Donate Bitcoin

Donate Paypal


PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby nero » Fri 30 Dec 2005, 19:35:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he theoretical economic definition of a monopoly is a firm which limits supply in order to raise prices. Clearly that is not true of Standard Oil. It is true of labor unions however.


There is no necessity to raise prices to be a monopoly. You could equally be the sole buyer for your suppliers to be in a monopoly situation. If you use your market dominance to raise your profits you are acting in a monopolistic manner.
Biofuels: The "What else we got to burn?" answer to peak oil.
User avatar
nero
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1433
Joined: Sat 22 May 2004, 03:00:00
Location: Ottawa, Ontario

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby threadbear » Fri 30 Dec 2005, 19:39:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', 'Y')ou can pretend that Standard Oil had pricing power, the reality is that they didn't use it. In fact they used low prices to drive out competitors.

The entire argument against monopolies resides in their ability to command abnormally high prices. There is no case against Standard Oil.


The case against Standard Oil rested on the illegal actions the company took to maintain their monopoly. Their low prices for kerosene were part of a strategy for keeping the regulators off their backs. Had they been successful, prices would have eventually risen--and high. You might credit the expansion of American business in the last century to the success of regulators at breaking up Standard Oil. Had they been allowed ongoing monopolistic control there would likely never have been an era of cheap fuel.
User avatar
threadbear
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 7577
Joined: Sat 22 Jan 2005, 04:00:00

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby Dezakin » Fri 30 Dec 2005, 19:40:53

This comparison in ideologies of role in government is somewhat orthoganal to the thesis that liberal trade is good. You can have total free trade with vast antitrust organizations and socialist market regulation just as you can have a total randroid society within the borders that charges exhorbant tarriffs and essentially destroys international competition.

As Ricardo illustrated so long ago, free trade is good. It doesnt mean there arent market failures, which is what Keynes illustrated, or that exploitive monopolies are good or bad. Thats role of government ideology and a different thing. Sure there are relations, but people try to tie them together at the hip and we end up with confused ideology arguments like this.
User avatar
Dezakin
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1569
Joined: Wed 09 Feb 2005, 04:00:00

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby Free » Fri 30 Dec 2005, 20:03:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', 'T')he union is a company that is selling labor. The problem with unions is that they receive an exceptional power priviledge from the government. They have a government-enforced monopoly over their business. The buyer, the business who hires union worker, is not free to hire a non-union worker who is also not free to offer to work at a wage both parties find beneficial. If unions were truly competitive they would have to offer competitive wages that would eliminate unemployment.


Well I don't really know if this is an accurate description of reality in at least the majority of the cases, but apart from that I am pleased that you principally agree that it is a legitimate instrument of competition if employees organize themselves to have greater leverage, as long as they don't have a state-enforced monopoly on that.

But I suspect that it is not without a reason if a state enforces unions and doesn't allow businesses to employ non-union workers, simply because often enough the business aggressively cuts out union-workers with unfair means.

Walmart for example has specially trained anti-union staff. At the slightest sign of workers organizing themselves at one of their stores, they change the managers with the specially trained staff who play dirty until the store is "clean"....

Now of course we have to define "playing dirty", but that's exactly what the laws are there for that regulate the employer-employee relationship. And since the employee is generally in a weaker position, I think it's ok if the state gives him legal leverage...

But that's what the whole argument is about I suppose.
You say that the one who is not able to compete shouldn't be, because that's what competition is about in your eyes, the one in the weak position loses and the stronger one prevails, and no one should tamper with that?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
') This brings me to answer your first question. Is it an individual right to be protected from the outcome of a competition that leaves the individual starving or under other existential threats? ABSOLUTELY NOT. Because such a protection implies that there is someone in even worse conditions competing for the resources, and the protection will condemn that person to starvation. It is unjust, it is unfree, and it is immoral.


That statement is absolutely illogical. In no way it automatically implies that a third party has to suffer if somebody who has more than enough has to give something to the one who doesn't have enough to survive.
"Democracy means the opportunity to be everyone's slave."
Karl Kraus
User avatar
Free
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1280
Joined: Sun 28 Nov 2004, 04:00:00
Location: Europe

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby nero » Fri 30 Dec 2005, 20:29:27

Unions gained restricted legal monopolies to redress the effective monopoly power of the large employer. Governments gave one organization a monopoly power to redress another organization's monopoly power.

