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Dirigisme - way of the future?

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Dirigisme - way of the future?

Unread postby Starvid » Fri 17 Feb 2006, 09:55:17

Reading the Hirsch report I thought it interesting to see the focus that was put on government intervention in the economy. Hirsch talks about massive government intervention through crash programmes to cope with the coming scarcity of oil. This is something not heard of in America since WW2 and the New Deal, so I thought it might be interesting to read up a bit on dirigisme and the country it has been used most.



$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Wikipedia', '[')b]Dirigisme (from the French) (in English also "dirigism" although per the OED both spellings are used) is an economic term designating an economy where the government exerts strong directive influence.

While the term has been applied occasionally to centrally planned economies, where the government effectively controls production and allocation of resources (in particular, to certain socialist economies where the national government owns the means of production), it originally had neither of these meanings when applied to France, and generally designates a mainly capitalist economy with a strong economic participation by government. Most modern economies are dirigiste to some degree – for instance, governmental action may be exercised through subsidizing research and developing new technologies, or through government procurement, especially military.

[...]

France

Because French industry prior to the Second World War was weak, due to fragmentation, the French government encouraged mergers and the formation of "national champions", large industry groups backed by the government.

Two areas where the French government sought greater control were infrastructure and the transportation system. The French government owned the national railway company SNCF, the national electricity utility EDF, the national natural gas utility GDF, the national airline Air France; phone and postal services were operated as the PTT administration. Interestingly, the government chose to devolve the construction of most autoroutes (freeways) to semi-private companies rather than to administer them itself. Other areas where the French government directly intervened were defense, nuclear and aerospace industries (Aérospatiale).

This development was marked by volontarisme, or the will to overcome all difficulties (War-related devastation, lack of natural resources...) through willpower and ingenuity. For instance, following the 1973 energy crisis, the saying "In France we don't have oil, but we have ideas" was coined. Voluntarism showed an obsession with the modernization of the country, resulting in a variety of ambitious plans imposed by the state. Examples of this trend include the extensive use of nuclear energy (close to 80% of French electrical consumption), the Minitel, an early online system for the masses, and the TGV, a high-speed rail network.

The development of French dirigisme coincided with the development of meritocratic technocracy: the École Nationale d'Administration supplied the state with high-level administrators, while leadership positions in industry were staffed with Corps of Mines state engineers and other personnel trained at the École Polytechnique.

[...]

Dirigisme flourished under the center-right governments of Charles de Gaulle and Georges Pompidou. In those times, the policy was viewed as a middle way between the American policy of little state involvement and the Soviet policy of total state control. In 1981, Socialist president François Mitterrand was elected, promising even more state intervention in the economy; his government soon nationalized industries and banks. However, in 1983 the initial bad economic results forced the government to renounce dirigisme and start the era of rigueur ("rigour"). Subsequent governments never have considered economic dirigisme again, though some of its traits remain.


Pretty interesting, is it not?
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Re: Dirigisme - way of the future?

Unread postby gego » Fri 17 Feb 2006, 14:32:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'H')irsch talks about massive government intervention through crash programmes to cope with the coming scarcity of oil.


Post peak the only crash associated with government will be the crash of government itself. Do you really think that any government is going to function during a collapse? Look at what the government did (or didn't do) in New Orleans post Katrina.

On second thought, since the population level is the true problem, maybe government is the solution, since the only thing they can do well is slaughter people. Other than that, don't look for them to come up with any other solution, cause there is no other soultion.
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Re: Dirigisme - way of the future?

Unread postby jaws » Fri 17 Feb 2006, 16:06:06

Dirigisme is the way of the past. It's just one more variant of government interventionism. It's aim is to subvert the market demand for the government's demand.

It wrecked France and now they're actively trying to dismantle it, facing huge resistance from labor unions (who are largely responsible for wrecking the country in the first place).

The idea that a government crash program is going to save America is not only ridiculous, it is a contradiction in terms. It was a government crash program that ruined America and caused its oil dependence.
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Re: Dirigisme - way of the future?

Unread postby Free » Fri 17 Feb 2006, 16:26:58

Lol, watch out guys, you could have just as well waved the red flag in front of an enraged bull as mentioned government intervention were jaws can read you... :P
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Re: Dirigisme - way of the future?

