approximation to 
reality. But we do not look to government as a "solution" to imperfect markets.

Masonomics sees market failure as a motivation for entrepreneurship. As an 
example of market failure, let us use a classic case described by a Nobel 
Laureate, which is that the seller of a used car knows more about the condition 
of the car than the buyer. Masonomics predicts that entrepreneurs will try to 
address this problem. In fact, there are a number of entrepreneurial solutions. 
Buyers can obtain vehicle history reports. Sellers can offer warranties. Firms 
such as Carmax undertake professional inspections and stake their reputation on 
the quality of the cars that they sell.

Masonomics worries much more about government failure than market failure. 
Governments do not face competitive pressure. They are immune from the 
"creative destruction" of entrepreneurial innovation. In the market, 
ineffective firms go out of business. In government, ineffective programs 
develop powerful constituent groups with a stake in their perpetuation."
-----

Personally, I would put it this way.  No matter how many flaws in markets you 
can identify, the existence of such flaws do not logically lead to the 
conclusion that the absence of markets (i.e. government intervention) would 
lead to a preferable result.

David Shemano

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