The problem with informational symmetry, of course, is that no-one gets to make a profit....SleeperService wrote:RB the history of economics is covered but not as a specific module AFAIK, however the course is under revision (I'm not starting until next year). The Wealth of Nations is on the reading list as is Small is Beautiful.raspberry-blower wrote:SS I'm curious to know whether your degree course includes modules on the history of economics?
Such as what did Adam Smith actually write about markets, why there have always been bubbles followed by busts, etc.
This appears to be lacking in the thought process of mainstream economists (although so does even the slightest hint of critical analysis)
Your last sentence sums up my reasons for studying the subject in a nutshell.
The other thing that is sadly lacking is an appreciation of the dangers of information assymmetry in a perceived Free Market. I think that and your statement go a long way to explaining the World since 2008.
And we can't have that, now, can we.....
In other words, profit requires that someone lose in order for someone to win and the only way that happens is if there are asymmetries in the market.
The only way the above asymmetries have not led to total economic and political disaster before now (though, there have been some pretty close shaves, all the same) is because, until now, much of the loss was born by the earth itself in terms of giving up it's resources. Now that we have hit the resource buffers, though, the losers are going to be other market participants.
Or, to put it another way, for the last two hundred years of industrial growth some people have won a little and some people have won a lot. From now on in, for some people to win a lot, other people have to lose a lot.