Unread postby jaws » Fri 17 Feb 2006, 18:06:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'S')o the U.S. Marshal plan didn't work? We really didn't put man on the moon? I don't think that knee-jerk antigovernmentism is a useful solution either.

Truth is if we wait for the magic of the marketplace to fix this situation then we are truly lost. The modern marketplace is about creating dreams and nightmares so it can sell the suckers trinkets. The marketplace is incapable of acting proactively. The marketplace cares about consumer crap, not solutions. Whereas government for and of the people has indeed performed miracles. See above. Or giant boondoggles like the interstate highway system :lol:

The miracles of modern government are gigantic militaries, bureaucratic nightmares and broken lives. What was the price of putting a man on the moon? The taxes levied to finance this project could have been used by their rightful owners for health care or education for their kids. It's hard to declare it a success when absolutely no economic benefit was derived from going to the moon. It was all geopolitical showmanship, and the common people paid for it. The same thing is true of the Marshall plan. The reconstruction of Europe could have been financed privately by the people who were taxed so that the government could decide where the money would go.

If we wait for the government to fix to situation we will all die because not only will it not fix the situation, it will continue on its policy of making the situation ever worse, as it has been doing since the beggining of interventionism. American sprawl is a product of the New Deal and government make-work programs. At every critical point a political decision was made to enforce sprawl on the population. The market had nothing to do with it. You cannot argue otherwise. The belief that this situation will magically turn itself around in the next election cycle is naive and delusional.

The free market is the only way that we can fix society, because the free market means that you act with your own resources, not politicians owned by lobbyists.
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Re: Dirigisme - way of the future?

Unread postby jaws » Fri 17 Feb 2006, 19:55:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'h')ow about advanced ceramics? metalurgy? carbon fibers?
Why did people need this more than what they would have bought with their own money?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') sure don't see the private sector responding to the Hirsch study. It says we need 20 years of preemptive planning and construction to create the non-conventional fuel infrastructure. The private sector is too busy milking current and ever-increasing high petroleum prices to worry about things as trivial as conservation and gas-to-liquids plants.

The companies who don't see profit in building more oil infrastructure when there is no oil left are going to invest in alternatives. Many oil companies are already involved. As long as the future is uncertain they will hedge their bets. The government certainly doesn't see 20 years in the future. It barely sees 4 years in the future, long enough to be re-elected. They won't act.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')HERE IS NO WAY THAT THE PRIVATE SECTOR WILL BAIL US OUT. THE ONLY SOLUTION IS FOR THE PEOPLE TO TAKE THE GOVERNMENT BACK FROM CORPORATIONS BY DECLARING THEM NON-PERSONS ONCE AGAIN AND BY INSTITUTING PUBLIC CAMPAIGN FINANCING
I'm sorry, but this is not possible. Everyone mad at the behavior of government always believes that the only thing necessary to make things right is to boot the bums out of office, and install someone more sympathetic to their own political ends. Some people want an environmentalist government, some people want a labor government, some people want a religious government, some people want a government free of special interests. All of these goals are incompatible with each other. The elected politician, wishing to remain in power, will use a strategy of skillful lying. The very nature of the government implies it will become corrupt. Even with public campaign financing the politicians would find a way to rig the system in their favor. Regardless you cannot hope to achieve these reforms from within the system, since as you described specific lobbies already control all the entry points.

The private sector is you. It is all of us. If we can't do it, what hope is there?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')merican sprawl is as much about the Auto/Petroleum conspiracy to rip out mass transit.

There is no free market. It is an illusion.
The auto/petroleum conspiracy was a government conspiracy. It never could have worked without the explicit support of the government to tax the people and hand the money over to the auto/petroleum lobby for the construction of freeways and sprawl. As you said there is no free market. That is the problem.
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Re: Dirigisme - way of the future?

Unread postby cube » Sat 18 Feb 2006, 01:47:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', '.')..
The free market is the only way that we can fix society, because the free market means that you act with your own resources, not politicians owned by lobbyists.
Some people have difficulty thinking for themselves. Sure a lot of folks like to talk tough about how "independent minded" they are, but once the going gets tough they crumble pretty easily.

When PO hits the first thing the public will do is latch onto whatever politician who can promise "the good old days" when oil was cheap and plenty.
*need proof?*

Remember hurricane Katrina last year and the surge in gasoline prices? What did the majority of the population do? Cry like a bunch of babies and demanded that the government "do something".

