very good points. transaction costs are important but not the only
consideration for a perfect market.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perfect_market
On 15/04/14 23:53, Washington Sanchez wrote:
> My thoughts:
>
> * High transaction costs for various goods and services typically lead
> to centralization temporal market monopolies (not even talking about
> the government-sponsored ones)
> * High transaction costs can be afforded by individuals or groups of
> individuals who possess capital and accept risk. These players
> become the gatekeepers and *the* /exclusive /third parties.
> * As a result, many individuals have little or no mobility within the
> market as only a few players are capable of handling these high
> transaction costs. Well known duopolies come to mind: McDonald's vs
> Burger King, Coke versus Pepsi, Republican vs Democrat, Labor vs Liberal
> * Revolutionary technologies that folks like us get excited about
> (e.g. 3D printing, Bitcoin, mesh networks, DIY drones), directly
> challenge these players and the centralized model they operate
> under. Fundamentally, these technologies significantly reduce these
> high transaction costs so that the /common man/ can start to provide
> these services for themselves or for a small group of others. Market
> mobility is now possible for everyone, rigid centralized models are
> disrupted.
> * If we were to take a glancing look at the trends, the explosion of
> information and communication has catalyzed the development of
> technology to break-down high transaction costs. Heavily centralized
> services and /exclusive /third parties have their days numbered.
> Once the network effect of these decentralizing technologies outpace
> the existing centralized order, a real, peaceful, and perhaps subtle
> revolution occurs.
> * Bitcoin threatens the centralization of the economy by the
> government and banks, who have long abused their privileged position
> to oppress everyone else. The underlying high transaction costs of
> enforcing monetary contracts, protecting vast sums of wealth, loans
> and high level market operations, are fast becoming within the reach
> of every human being. If trends continue, I foresee the government
> being permanently banned from the economic and market order.
> * Physical security is one of the ultimate high transaction costs,
> just above money itself. This is, in effect, the high transaction
> cost service to overcome. For this reason, individuals perpetuate
> the network effect that is called 'government', in well-reasoned
> fear of the alternative (chaos, criminal gangs).
> * I don't know what technological and market solutions will appear to
> better protect individuals, so much so that centralized protection
> services like the police and military become unnecessary, but I
> remain optimistic about the future. I have no desire to use these
> tools help maintain antiquated centralized systems.
>
> Regards,
>
> drwasho
>
>
>
>
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