Coping with Market Impeders and Market Inefficiencies
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Coping with Market Impeders and Market Inefficiencies
By Sam Vaknin
Author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited"
Even the most devout proponents of free marketry and hidden hand
theories acknowledge the existence of market failures, market
imperfections and inefficiencies in the allocation of economic
resources. Some of these are the results of structural problems,
others of an accumulation of historical liabilities. But,
strikingly, some of the inefficiencies are the direct outcomes of
the activities of "non bona fide" market participants.
These "players" (individuals, corporations, even larger economic
bodies, such as states) act either irrationally or egotistically
(too rationally).
What characterizes all those "market impeders" is that they are
value subtractors rather than value adders. Their activities
generate a reduction, rather than an increase, in the total benefits
(utilities) of all the other market players (themselves included).
Some of them do it because they are after a self interest which is
not economic (or, more strictly, financial). They sacrifice some
economic benefits in order to satisfy that self interest (or, else,
they could never have attained these benefits, in the first place).
Others refuse to accept the self interest of other players as their
limit. They try to maximize their benefits at any cost, as long as
it is a cost to others. Some do so legally and some adopt shadier
varieties of behaviour. And there is a group of parasites -
participants in the market who feed off its very inefficiencies and
imperfections and, by their very actions, enhance them. A vicious
cycle ensues: the body economic gives rise to parasitic agents who
thrive on its imperfections and lead to the amplification of the
very impurities that they prosper on.
We can distinguish six classes of market impeders:
1.. Crooks and other illegal operators. These take advantage of
ignorance, superstition, greed, avarice, emotional states of mind of
their victims - to strike. They re-allocate resources from
(potentially or actually) productive agents to themselves. Because
they reduce the level of trust in the marketplace - they create
negative added value. (See: "The Shadowy World of International
Finance" and "The Fabric of Economic Trust")
2.. Illegitimate operators include those treading the thin line
between legally permissible and ethically inadmissible. They engage
in petty cheating through misrepresentations, half-truths, semi-
rumours and the like. They are full of pretensions to the point of
becoming impostors. They are wheeler-dealers, sharp-cookies, Daymon
Ranyon characters, lurking in the shadows cast by the sun of the
market. Their impact is to slow down the economic process through
disinformation and the resulting misallocation of resources. They
are the sand in the wheels of the economic machine.
3.. The "not serious" operators. These are people too hesitant, or
phobic to commit themselves to the assumption of any kind of risk.
Risk is the coal in the various locomotives of the economy, whether
local, national, or global. Risk is being assumed, traded,
diversified out of, avoided, insured against. It gives rise to
visions and hopes and it is the most efficient "economic natural
selection" mechanism. To be a market participant one must assume
risk, it in an inseparable part of economic activity. Without it the
wheels of commerce and finance, investments and technological
innovation will immediately grind to a halt. But many operators are
so risk averse that, in effect, they increase the inefficiency of
the market in order to avoid it. They act as though they are
resolute, risk assuming operators. They make all the right moves,
utter all the right sentences and emit the perfect noises. But when
push comes to shove - they recoil, retreat, defeated before staging
a fight. Thus, they waste the collective resources of all that the
operators that they get involved with. They are known to endlessly
review projects, often change their minds, act in fits and starts,
have the wrong priorities (for an efficient economic functioning,
that is), behave in a self defeating manner, be horrified by any
hint of risk, saddled and surrounded by every conceivable
consultant, glutted by information. They are the stick in the
spinning wheel of the modern marketplace.
4.. The former kind of operators obviously has a character
problem. Yet, there is a more problematic species: those suffering
from serious psychological problems, personality disorders, clinical
phobias, psychoneuroses and the like. This human aspect of the
economic realm has, to the best of my knowledge, been neglected
before. Enormous amounts of time, efforts, money and energy are
expended by the more "normal" - because of the "less normal" and
the "eccentric". These operators are likely to regard the
maintaining of their internal emotional balance as paramount, far
over-riding economic considerations. They will sacrifice economic
advantages and benefits and adversely affect their utility outcome
in the name of principles, to quell psychological tensions and
pressures, as part of obsessive-compulsive rituals, to maintain a
false grandiose image, to go on living in a land of fantasy, to
resolve a psychodynamic conflict and, generally, to cope with
personal problems which have nothing to do with the idealized
rational economic player of the theories. If quantified, the amounts
of resources wasted in these coping manoeuvres is, probably, mind
numbing. Many deals clinched are revoked, many businesses started
end, many detrimental policy decisions adopted and many potentially
beneficial situations avoided because of these personal upheavals.
5.. Speculators and middlemen are yet another species of
parasites. In a theoretically totally efficient marketplace - there
would have been no niche for them. They both thrive on information
failures. The first kind engages in arbitrage (differences in
pricing in two markets of an identical good - the result of
inefficient dissemination of information) and in gambling. These are
important and blessed functions in an imperfect world because they
make it more perfect. The speculative activity equates prices and,
therefore, sends the right signals to market operators as to how and
where to most efficiently allocate their resources. But this is the
passive speculator. The "active" speculator is really a market
rigger. He corners the market by the dubious virtue of his
reputation and size. He influences the market (even creates it)
rather than merely exploit its imperfections. Soros and Buffet have
such an influence though their effect is likely to be considered
beneficial by unbiased observers. Middlemen are a different story
because most of them belong to the active subcategory. This means
that they, on purpose, generate market inconsistencies,
inefficiencies and problems - only to solve them later at a cost
extracted and paid to them, the perpetrators of the problem. Leaving
ethical questions aside, this is a highly wasteful process.