I'll bet my last barrel of oil that when PO hits the public will ask the government to intervene.
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Re: Dirigisme - way of the future?

Unread postby gg3 » Sat 18 Feb 2006, 02:53:05

When I hear the word "regulation" my first reaction is to cringe, and my second reaction is to get bloody pissed.

And yet, in terms of the crises we're facing, we simply do not know what will succeed and what will fail.

So let's try the experiment, comparing one country to another, and see what works. The Scandanavian countries have traditionally been the most socialistic Western countries; France and the UK somewhere in the middle; the US more toward laissez-faire; and Germany and Japan have had a different type of pubilc/private partnership based in part on much stronger government support for private commerce.

Anywhere we can find a viable solution, we should implement it. Some of it may be market-based, some government-based, some completely grassroots. At this point we've basically already screwed the proverbial pooch (for non-English speakers: bought the farm, cashed in our chips, gone over the edge) so anything is preferable to the present state of doing not-much-more-than-nothing. 'Tis better to try but fail gloriously, than to fail to try ignominiously.
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Re: Dirigisme - way of the future?

Unread postby gego » Sat 18 Feb 2006, 03:40:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'S')o the U.S. Marshal plan didn't work? We really didn't put man on the moon? I don't think that knee-jerk antigovernmentism is a useful solution either.

Truth is if we wait for the magic of the marketplace to fix this situation then we are truly lost. The modern marketplace is about creating dreams and nightmares so it can sell the suckers trinkets. The marketplace is incapable of acting proactively. The marketplace cares about consumer crap, not solutions. Whereas government for and of the people has indeed performed miracles. See above. Or giant boondoggles like the interstate highway system :lol:


Well we know the Marshal plan had some effect, but we do not know how much better things would have worked out without the Marshal Plan. You can point to anything that a slave system produces and say how wonderful it worked. Look at the wonderful plantation houses that slave labor built in the Southern USA.

The reality is that government does not respond to what people want like free markets do. The Soviet Union produced lots of things, but those things were not necessarily what people wanted; rather they were what government officials decided people wanted, or maybe just what the government officials wanted. And when government acts, it almost always is inefficient ($100 Pentagon purchased hammers). It is an accident if government is effective. Public education occasionally does a good job, but generally does a poor job. This is because good is not rewarded and bad is not punished, so it is only a random event if they do well. This is just one example of what happens when people lose control to government over what they consume.

Here we are on the threshold of one of the greatest disasters in human history. The best chance for the maximum to survive is for people to act in their own best interests. The more government involves itself the greater will be the disaster.

I know that many species have a tendency to gather together in times of danger. I once brought a new dog home to my farm and when my cows saw him they immediately went on alert. The calves and the bull immediatley formed in the middle of a big circle with the most dominant cows on the edge with the other cows midway between the center and the outer edge. In combat, soldiers need to be constantly reminded to not bunch up because this is more dangerous, but they instinctively want to get in a bunch when the going gets serious. It is your instinctive animal response to want to get together to face danger. That is fine if you want to volintarily get in some group, but to look to government for your protective group is irrational and self destructive, and it puts not only you in danger, but also exposes the rest of us who know better to this dead end path to survival.

Of course while you collectivists plot and plan for the government to do something to save you, you will not be doing much to save yourselves. Somehow I think that the greater part of the less than 1 billion survivors will be individuals who have a strong drive for independence and self sufficiency. The next 50 years are likely to be a great pruning of the human species by good old mother nature, so maybe at the end of that time people will understand that survival of the fittest is always working and collectivism is not very fit.
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Re: Dirigisme - way of the future?

Unread postby MacG » Sat 18 Feb 2006, 05:02:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gego', 'O')f course while you collectivists plot and plan for the government to do something to save you, you will not be doing much to save yourselves. Somehow I think that the greater part of the less than 1 billion survivors will be individuals who have a strong drive for independence and self sufficiency. The next 50 years are likely to be a great pruning of the human species by good old mother nature, so maybe at the end of that time people will understand that survival of the fittest is always working and collectivism is not very fit.


I would like to add a couple of nuances. The mechanisms of "banding together" you describe are there for an obvious reason: They worked for millions of years. They worked to the advantage of people who banded together, and they will likely work in the future as well, otherwise the instincts had simply not been there.

