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by sqeaky
3384 days ago
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I think the implication is that if consumers are well informed they will lookout for their own needs and try to buy goods of sufficient quality. If enough consumers do this the market for junk should fail.
In some markets it has and in others it hasn't, apparently in appliances junk prevails. |
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I think over the long run we've seen evidence for the opposite due to consolidation. Markets aren't perfect; so I am highly skeptical of such a claim.
it almost seems like the more the market matters to society, the less choice consumers actually have.
I am more interested in trends over time than point-evaluations of dynamics at a specific moments.