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coberst
11-16-2008, 10:06 AM
Market Economies Demand Subordinated Market Societies

“A market economy is an economic system controlled, regulated, and directed by market prices; order in the production and distribution of goods is entrusted to this self-regulating mechanism.”

Such a system contains the following assumptions:
1) Human behavior is such as to seek maximum money gains
2) The supply of goods and services are available based on demand at market prices
3) Money, functioning as buying power, is in the hands of prospective buyers
4) Nothing beyond prices must interfere with markets
5) All incomes are supplied through markets
6) Prices, supply, and demand respond only to market forces

Production and distribution will thus depend upon market prices alone. “Self-regulation implies that all production is for sale on the market and all incomes derive from such sales.”

Under feudalism and the guild system land and labor formed a part of the social organization: the status and function of land were determined by legal and provincial rules, all questions about land were removed from any organized market of buying and selling and subjected to various institutional regulations; the same was true regarding matters of labor, the relations between journeymen and apprentice, the terms of craft, and the wages were regulated by the custom and rule of the guild and the town.

“The self-regulating market demands nothing less than the institutional separation of society into an economic and a political sphere…It might be argued that the separateness of the two spheres obtains in every type of society at all times. Such an inference, however, would be based on a fallacy…normally, the economic order is merely a function of the social order…Nineteenth-century society, in which economic activity was isolated and imputed to a distinctive economic motive, was a singular departure.”

A self-regulating market cannot exist unless society is subordinated to its requirements; a market economy can exist only in a market society.

Quotes from “The Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of Our Time” by Karl Polanyi

gopman
11-17-2008, 03:52 PM
The first assumption is wrong (in the sense that it's not an assumption of any market economies or economists). People don't seek to maximize money, they seek to maximize a vague economic concept known as utility, which is basically the value of everything they own and do. If the goal of every human was to maximize money, we would work 24/7. This is obviously not the case. Normally this is where I would stop reading an article like this, but out of curiosity I persevered and it was even more disappointing than I expected.

There are numerous other flaws the author makes that he could have easily overcome if he bothered to read the first chapter of an economics textbook.

Finally what I can make out to be his point is silly because it makes a 7th assumption, equally flawed as the others, that market prices are set independently of any human decision process. The opposite is true. Prices are reflections of human tastes, needs and budgets.

I don't really get what the thrust of the article is. What is a market society? This whole thing just makes absolutely no sense. How does a book like this get published? What if one day I woke up and decided to write a book on biology or computers or something else I know virtually nothing about?