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Monday, November 9th, 2009

ACCOUNTING FOR A FREE MARKET & THE WGA WRITERS STRIKE

January 21, 2008 by ren  
Filed under Finance

Anne Wayman at The Golden Pencil started a discussion on the WGA Strike which attracted a lot of discussions and comments (http://www.thegoldenpencil.com/2008/01/16/writers-strike-and-the-myth-of-the-free-market/).

One of the central issues was the existence or non-existence of a free market.

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A free market works efficiently & effectively if two conditions are present in the market:

1 if the operators / competitors in the market are more or less on an equal footing (i.e., in numbers, in financial capabilities, in access to resources & markets, etc). Otherwise, you have an oligopoly or cartels where the big operators act in concert (whether by design or by happenstance) to dictate prices, working conditions, etc.

2 if the society has strong moral norms. Adam Smith’s the invisible hand from which the concept of a free market is derived posited that strong moral norms are required for the invisible hand or a free market to actually work for the benefit of individuals, society and the economy.

A union with its threat of a strike is one of the most effective ways for davids to contend with or against goliaths. However, like a slingshot, a strike has to be well-timed, well-aimed, with sufficient force to work. Otherwise, the strike will drag on and on and on. A relevant question, therefore, is: Is the WGA strike well-timed, well-aimed, and has it gathered sufficient force?

Except for a precious few, corporations in general are amoral (some are downright immoral).

I agree with Anne: there really isn’t a free market.

Image from Microsoft Clipart

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Comments

2 Responses to “ACCOUNTING FOR A FREE MARKET & THE WGA WRITERS STRIKE”
  1. Laura says:

    This is a very interesting issue. I agree that ideally a free market should take care of the situation. Unfortunately, we live in a less than ideal world.

  2. Anne Wayman says:

    Hi Ren, thanks… I just re-learned today that most the banking regulations that were thrown out during the Regan era and since were put in place in response to the great depression… suppose we’ll ever learn?

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