Todays "governments" and "political parties" probably represent some perverted projections of theses instincts, and will probably not work to the advantage of the participants for very much longer...

Regarding the original topic, I would expect quite a lot of people to ask for all possible and impossible kinds of government interventions, and governments will happily go along with such opinions.
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Re: Dirigisme - way of the future?

Unread postby Starvid » Sat 18 Feb 2006, 09:47:41

I am quite aware of the inefficiency of government. I do live in the country with the highest taxes in the world (51 % of GDP).

BUT!

Dirigisme did work in France at reducing oil use. The kind of massive centrally planned infrastructure projects that are IMHO needed to cope with peak oil, like the French nuclear and TGV projects, did happen under dirigisme.

When it comes to building a few massive structures, like rail and power plants, (technocratic) government can be just as good or even better than the market.

Why?

To answer that question we must understand what is the strength of the market economy. That strength is that decisions on what should be produced is the aggregate of billions of small decisions made by millions of people. This will always be better at gauging the demand for hats and forks than any government agency, no matter how skilled it might be.

But massive projects are different. Here we do not have millions of people in the decisions loop. We are talking about a few dozen or a few hundred power plants, a handful or a dozen rail lines, and hence, maybe a few dozen or a few hundred board members to decide on these projects.

There is no reason these few hundred people should be better at gauging what should be built than a few hundred skilled government experts.

The American natural gas/power crisis, and the lack of Swedish/French equivalents of it, is a good example of this.

On the other hand, the German power situation is an example of the opposite.

Here we see that it is crucial that those in charge are very competent (ie not German greens but Swedish and French nonpolitical technocrats).
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Re: Dirigisme - way of the future?

Unread postby TheTurtle » Sat 18 Feb 2006, 11:24:30

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'h')ow about advanced ceramics? metalurgy? carbon fibers?

And Tang .... don't forget Tang! :P
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Re: Dirigisme - way of the future?

Unread postby jaws » Sat 18 Feb 2006, 16:32:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'D')irigisme did work in France at reducing oil use. The kind of massive centrally planned infrastructure projects that are IMHO needed to cope with peak oil, like the French nuclear and TGV projects, did happen under dirigisme.
You point out the supposed successes of dirigisme but fail to explain as compared to what. In the US the transportation and energy industries were also controlled by the state, also following dirigisme. It just happen that the politicians in the USA made a terrible set of choices, while the politicians in France made a much better set of choices. As someone said the government sometimes makes the right decisions accidentally, and France turned out to have been luckier than most. This does not prove that the free market wouldn't have made the best choice.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')hen it comes to building a few massive structures, like rail and power plants, (technocratic) government can be just as good or even better than the market.

Why?

To answer that question we must understand what is the strength of the market economy. That strength is that decisions on what should be produced is the aggregate of billions of small decisions made by millions of people. This will always be better at gauging the demand for hats and forks than any government agency, no matter how skilled it might be.

But massive projects are different. Here we do not have millions of people in the decisions loop. We are talking about a few dozen or a few hundred power plants, a handful or a dozen rail lines, and hence, maybe a few dozen or a few hundred board members to decide on these projects.

There is no reason these few hundred people should be better at gauging what should be built than a few hundred skilled government experts.

You don't understand what the free market is. Look at the oil companies. They are immense organizations spanning the entire globe, and they make their decisions based on free market demand for their products. The oil company planners make better decisions than the government planners because they must seek profit, and you can only earn profit by correctly forecasting the future demands of consumers while simultaneously reducing costs to a minimum.

If an industry requires huge companies to run efficiently, the free market will respond to it. The government's intervention is not necessary, and in fact is more likely to create a huge inneficient company that is not needed.
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Re: Dirigisme - way of the future?

Unread postby Starvid » Sat 18 Feb 2006, 17:22:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'D')irigisme did work in France at reducing oil use. The kind of massive centrally planned infrastructure projects that are IMHO needed to cope with peak oil, like the French nuclear and TGV projects, did happen under dirigisme.
You point out the supposed successes of dirigisme but fail to explain as compared to what. In the US the transportation and energy industries were also controlled by the state, also following dirigisme. It just happen that the politicians in the USA made a terrible set of choices, while the politicians in France made a much better set of choices. As someone said the government sometimes makes the right decisions accidentally, and France turned out to have been luckier than most. This does not prove that the free market wouldn't have made the best choice.

