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Markets are one mechanism for social regulation; there are many others. For example it was common for rulers in past societies to bury large hordes of treasure as offering to the gods. This was done not to store it, but because it increased prestige while reducing actual power. This is not a market. Not everything is a market and attempting to apply market mechanics to things which are not markets (like relationships, education) is a major source of inefficiency and unhappiness.



Everything is a market. Problems arise when this is ignored and, worse, when rules are created that go against the market.

Education, for example, certainly is a market. Demand is high and all parents try to get the best the can for their children, which creates an imbalance between demand and supply for the best education. Where school places are allocated according to catchment areas, houses prices immediately reflect the value of certain schools. That's the market talking.

In the UK, there used to be "grammar schools", which were selective secondary state schools. Most of them have been abolished but not all of them. Getting a place means top free education. Result? Insane competition and huge industry of private tuitions and training books that lockout the poorer. Again the market is at play and tells us that a grammar school place is extremely valuable.

Supply and demand, therefore markets, shape everything.


Everything is NOT a market, that’s a profoundly ideological statement. Check out Karl Polanyi and the distinction between a society with markets vs a market society. We live in a market society, but that is a historically unprecedented state of affairs - historically, many important aspects of society were distributed and regulated through other social forms. It is capitalism alone which commodifies everything under the sun, including land, housing and labor. Many of the most awful aspects of our society are rooted in this historic aberration and the creative destruction it brings with it.


Specifically the interests of the unborn cannot be represented in a market. The unborn have an interest in the use of resources and the exploitation of the environment, and it is a legitimate moral interest, but they are not market actors and their interests cannot be accounted for in a market framework.




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