Quote from traderNik:
...
I would very much like to follow a reasoned discussion by a few guys here about the need for regulation in order to avoid monopoly.
Why do you think a lack of regulation creates a monopoly?
You should take a different approach at understanding how monopolies are being made... and, if a provider is the best one - why shouldn't everyone want to go there for their purchasing?
So - a monopoly is bad when one player is forcing the others out of business using various tactics. These tactics may include price dumping, but in the case of price dumping - customers get a short term benefit. The intelligent way to "defend" against such tactics - would be to employ various customer loyalty benefits, or some competitive edge with additional value.
If a large provider uses tactics of price dumping, or some "starving/exclusion" tactics within a supply chain - then it's only unfair to competitors if they are unable to regain their equal standing. E.g if someone like Microsoft blocks others from delivering products, then this exclusivity of course is an unfair tactic.
However, the problem does not lie in the free markets themselves - but in the corruptible choices and options that are open. If one sees the "market system" as a whole, and look at all the "corruption options" - then we can easily say that we still have a free market - even if we block all the corruptible tactics and ways market actors can employ, right? It would still constitute a totally free market - it would just not be possible to do the little dirty tricks like blocking with exclusivity etc.
I don't think "total anarchy" is what constitutes free markets or laissez-faire... I think it's the freedom to create, choose and trade with whomever you want - and keeping this intact as a "market system". If someone tries to impose "exclusivity" - then it is no longer anything "free" - but just included something "non-free" and thus is a corruption of the free market notion.
Well, I have some ideas along this line of thinking - and was writing about this earlier in the politics forum on ET, but then mostly with the approach of democracy, political process and government. There is a way to avoid the possibility of corruption - in government and the markets - all with out people regulating anything.
And remember - when you put people in charge of regulations - then you open up for a well of corruption. Encumbering society with regulations and a well of legislation - that is the surest way to perpetuate corruption.
