| > Theoretically I think it's true because there are far too many variables at play in economies of any decent size for a national government to efficiently organize it. This has been a common complaint, though it's not without response. As to what variables need to be taken into account, there's been discussion that not every product made would have to be. Here's a comment by "Keshav"[0] on Cockshott's input-output tables idea of economic planning, which came about in 1995: "On a related note, Cockshott and Cottrell have a number of papers arguing that central planning is feasible with modern computer technology. As I understand it, the algorithm they present (e.g. in “Towards a New Socialism”) does not consider a linear programming problem; rather, it takes as given a target for final goods production (determined elsewhere in their model, which includes some markets for consumer goods) and solve for the gross output levels required to meet this target. They exploit the fact that the input-output structure of the economy is sparse (only a small fraction of the goods in the economy are directly used to produce any single good). Their algorithm’s complexity increases with n*m, where m is the number of direct inputs for each product, which seems manageable even with n=12 billion." Cockshott talks at length about "The problem of scale" (the one which is your theoretical agrument) in his book in the chapter of the same name, which is downloadable for free as a PDF in its LaTeX glory here[1]. I last read it many years ago and refutations of it exist, though it's worth a read in my opinion. [0] http://crookedtimber.org/2012/05/30/in-soviet-union-optimiza... [1] https://www.researchgate.net/publication/299519892_Towards_a... |
But that's a very big if.
Furthermore, I'd suggest "If it ain't broke, don't fix it" applies here. We already know markets are good at organizing production, we should use them to do that.
Any social ills that result because or alongside of markets should be addressed directly.