by jimk » Thu 27 Apr 2006, 01:36:48
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('bobcousins', 'Y')ou use the term "efficient" in three different contexts. Instead of making up nonsense based on thermodynamics, why not learn some basic economics?
You're right, I used "efficiency" in three different senses. That was surely unnecessarily confusing!
And I think it's true that my use of "efficiency" to describe a market that works well to match marginal costs and benefits, that's not the official definition of efficiency according to economists.
But that doesn't make my idea nonsense. It just means I haven't done such a great job communicating it.
So if anybody does know some economics and would like to pitch in, rather than sending me back to college...
Surely there is in economics some examination of how various market structures allow buyers and sellers to negotiate a price. I am looking at the market in broad terms, like how people who would like to buy or sell might be required to do so or forbidden to do so by means other than monetary, e.g. threat of violence.
Is there, in economics, a term that captures some measurement of how well a market structure works in pairing up buyers and sellers?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kerosene', 's')lowly on of the farmers collects capital and buys all other farms. Now he has all the potatoes.
He sets the price at 2.50$ - everybody have to buy from him. see.
That hardly is the case in the current oil industry though.
The current oil business isn't so far from your potato example. If there are just one or two farms where potatoes can be grown at low cost, then the owners of those farms are going to make huge profits once the demand exceeds their capacity to produce and folks start paying high enough prices that less productive fields can also be used to meet the demand.