It would have been better if instead they had destroyed the business's effective monopoly power instead of extending monopoly power to another organization. The government could have done this if they had placed strict limits on the ability of companies to grow and gain power over their suppliers of labor. If in the early days of capitalism we had recognized that we needed to forgo some economies of scale in the interests of maintaining competition we would all have a more equitable society. Unfortunately that horse has already left the barn and international competition makes sure we cannot corral that horse back into the barn. Instead , through free trade and market opening treaties we are forcing developing countries to follow suite. Eventually they also will give legal protections to their workers as well, however the proverbial "race for the bottom" is retarding the process.
Biofuels: The "What else we got to burn?" answer to peak oil.
User avatar
nero
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1433
Joined: Sat 22 May 2004, 03:00:00
Location: Ottawa, Ontario

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby Dezakin » Fri 30 Dec 2005, 20:46:03

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'U')nions gained restricted legal monopolies to redress the effective monopoly power of the large employer. Governments gave one organization a monopoly power to redress another organization's monopoly power.

Large employers aren't monopoly buyers of labor last I checked, except in small towns perhaps and even then everyone has the power to move.
User avatar
Dezakin
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1569
Joined: Wed 09 Feb 2005, 04:00:00
Top

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby nero » Fri 30 Dec 2005, 22:29:02

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Dezakin', 'L')arge employers aren't monopoly buyers of labor last I checked, except in small towns perhaps and even then everyone has the power to move.


Certainly in many situations large employers never have a pure monopoly on employment. However as you correctly point out in small towns they often have monopoly like powers. Additionally when the employee has invested in specialized skills that have a limited demand even in a large market there may be a limited number of potential employers. In general there is a spectrum between perfect competition and perfect monopoly. The large business has more market power and is therefore closer to the monopoly end of the spectrum than is the individual worker. Then there is the competition provided by the possibility for substitution. Your suggestion that the worker can always move is the equivalent of substitution. It provides a limit to the ability of a monopolist exercising his powers in the market.
Biofuels: The "What else we got to burn?" answer to peak oil.
User avatar
nero
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1433
Joined: Sat 22 May 2004, 03:00:00
Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Top

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby jaws » Fri 30 Dec 2005, 23:56:37

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('nero', 'T')here is no necessity to raise prices to be a monopoly. You could equally be the sole buyer for your suppliers to be in a monopoly situation. If you use your market dominance to raise your profits you are acting in a monopolistic manner.
Well that's the point. Everybody acts in a monopolistic manner. Everyone is trying to maximize profits. Usually that means cutting costs and lowering prices to increase sales.

If you are Walmart and you drive down the prices your suppliers offer you, you are doing it in order to drive down the prices you offer to your customers. The reason being they will buy more stuff from you and you will make more profits. The customers get more stuff for less money, Walmart makes more profits, everybody is happy.

The only difference between a monopolist and perfect competition in the economic models used to justify anti-monopoly government action is the elasticity of demand. However any firm with dominant market share that doesn't have inelastic demand has absolutely no monopoly power. You can be the only existing provider of maple-flavored hamburger buns in the world, that doesn't make you a monopolist. People won't buy your product if it isn't priced competitively. To cartellize an industry with high elasticity is wasteful and pointless for everyone inside the deal.
User avatar
jaws
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1228
Joined: Sun 24 Apr 2005, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby jaws » Fri 30 Dec 2005, 23:58:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('nero', 'U')nions gained restricted legal monopolies to redress the effective monopoly power of the large employer. Governments gave one organization a monopoly power to redress another organization's monopoly power.

The problem with this theory is that they have no such power. They must always offer market-competitive wages or their employees will leave for other places. Wages in small, isolated areas may be low compared to large cities, that price reflects the relative lack of productivity of labor in isolated areas. It is not evidence of monopoly power by the company.

The whole thing was a scam by the labor lobby to justify their receiving exceptional powers, and you bought it.
User avatar
jaws
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1228
Joined: Sun 24 Apr 2005, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby nero » Sat 31 Dec 2005, 01:53:28

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', 'T')he problem with this theory is that they have no such power. They must always offer market-competitive wages or their employees will leave for other places.


No you're missing the point that the market competitive wages are a result of the balance of power between the workers and the businesses. If workers are in a strong negotiating position they gain a larger proportion of the benefits from the trade in services. The fact that businesses have less competition for the worker's services than the worker has when seaking employment means the business is in a more powerful negotiating position than the worker and thus can gain a large fraction of the benefits from the trade in the worker's services.

But I doubt you will see this because somehow you believe the market for employment services is perfectly competitive and the businesses have absolutely no pricing power.
Biofuels: The "What else we got to burn?" answer to peak oil.
User avatar
nero
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1433
Joined: Sat 22 May 2004, 03:00:00
Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Top

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby threadbear » Sat 31 Dec 2005, 02:10:09

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('nero', '
')The only difference between a monopolist and perfect competition in the economic models used to justify anti-monopoly government action is the elasticity of demand. However any firm with dominant market share that doesn't have inelastic demand has absolutely no monopoly power. You can be the only existing provider of maple-flavored hamburger buns in the world, that doesn't make you a monopolist. People won't buy your product if it isn't priced competitively. To cartellize an industry with high elasticity is wasteful and pointless for everyone inside the deal.


