Originally posted by Spiffor
I'm not trying to confuse the two. I only consider the latter meaning to have any sense. The purely economic meaning of "shortage" is absurd IMO, as it doesn't consider a "shortage" the fact that some people don't get the resources they need (because they can't afford them).
Hence, I did no wordplay. I was positioning myself out of the free-market paradigma, precisely because I think market mechanisms are a failure here.
I'm not trying to confuse the two. I only consider the latter meaning to have any sense. The purely economic meaning of "shortage" is absurd IMO, as it doesn't consider a "shortage" the fact that some people don't get the resources they need (because they can't afford them).
Hence, I did no wordplay. I was positioning myself out of the free-market paradigma, precisely because I think market mechanisms are a failure here.
I don't think that the free market manages to allocate resources perfectly, but it does better than a badly-designed hard cap system.
Which is why, in the current global economic climate, the idea of "fixing" oil is ridiculous. There's no way to socialise a single, fungible commodity without socialising the rest of the economy as well. It's possible to break off many individual services in that way (to create the modern welfare state), but when you're talking about goods which are easily bought and sold the existence of a black market will lead almost immediately to everybody grabbing as much on the official market as they can, only to turn around and resell to those who need it more. Which leads, as I've already pointed out, to even higher "real" prices, and a movement of the profit from those doing the exploration and refining to black marketeers who don't even have the excuse of running a value-added business.
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