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by rachofsunshine
489 days ago
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> It seems inefficient and certainly demoralizing, but I would prefer that solutions to the problem were driven by market forces and innovation rather than regulation or employee backlash. I ask this as a person who takes market forces very seriously: why? I think it's pretty obvious at this point that these forces are not producing very good outcomes for the population (even if they are on paper efficient in the market-efficiency sense), or at least, that the public doesn't feel like they are. That's causing massive social instability that is threatening nearly the entire developed world. That instability poses a pretty high threat to the approach you're arguing for. Neither protectionist reactionaries, nor leftists, are very well aligned with free-market philosophy, and those ideologies are ascendant nearly everywhere right now. Isn't that a greater threat to free-market economics than relatively mild welfare-state and workers-rights stuff? (Full disclosure: I am very much pro-labor and pro-regulation, so this is arguing for things I support, but even with your views it seems pretty clear to me that the status quo is dead no matter what you do. Wouldn't you rather have reforms that make the existing system work for the public than a revolution that destroys it entirely?) |
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Just because market failures exist, doesn’t mean a non-market approach will work better. Our markets have a lot of issues, but so do our public policies. For me, the perfect example is land use and housing regulation. With the best of intentions, government policies have made housing costs sky rocket. Meanwhile in places like Tokyo where I used to live, limited zoning laws and straightforward building codes has led to dirt cheap apartments, wonderful, walkable neighborhoods, and clean air. Where I live in California, we’re drowning in parking requirements and environmental reviews. Nothing gets built. Air is dirty, traffic is horrible, and you have to go everywhere by car.
Like you, I’m not at all opposed to government regulation or intervention. But the devil is in the details. Would a government enforced pay cap be better than the current system? I think the only honest answer is we don’t know. We need to be humble when approaching public policy, acknowledging that how we intend our policies to function is often quite different from their actual effects.