| >> Hayek is arguing that no centralised agent has perfect information. The author is arguing that Amazon is approaching the stage when it would have perfect information about the consumers it serves. >This statement in the article is a huge misstatement. At least blame the right person: me. The above statement is a paraphrase of what I thought the author's argument was. >First, Amazon only has information about the goods it sells. >There are huge supply chains behind the products it sells that it does not see. And it is in the process of acquiring more information. Amazon isn't just a retailer anymore: its main source of operating income is now AWS[0]. Also, dredmorbius has pointed out[1] that Amazon is doing vertical integration with its Amazon Business offering[2]. >There are many things it doesn't sell, and many things that it can't sell. This is irrelevant, because these "many things" exist in a market outside of Amazon's "jurisdiction". Even in the historical centrally planned economies, these "many things" also existed. >There are also many things of value that are not exchanged with money. And they are getting rarer and rarer, because monetisation is now the Great Project. >In other words, it has exactly the information that Hayek says a market participant has, and no more: the price at which other market participants will buy whatever quantity of one's products are sold. Actually, Amazon has more information than a single market participant has. Since it is the market because it is a marketplace-as-a-service, it has exactly the information that Hayek says the sum total of all market participants have. This invalidates Hayek's argument that no centralised agent can possibly collect that much information. This point is what I believe the author of the article is trying to make. [0] https://www.zdnet.com/article/in-2018-aws-delivered-most-of-... [1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=21306655 [2] https://www.amazon.com/b2b/info/amazon-business |
Fair enough.
> Amazon has more information than a single market participant has. Since it is the market because it is a marketplace-as-a-service, it has exactly the information that Hayek says the sum total of all market participants have.
No, it doesn't. It has all the information that a large market participant has--i.e., a market participant that has a very large number of transactions with a very large number of other market participants. Hayek was perfectly well aware that such market participants existed (after all, such participants existed in his day--for example, Standard Oil).
But Amazon's information is still limited to information that a market participant can have: namely, as I said, the prices at which the various goods it sells are sold. It does not have any more information than that. It has information about a lot more transactions than most other market participants, but the information it has about each transaction is the same as what the other participant in the transaction has, no more.