Middlemen use privileged information and access - whereas
speculators use information of a more public nature. Speculators
normally work within closely monitored, full disclosure, transparent
markets. Middlemen thrive of disinformation, misinformation and lack
of information. Middlemen monopolize their information - speculators
share it, willingly or not. The more information becomes available
to more users - the greater the deterioration in the resources
consumed by brokers of information. The same process will likely
apply to middlemen of goods and services. We are likely to witness
the death of the car dealer, the classical retail outlet, the music
records shop. For that matter, inventions like the internet is
likely to short-circuit the whole distribution process in a matter
of a few years.
6.. The last type of market impeders is well known and is the only
one to have been tackled - with varying degrees of success by
governments and by legislators worldwide. These are the trade
restricting arrangements: monopolies, cartels, trusts and other
illegal organizations. Rivers of inks were spilled over forests of
paper to explain the pernicious effects of these anti-competitive
practices (see: "Competition Laws"). The short and the long of it is
that competition enhances and increases efficiency and that,
therefore, anything that restricts competition, weakens and lessens
efficiency.
What could anyone do about these inefficiencies? The world goes in
circles of increasing and decreasing free marketry. The globe was a
more open, competitive and, in certain respects, efficient place at
the beginning of the 20th century than it is now. Capital flowed
more freely and so did labour. Foreign Direct Investment was bigger.
The more efficient, "friction free" the dissemination of information
(the ultimate resource) - the less waste and the smaller the
lebensraum for parasites. The more adherence to market, price
driven, open auction based, meritocratic mechanisms - the less
middlemen, speculators, bribers, monopolies, cartels and trusts. The
less political involvement in the workings of the market and, in
general, in what consenting adults conspire to do that is not
harmful to others - the more efficient and flowing the economic
ambience is likely to become.
This picture of "laissez faire, laissez aller" should be
complimented by even stricter legislation coupled with effective and
draconian law enforcement agents and measures. The illegal and the
illegitimate should be stamped out, cruelly. Freedom to all - is
also freedom from being conned or hassled. Only when the righteous
freely prosper and the less righteous excessively suffer - only then
will we have entered the efficient kingdom of the free market.
This still does not deal with the "not serious" and the "personality
disordered". What about the inefficient havoc that they wreak? This,
after all, is part of what is known, in legal parlance as: "force
majeure".
Note
There is a raging debate between the "rational expectations" theory
and the "prospect theory". The former - the cornerstone of rational
economics - assumes that economic (human) players are rational and
out to maximize their utility (see: "The Happiness of Others", "The
Egotistic Friend" and "The Distributive Justice of the Market").
Even ignoring the fuzzy logic behind the ill-defined philosophical
term "utility" - rational economics has very little to do with real
human being and a lot to do with sterile (though mildly useful)
abstractions. Prospect theory builds on behavioural research in
modern psychology which demonstrates that people are more loss
averse than gain seekers (utility maximizers). Other economists have
succeeded to demonstrate irrational behaviours of economic actors
(heuristics, dissonances, biases, magical thinking and so on).
The apparent chasm between the rational theories (efficient markets,
hidden hands and so on) and behavioural economics is the result of
two philosophical fallacies which, in turn, are based on the
misapplication and misinterpretation of philosophical terms.
The first fallacy is to assume that all forms of utility are
reducible to one another or to money terms. Thus, the values
attached to all utilities are expressed in monetary terms. This is
wrong. Some people prefer leisure, or freedom, or predictability to
expected money. This is the very essence of risk aversion: a trade
off between the utility of predictability (absence or minimization
of risk) and the expected utility of money. In other words, people
have many utility functions running simultaneously - or, at best,
one utility function with many variables and coefficients. This is
why taxi drivers in New York cease working in a busy day, having
reached a pre-determined income target: the utility function of
their money equals the utility function of their leisure.
How can these coefficients (and the values of these variables) be
determined? Only by engaging in extensive empirical research. There
is no way for any theory or "explanation" to predict these values.
We have yet to reach the stage of being able to quantify, measure
and numerically predict human behaviour and personality (=the set of
adaptive traits and their interactions with changing circumstances).
That economics is a branch of psychology is becoming more evident by
the day. It would do well to lose its mathematical pretensions and
adopt the statistical methods of its humbler relative.
The second fallacy is the assumption underlying both rational and
behavioural economics that human nature is an "object" to be
analysed and "studied", that it is static and unchanged. But, of
course, humans change inexorably. This is the only fixed feature of
being human: change. Some changes are unpredictable, even in
deterministic principle. Other changes are well documented. An
example of the latter class of changes in the learning curve. Humans
learn and the more they learn the more they alter their behaviour.
So, to obtain any meaningful data, one has to observe behaviour in
time, to obtain a sequence of reactions and actions. To isolate,
observe and manipulate environmental variables and study human
interactions. No snapshot can approximate a video sequence where
humans are concerned.
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AUTHOR BIO (must be included with the article)
Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant
Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West
Lost the East. He served as a columnist for Global Politician,
Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a
United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent, and
the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in
The Open Directory and Suite101.
Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government
of Macedonia.
Visit Sam's Web site at samvak.tripod.com
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