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 Originally Posted by CoccoBill
I wouldn't call that monopolistic. It's just one supply source for universities, one they could replace with private funding if they please. It's just such a good deal for the universities that they compete for the grants. Why would there be more basic research (=research that mostly cannot directly be applied for profit) in a free market? In my opinion, the situation would be exactly the same as it is now, minus the possibility of public funding.
Government funds crowd out private funds, and there would probably be more donations without government involvement because it would allow incentives to work. Instead of universities focusing on competing for a fixed pie that is distributed based on general rules, they would focus on competing for a much bigger pie. The concept is similar to how so many heavily traveled roads are in shoddy condition because the government is in charge of their maintenance. Their incentive for upkeep is not as much as if the owners were private, and the fact that government is responsible for upkeep, it discourages private entities from not passing the buck.
That's not at all what happened. MS or any MS OS hasn't been a monopoly (the only supplier for a commodity), and they weren't sued for being one. They just abused their commanding market position:
- in 1990's they adopted a licensing scheme where PC manufacturers were required to pay for an MS-DOS license even when the system shipped with an alternative operating system, used predatory tactics to price its competitors out of the market and erected technical barriers to make it appear that competing products did not work on its operating system. They were sued in 1994 and settled in 1995.
- they bundled IE to the OS to kill off Netscape. In 2001 they were sued again and found to have breached the earlier settlement and abused their monopoly position.
- they've also been sued for similar things in 2002, 2003, and 2007.
So in a nutshell, they had been repeatedly abusing their market position, and 20 years later when they finally have started to lose market share, that's due to a shift from PC systems to tablets and smartphones. Due to litigation, they've been forced to pry out IE from the OS core, pay hundreds of millions and stop their questionable practices. The market didn't solve it in any way, the courtrooms did a somewhat better job, however the Bush jr administration decided to drop all charges based on 9/11 (makes sense right?).
This doesn't negate anything I said. Individual companies act against the interests of others all the time. That is expected. Greed is a necessary facet of economics. Everybody acts in their self-interests all the time, and when those interests don't align with the interests of others, the door is open for realignment due to competition from others who will engage those interests
The market worked perfectly with Microsoft. In fact, it's likely that government intervention delayed MS's fall by cushioning the negatives the consumers experienced by Microsoft's power. There are few quicker ways to destroy a company than by giving it too much market share. Then the burden they feel from consumers for poor performance skyrockets and the incentive to compete against them for potential producers also skyrockets. The only time we see perpetual monopolies is when government creates them through laws. The only example I can think of in the private field is DeBeers, but that's a monopoly precisely because what consumers value about its product is the rarity and ultra-gouged prices.
Slave trade was made illegal in 1808, but in 1861 when the civil war broke out, there were more slaves in the US than there ever had been. Lincoln offered to buy the freedom of the slaves from the south, but he both could not have been able to (buying all the 1.5M slaves would have cost $3bn, more than the worth of all the banks, railroads, factories etc combined), even if the southern states would have agreed to it which they didn't, since they were a profitable business. So much for the market solving the issue.
Another example of making the perfect the enemy of the good. When we discuss "good" things government does, we completely wash over the enormous cost they came at. We just assume the cost was neutral. How many people had to die in the Civil War for people to say that it created more suffering than the problem it was trying to solve? Somehow I feel like that number is infinite because it always seems to go unconsidered. All we do is think "before slavery vs after slavery", not "before a million casualties vs after a million casualties".
I don't want to get into it because finding sources is the hardest thing in the world since virtually nobody ever wants to examine slavery outside the context of racism and laws, but the concept that markets would solve it is just fine and there's ample evidence of it working just about everywhere else (including slavery in other countries). All things boil down to costs and benefits and private entities bend over to them more quickly than governments because of more efficient revenue accountability. If it wasn't true that markets solve these sorts of problems, we would today see the accounting work for bringing slavery back, and we would also see things like Putin invading and holding Ukraine and not stopping unless an army stood in his way instead of what he did, which was stop because the markets were fucking him
I live in Finland, and there's absolutely nothing free market about the education system. There are practically no private schools and education is basically free for everyone, even foreigners. The result is, that Finland has consistently scored at the top of the PISA rankings. Why? I'd personally say it's mainly due to the quality of teachers. They aren't paid well but they're enthusiastic and dedicated, being a teacher is respected. Whereas in some societies "those who can't do teach", in Finland some of the best choose teaching instead of working in the private sector.
Compared to the US, state-run systems that negotiate prices are more market-oriented, as odd as that may be.
Regardless, the difference between the two are better summed up through other means than markets. In a way, it's a night and day comparison, because Finland incorporates vocational education sensibly. The US does not and this is about as stupid as using horse-drawn plows for agriculture.
I absolutely do not think that government(s) should provide any of that in the first place. Only infrastructure, safety, healthcare, regulate individuals and companies so they don't act like a douche and maybe some other things.
Why are these things different? Why do markets work for entertainment or nourishment but not for safety or transportation?
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