lpetrich
Contributor
Economists who are not capitalist Panglossians recognize various pathologies of capitalism, most generally,
market failures. From the Wikipedia article,
tragedy of the commons (individual gains but shared losses) and the
tragedy of the anticommons (avoiding individual losses causing shared losses) and
economic bubbles (assets attracting buyers willing to bid up their prices far beyond any sensible economic justification).
I've seen some people try to argue that market failures never happen, but that often involves defining "rationality" or whatever so broadly as to become meaningless, or else trying to define market failures out of existence.
But there is a very interesting recent market failure. In recent years, various oligarchs and plutocrats have whined that they are being treated as badly as the Nazis' victims and lynching victims and the like. But also in recent years, a certain John Aglialoro has produced a three-part movie adaptation of Ayn Rand's novel Atlas Shrugged, a novel that pictures capitalists as Nietzschean heroes who do what many disgruntled workers have done. He is the head of a company that makes physical-fitness equipment, something that has given him the money necessary to make that adaptation. But what I find most curious is that those self-pitying oligarchs and plutocrats have not pumped large amounts of money into making those movies. One might expect them to love a movie that shows what misunderstood geniuses they are compared to everybody else, but they had no interest in financing those movies, and making them glossy, lavish productions with lots of advertising. They are cheap, low-budget productions, and it shows, especially in the third movie. The movies also had different casts and crews, resulting in three Dagny Taggarts.
Atlas Shrugged: Part I -- budget: $20m, box-office earnings: $4,627,375
Atlas Shrugged: Part II -- budget: $10m, box-office earnings: $3,336,053
Atlas Shrugged: Part III -- budget: $5m, box-office earnings: $851,690
So by the standard of Atlas Shrugged, the movie is a failure. That book advocates the money theory of value, and in it, Francisco d'Anconia delivers his "money speech", arguing that the love of money is the root of all good.
This includes such resource-management troubles as theIn economics, market failure is a situation in which the allocation of goods and services by a free market is not efficient. That is, there exists another conceivable outcome where a market participant may be made better-off without making someone else worse-off. (The outcome is not Pareto optimal.) Market failures can be viewed as scenarios where individuals' pursuit of pure self-interest leads to results that are not efficient – that can be improved upon from the societal point of view. The first known use of the term by economists was in 1958, but the concept has been traced back to the Victorian philosopher Henry Sidgwick.
Market failures are often associated with time-inconsistent preferences, information asymmetries, non-competitive markets, principal–agent problems, externalities, or public goods.
I've seen some people try to argue that market failures never happen, but that often involves defining "rationality" or whatever so broadly as to become meaningless, or else trying to define market failures out of existence.
But there is a very interesting recent market failure. In recent years, various oligarchs and plutocrats have whined that they are being treated as badly as the Nazis' victims and lynching victims and the like. But also in recent years, a certain John Aglialoro has produced a three-part movie adaptation of Ayn Rand's novel Atlas Shrugged, a novel that pictures capitalists as Nietzschean heroes who do what many disgruntled workers have done. He is the head of a company that makes physical-fitness equipment, something that has given him the money necessary to make that adaptation. But what I find most curious is that those self-pitying oligarchs and plutocrats have not pumped large amounts of money into making those movies. One might expect them to love a movie that shows what misunderstood geniuses they are compared to everybody else, but they had no interest in financing those movies, and making them glossy, lavish productions with lots of advertising. They are cheap, low-budget productions, and it shows, especially in the third movie. The movies also had different casts and crews, resulting in three Dagny Taggarts.
So by the standard of Atlas Shrugged, the movie is a failure. That book advocates the money theory of value, and in it, Francisco d'Anconia delivers his "money speech", arguing that the love of money is the root of all good.