So ...
A free market guarantees the most efficient allocation of resources. Except when it doesn't. So we create a system of guarantees in the finance sector that doesn't exist in the wider economy, and that system reduces the peak efficiency of the system in exchange for ... what do the rest of us get out of this, again?
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Drew |
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We get to watch, and pick up the pieces when it crashes. :-/
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Heard about Piketty?
The groundbreaking status of the book was recognised by a recent long essay in the New Yorker in which Branko Milanovic, a former senior economist at the World Bank, was quoted as describing Piketty's volume as "one of the watershed books in economic thinking". In the same vein, a writer in the Economist reported that Piketty's work fundamentally rewrote 200 years of economic thinking on inequality. In short, the arguments have centred on two poles: the first is a tradition that begins with Karl Marx, who believed that capitalism would self-destruct in the endless pursuit of diminishing profit returns. At the opposite end of the spectrum is the work of Simon Kuznets, who won a Nobel prize in 1971 and who made the case that the inequality gap inevitably grows smaller as economies develop and become sophisticated. http://www.theguardi...st-thomas-piketty |
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Yup. #388401. ;-)
http://forum.iwethey...iwt?postid=388401
It's an important book, no doubt. But it's not the last word (of course). See DeLong's review in that thread. Cheers, Scott. |
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I will *TRY* to stop doing that to you. ;0(
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No worries.
My snark detector is often broken.
Post what you like. The more, the merrier. Cheers, Scott. |