| Yes. To speak metaphorically, decentralized market regulation by supply and demand is the Bitcoin style of solving the problem. That is extremely inefficient, wasting lots of resources, being very slow but avoiding a single point of failure. If you are surprised by the comparison, consider that you are avoiding the calculation problem with "the market regulating itself" phrase which falsely implies that this regulation would happen for free. It is equivalent to saying "Bitcoin approves transactions itself". That is true but there is still huge processing power employed to do so, as the huge mining farms show. In a free market calculations are performed by every individual actor in the market. In fact companies spent huge amounts of resources on market research to find out what and how much they should produce. Central planning does naturally require far less processing power and can be more efficient (it has a much better best case but, to be fair, also a much worse worst case). Even primitive, paper based, Soviet style planning has been proven to be quite adequate for early 20th century economies (don't be tempted to move the goalpost here, yes there were inefficiencies and it sometimes did perform worse that free markets, the point is it was already good enough to keep a country running for decades) Now cybersyn was the right idea to go a step further. Make the central planning faster, more flexible and more democratic. To answer your question a little bit less simplistic, it depends. Obviously cybersyn was an early experiment and would surely not sufficed but would have Chile been better off with it than with the bloody CIA backed dictatorship that was put in power instead? Yeah, I am quite sure. We have now strong empirical evidence that neoliberalism does not work as promised. |
Central planning works horribly and there's wide evidence of that.
> decentralized market regulation by supply and demand is the Bitcoin style of solving the problem.
This is word salad. The criticism of bitcoin - that I would absolutely agree with - is that it wastes resources to solve the same problem that a SQL database solves, just more inefficiently.
In order to solve the same problem a market solves you would need to take into account the preferences of millions of independent actors and mash them together into a Frankenstein solution, which is clearly beyond the capabilities of any government, with or without computers.
> Even primitive, paper based, Soviet style planning has been proven to be quite adequate for early 20th century economies
This claim is complete insanity. At no point in history the USSR has performed better than the first world in any sector, with the exception of a few propaganda stunts (like the space race) that came at costs so enormous that could only be borne by a brutal dictatorship, and that were promptly and easily matched and surpassed by the US.
Frankly, if your argument for central planning is to point at how well it worked out for the Soviets, I don't need to argue any further.
> it was already good enough to keep a country running for decades
Anything is good enough to keep a country running for decades, that's not a reasonable indicator of any kind of success whatsoever. The alternative to central planning is to stop doing it, not to go back to the 19th century.
> would have Chile been better off with it than with the bloody CIA backed dictatorship
A comment that contains a literal invitation to not move the goalposts ends with an irrelevant tangent. How ironic.
Yes, the OG 9/11 was bad, you get a gold star.
Cybersyn is interesting as an information system for the technology it employed, and is for sure a great display of ingenuity.
But come on, let's stop beating this dead horse. Central planning is a pipe dream.