What your professor was discussing were the later years of the USSRs era. That's when the execution of the system really got screwed up by those in charge. I was lucky to live before and after that stage and can assure you that before the perestroika ideas (very good in themselves) things were much better. The system worked better b/c it was more stable. The temporary instability got things out of wack. Criminal elements go to power. The rest is history. It is NOT that the west destroyed the USSR.Quote from jem:
vlad... While you seemed to have made a case for socialism/soviet systems there were economists in Wash. D.C. a few years before the collapse of the USSR that briefed congress with thick books detailing and I mean detailing how completely inefficient the soviet command economy was. ( I know I ended the sentence improperly)
I had a professor who put out parts of and edited 300 - 500 pages of documents for Congress on this subject every year. He was smart a guy and in the papers he was allowed to pass out to the class he predicted exactly what was going to happen and how it would happen. It was one of the most amazing experiences I ever had--- watching what this guy said would happen, happen. You can not argue that any aspect of their economy was efficient from what I read. They had resources all spread out-- people in one place, food in another, minerals in another, and they could not command that economy to work.
For background I graduated from George Washing Univ in 1986, in case you want to look my professor's work up. By the way aren't you a little concerned that while professors get to pursue knowledge ( perhaps an underpaid career) they expect others to work for a government wage so things are more equitable.
Now for EMH- If you trade large enough amounts you can't do better than the market. No kidding.
I have been fascinated by this EMH thought for years as it was beaten into me by my socialist econ professors in the early eighties. You must admit what you are professing now is significantly different from what my professors were stating then.
Also, what I rarely see is how people account for the following: X percent of institutions underperform the market and probably an even higher percentage of individuals underperform the market. The market is not efficient it is actually more difficult than efficient or random. When people start to understand this fact they can start to make a living via trading. The pit and the others making markets are living adapting mechanisms by their nature forced to destroy repetitive non adapting systematic exploitation of the market.
On a side note I refer to an article by an academic who works for the Fed. She was interviewed in Stocks and Commodities magazine about a year ago. She used what she called boot strapped statistics and stated rather clearly that the currency market was not efficient because it reacted differently to different price levels relative to how the market was quoted. I.E. you would find price bounces that were outside random occurrences when you looked at round numbers based on say the normal market quotation of dollar yen but you would not see the same kind of actions around the same number for yen dollar. The article fairly convincingly questioned the merit of any kind of emh theory.
It was really just a very unlucky confluence of events. Just as it was a very LUCKY confluence of events that things were initially set up so well in the US with the constitution etc and that no event got the system out of it's stable course by enough. Had that happened, I'm not sure how viable it would have turned out. The reason it is even higher to beat the market that what would be under EMH is b/c of the transactions costs. For long term traders the performance is much closer to EMH predictions.The last example you are giving is a good one as it sheds light on another thing I don't think I mentioned before. It's not the true randomness that EMH implies. It's the fact that you can make a fortune on the instances of nonrandomness you spot. Many of those will only be evident in retrospect and if there is something you can predict in advance, your own actions will make it vanish.