Jaws, This doesn't make any sense to me. I'm not saying I think you're right or wrong here--I simply don't understand this paragraph.

Also, you keep using Mal Wart as an example of a monopoly, when they aren't a monopoly. This muddies the water. They are competing effectively with Target and a couple of other big players. Members of oligopolies often compete agressively with each other. Nobody would say Mal Wart is engaging in grosse illegality, just that they are cutthroat. So what is true for oligopoly is not necessarily true for a monopoly. I can provide links that can explain it better than I can, if you're confused on this topic.
User avatar
threadbear
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 7577
Joined: Sat 22 Jan 2005, 04:00:00
Top

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby jaws » Sat 31 Dec 2005, 02:35:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('nero', 'N')o you're missing the point that the market competitive wages are a result of the balance of power between the workers and the businesses. If workers are in a strong negotiating position they gain a larger proportion of the benefits from the trade in services. The fact that businesses have less competition for the worker's services than the worker has when seaking employment means the business is in a more powerful negotiating position than the worker and thus can gain a large fraction of the benefits from the trade in the worker's services.
The balance of power must always be even in that both sides of the agreement must have total freedom. That is the most even you can make it.

The idea that workers have no pricing power is ridiculous. They can offer to work for drastically lower wages if they choose to, and employers will be stepping over each other to hire them at whatever conditions the workers put forward. They prefer only to seek high-pay work because they have this pricing power and choose to exercise it.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')ut I doubt you will see this because somehow you believe the market for employment services is perfectly competitive and the businesses have absolutely no pricing power.
I've already said there's no such thing as perfect competition. It's a theoretical mathematical condition.
User avatar
jaws
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1228
Joined: Sun 24 Apr 2005, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby lakeweb » Sat 31 Dec 2005, 02:40:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', 'T')he balance of power must always be even in that both sides of the agreement must have total freedom. That is the most even you can make it.


Now, go back to my original post...

Best, Dan.
User avatar
lakeweb
Lignite
Lignite
 
Posts: 246
Joined: Sun 06 Nov 2005, 04:00:00
Location: Arizona
Top

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby jaws » Sat 31 Dec 2005, 02:41:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('threadbear', 'J')aws, This doesn't make any sense to me. I'm not saying I think you're right or wrong here--I simply don't understand this paragraph.
Then you don't understand the nature of competition and are in a poor position to voice an opinion on the subject.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')lso, you keep using Mal Wart as an example of a monopoly, when they aren't a monopoly. This muddies the water. They are competing effectively with Target and a couple of other big players. Members of oligopolies often compete agressively with each other. Nobody would say Mal Wart is engaging in grosse illegality, just that they are cutthroat. So what is true for oligopoly is not necessarily true for a monopoly. I can provide links that can explain it better than I can, if you're confused on this topic.

Wal-Mart is monopolistically competitive. They have the exclusivity over the brand Wal-Mart. They are also often the sole buyer for their suppliers. Target does not compete directly with Walmart, they target (har har) a different market segment. Call it upscale shoppers if you wish.

There's no one other than Walmart in the Walmart business: volume and affordability. If you want to start including other stores as competitors to Walmart, then you enter a process that is literally limitless. Anyone who sells food or ammunition or clothing can be a Walmart competitor.

The same will be true of Standard Oil if you apply the Walmart standard consistently. Standard Oil was not a monopoly because there were many other different ways of supplying yourself with energy. Every additional substitute for oil would affect the elasticity of demand for oil upwards, reducing Standard Oil's pricing power.
User avatar
jaws
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1228
Joined: Sun 24 Apr 2005, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby Zentric » Sat 31 Dec 2005, 03:05:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', 'W')al-Mart is monopolistically competitive. They have the exclusivity over the brand Wal-Mart. They are also often the sole buyer for their suppliers. Target does not compete directly with Walmart, they target (har har) a different market segment. Call it upscale shoppers if you wish.

There's no one other than Walmart in the Walmart business: volume and affordability. If you want to start including other stores as competitors to Walmart, then you enter a process that is literally limitless. Anyone who sells food or ammunition or clothing can be a Walmart competitor.

The same will be true of Standard Oil if you apply the Walmart standard consistently. Standard Oil was not a monopoly because there were many other different ways of supplying yourself with energy. Every additional substitute for oil would affect the elasticity of demand for oil upwards, reducing Standard Oil's pricing power.


Jaws, your observations are vague, yet unsatisfying.
User avatar
Zentric
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 709
Joined: Mon 14 Mar 2005, 04:00:00
Top

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby threadbear » Sat 31 Dec 2005, 03:11:03

Jaws, Well my good man, your last post broke the silliness barrier. Wal Mart isn't a monopoly at all but the strongest player in it's field. I challenge you to provide any links to back up your assertion that it IS a monopoly.