And this is why dirigisme is only useful if it is implemented by skilled nonpolitical technocrats and not politicians. Otherwise it will create more problems than it will solve.

Ponder the words "meritocratic technocracy".

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'W')hen it comes to building a few massive structures, like rail and power plants, (technocratic) government can be just as good or even better than the market.

Why?

To answer that question we must understand what is the strength of the market economy. That strength is that decisions on what should be produced is the aggregate of billions of small decisions made by millions of people. This will always be better at gauging the demand for hats and forks than any government agency, no matter how skilled it might be.

But massive projects are different. Here we do not have millions of people in the decisions loop. We are talking about a few dozen or a few hundred power plants, a handful or a dozen rail lines, and hence, maybe a few dozen or a few hundred board members to decide on these projects.

There is no reason these few hundred people should be better at gauging what should be built than a few hundred skilled government experts.

You don't understand what the free market is. Look at the oil companies. They are immense organizations spanning the entire globe, and they make their decisions based on free market demand for their products. The oil company planners make better decisions than the government planners because they must seek profit, and you can only earn profit by correctly forecasting the future demands of consumers while simultaneously reducing costs to a minimum.

On the profit issue, that might not be a major problem. Link the wages of the government experts to how well they solve the problems they are supposed to solve, and presto you have a profit motive.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', '
')If an industry requires huge companies to run efficiently, the free market will respond to it. The government's intervention is not necessary, and in fact is more likely to create a huge inneficient company that is not needed.
When you allow shortsighted companies to control long term national security policy where there might not be a return on investment in decades, you get chaos. Like the lack of railroads and the natural gas crisis in America. This is what the market might do.

Of course, the market can also create great things. Without market economy 99 % of us would be very poor. But some things are better done by the state. Like national security.
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Re: Dirigisme - way of the future?

Unread postby jaws » Sat 18 Feb 2006, 18:17:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'A')nd this is why dirigisme is only useful if it is implemented by skilled nonpolitical technocrats and not politicians. Otherwise it will create more problems than it will solve.

Ponder the words "meritocratic technocracy".

On the profit issue, that might not be a major problem. Link the wages of the government experts to how well they solve the problems they are supposed to solve, and presto you have a profit motive.

The only way to determine how well the experts are solving the problem is through the profitability of the company. What you are arguing for is a government-owned, for-profit free market business. It is pointless for the government to own such an enterprise as it could more easily operate completely separate from the government.

The reason governments take control of the economy is because they want to do the opposite of the correct solution to an economic problem. The market provides the solution the consumers want. The government wants to substitute the solution that the government wants for that. That's how you get corruption.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')When you allow shortsighted companies to control long term national security policy where there might not be a return on investment in decades, you get chaos. Like the lack of railroads and the natural gas crisis in America. This is what the market might do.

Of course, the market can also create great things. Without market economy 99 % of us would be very poor. But some things are better done by the state. Like national security.

The lack of railroads and the natural gas crisis in America is caused entirely by the government planners who spent all of Americans' money on the interstate highways and natural gas electrical plant. This is not shortsighted companies, it is shortsighted government. The government and its technocrats will always be more short-sighted than a private company because they only look ahead four years or less into the future.

Even for national security it is doubtful that the state is the best provider. Was the invasion of Iraq better for national security? Americans are being killed to impose the dreams of American technocrats, and national security is decreasing because of it.
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Re: Dirigisme - way of the future?

Unread postby RacerJace » Sat 18 Feb 2006, 19:46:19

Benevolent dictatorship is the most efficient form of government but unfortunately it is almost impossible to assure full and true benevolence. One’s ideals for the people may be viewed by another as a form of fascism. And if a nations people grant totalitarian power to a single controlling government and ultimately a single leader there is an overwhelming temptation to corrupt that power for personal gain or the gain of those that may have strong influence.

My point however, is that I believe a strong leadership is and will be the only way out of a crisis. A way of uniting the people and providing stability and direction or else there will be chaos and civil war. Dirigisme sounds like it approaches this form of governing more than any other example I’ve heard of. But there will always be winners and losers when the government policy covers larger populations of people. Therefore my vision of the future would be smaller fragmented localised governments that have power that do achieve something closer to benevolent dictatorship but that are not subservient to a national government. National government would provide the platform for co-operation between local governing bodies… and this starts to sound like a simplified liberalist democracy structure with many representatives at the national level.

