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by SolarNet
2947 days ago
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On two, as this appears to be a cross disciplinary paper, it's important to consider that some economists currently claim markets are efficient (the efficient market hypothesis, which is like a big open question in economics). By drawing a link between the EMH and P=NP (which many computer scientists believe is unlikely) the author is linking two open questions with opposing beliefs. So I think point two is sort of a technicality that with context it should be understood that the author is specifically talking about two open questions as they stand today. Also to further hammer home the point, due to the phrasing of the EMH, although no one may currently be using P=NP, markets would still have the efficiency property now even if no one is exploiting it. Perhaps this sort of vacuously true statement rubs you the wrong way (like it does me a bit) with the strength of the "if and only if" the author used. But if you read "markets are efficient" as the EMH then it is still a valid literal formulation. On three, sure that's great for reality. But for the formulation of markets being efficient as an inherent property (again the EMH) of markets, the size of the market could be held as effectively infinite (or at least extremely large) and the property should still hold. At some point the size of the theoretical market will explode the polynomial, and for the EMH to hold P=NP must be true. |
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IE, it is almost as good.
So sure, maybe the market isn't 100% efficient. Maybe it is instead 99.99999% efficient, and that's good enough.
Or in other words, The author of the paper is trying to be clever, and in the process he kinda misses the point of why the efficent market hypothesis is important to begin with.