I figured that if I kept at it, I could pin you into a corner and expose the lame assumptions underlying your free market drivel. I'm not going to counter your post point by point, as that's how you "defeat" your opposition. You draw people into arguments where their central premise is lost in a sea of your obfuscating jargon. I nailed you good, Pal, fair and square. Let others observe for themselves. :lol: :lol: :lol:
User avatar
threadbear
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 7577
Joined: Sat 22 Jan 2005, 04:00:00

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby jaws » Sat 31 Dec 2005, 03:33:29

You still don't know what a monopoly actually is, Threadbear. You call me obfuscating but I haven't used any terms that aren't basic concepts of economics. Perhaps you need to pick up a few books before you pretend to be knowledgeable about the subject. Failing that, ask me what specific concept you fail to understand and I'll do my best to illuminate it for you.
User avatar
jaws
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1228
Joined: Sun 24 Apr 2005, 03:00:00

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby threadbear » Sat 31 Dec 2005, 04:01:25

That was very civil. You might start by explaining the term"monopolistically competetive", as I haven't read my recently purchased copy of Oxymorons for Dummies. :lol:

Look, I promise to back off if you'll just admit that like Communist theory, free market ideas and formulas that support globalization are more religion than anything else. Macroeconomics provide a handy altar that sacrifices the unique and the powerless. The Communists did the same thing to appease their God of "egalitarianism", the NWO capitalist fascists do it to appease their God of "democracy and reform." Who is kidding who?
User avatar
threadbear
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 7577
Joined: Sat 22 Jan 2005, 04:00:00

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby Zentric » Sat 31 Dec 2005, 04:49:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', 'Y')ou still don't know what a monopoly actually is, Threadbear. You call me obfuscating but I haven't used any terms that aren't basic concepts of economics. Perhaps you need to pick up a few books before you pretend to be knowledgeable about the subject. Failing that, ask me what specific concept you fail to understand and I'll do my best to illuminate it for you.


Jaws, your jargon-filled explanations are so turgid, I often can't tell what you're saying or what side, if any, you're taking in an argument. And can you see what happens? Your vagueness has sucked me into this conversation with you. They've given the job to Bernanke already, so give it a rest.

You say that Wal-mart is monopolistically competitive with Target - which I take to mean the stores are brand-name-distinctive, yet comparable (and let's hope, for the sake of your argument, that the poor slobs who shop at Wal-Mart also can choose to shop at a Target right in their same neighborhood).

Then, in your next paragraph you say that the Standard Oil of old is not monopolistic. Well, if Standard Oil could dramatically raise their revenues by dramatically raising their prices in one locale, while knocking other, smaller gasoline vendors out of business by dramatically lowering their prices in another locale, what else would you call it other than "good, fair and free-market business practices"?
User avatar
Zentric
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 709
Joined: Mon 14 Mar 2005, 04:00:00
Top

Re: Why Trade liberalization could be part of the solution?

Unread postby nero » Sat 31 Dec 2005, 13:58:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', 'T')he balance of power must always be even in that both sides of the agreement must have total freedom. That is the most even you can make it.


Is this your idea that since they can always walk away they balance of power in the negotiations is even? This is simply not true. The division of the benefits of trade are set in negotiations. The ability to extract the maximum for your side is set by the opportunity cost of walking away from the deal. If you have limited options as to where else you can work then you are in a poor bargaining position. If your opposite number in the negotiations has a multitude of alternative sources for those kind of services or if the loss involved in not hiring at all is not significant to their bottom line then they are in a stronger negotiation position and therefore can extract a larger fraction of the benefits of trade.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he idea that workers have no pricing power is ridiculous. They can offer to work for drastically lower wages if they choose to, and employers will be stepping over each other to hire them at whatever conditions the workers put forward. They prefer only to seek high-pay work because they have this pricing power and choose to exercise it.


I didn't say the workers have no pricing power. You had stated that the businesses "have no such power." Of course both parties have some amount of power to walk away from the negotiations. The balance of power determines who gains the most from the trade. I was simply stating what I thought was rather uncontroversial that in general large businesses are in the stronger bargaining position than an individual employee because the cost of walking away from the deal is not as large.

In the classic case of a small mill town if the employer chooses to terminate an employee's contract then the employee will have the large cost of moving to another location to find work (substitution). Whereas the employer simply can continue the work with their remaining employees until someone comes along who is willing to work at the less advantageous terms. Since the market for employees is more liquid even in a small town than the market for jobs the opportunity cost of forgoing the services of that particular employee is less than the opportunity cost to the employee of losing their job.
Biofuels: The "What else we got to burn?" answer to peak oil.
User avatar
nero
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1433
Joined: Sat 22 May 2004, 03:00:00
Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Top

PreviousNext

Return to Economics & Finance

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest

cron