I’m fairly ignorant on the subject of politics and government, just though I’d share my thoughts. :)

.
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Re: Dirigisme - way of the future?

Unread postby Starvid » Sat 18 Feb 2006, 20:20:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', '
')The only way to determine how well the experts are solving the problem is through the profitability of the company. What you are arguing for is a government-owned, for-profit free market business. It is pointless for the government to own such an enterprise as it could more easily operate completely separate from the government.

Profitability is not at all the only way to measure sucess. It could just as well be: complete project X within time Y, or reduce oil consumption to Z within time Y.

The projects themselves could of course be done by private corporations. The State just decide what projects should be done.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', '
')The reason governments take control of the economy is because they want to do the opposite of the correct solution to an economic problem. The market provides the solution the consumers want. The government wants to substitute the solution that the government wants for that. That's how you get corruption.

We hardly built our nuclear power plants because the government wanted to ruin our economy. If they wanted that they failed quite completely.

We did it because we had a major problem, and politicians, unions, experts and big corporations sat down together and forged a solution to the problem.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', '
')When you allow shortsighted companies to control long term national security policy where there might not be a return on investment in decades, you get chaos. Like the lack of railroads and the natural gas crisis in America. This is what the market might do.

Of course, the market can also create great things. Without market economy 99 % of us would be very poor. But some things are better done by the state. Like national security.

The lack of railroads and the natural gas crisis in America is caused entirely by the government planners who spent all of Americans' money on the interstate highways and natural gas electrical plant. This is not shortsighted companies, it is shortsighted government. The government and its technocrats will always be more short-sighted than a private company because they only look ahead four years or less into the future.

As far as I know those natural gas plants were built by private corporations (except TVA which is government owned but not government influenced).

The American railroads have always been privately owned (haven't they?) and the only reason there still are any railroads for personal transportation is because of government intervention via Amtrak.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', '
')Even for national security it is doubtful that the state is the best provider. Was the invasion of Iraq better for national security? Americans are being killed to impose the dreams of American technocrats, and national security is decreasing because of it.
I'd hardly call the architects of the Iraq War nonpolitical experts who got their job through a meritochratic process.

Even if such a thing as a war can never be decided on by nonpolitical experts but only by democratically elected politicans, the implementation of the war and the following occupation should be managed by experts.

While the war was well done, the post war phase wasn't by a longshot.


And do you seriously believe the police and armed forces should be privatized? That's even worse than Nozick.
Peak oil is not an energy crisis. It is a liquid fuel crisis.
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Starvid
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Re: Dirigisme - way of the future?

Unread postby jaws » Sat 18 Feb 2006, 21:43:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'P')rofitability is not at all the only way to measure sucess. It could just as well be: complete project X within time Y, or reduce oil consumption to Z within time Y.
But how do you decide what projects should be undertaken? If tell you to start eliminating SUVs with firebombs, and set you specific deadlines for completion, you will meet your deadline and the project will be a success. What isn't known however is what the purpose of destroying all these SUVs was. If it wasn't profitable for me to hire you for this job, it makes no sense.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he American railroads have always been privately owned (haven't they?) and the only reason there still are any railroads for personal transportation is because of government intervention via Amtrak.
The American railroads were privately owned, then the government began taxing people and providing alternatives to the railroads for free. No wonder all the railroads went out of business. Then the government blamed the free market for their death and created Amtrak so that it wouldn't have to create a fair market for transportation.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')'d hardly call the architects of the Iraq War nonpolitical experts who got their job through a meritochratic process.

Even if such a thing as a war can never be decided on by nonpolitical experts but only by democratically elected politicans, the implementation of the war and the following occupation should be managed by experts.

While the war was well done, the post war phase wasn't by a longshot.
You're making the mistake I pointed above again. What was the point of the war? Even if it was run expertly, there was nothing to gain from it!

And where do you get the idea that we can find "nonpolitical" experts? The moment someone gets involved in government, he becomes political. You can't avoid it. Only the free market is apolitical. Only individual decisions are taken on the free market.
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