Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
Posted: 17 Oct 2014 02:52 PM PDT In response to Obama's Lame Response to Ebola; No Protocols but Lots of Fearmongering one person responded that I was "over-cooking the Ebola crisis". Amusingly, another reader accused me of "underplaying the crisis". A third reader asked "what is the free market response?" A similar question arose in a comment to Acting Man's post The Ebola Outbreak – A Black Swan. Before tackling the free market issue, let's first review the government's response to date.
Think about the act of temperature taking. Whoever administered the test would have been in close contact with everyone on or entering the plane. Is that a good idea? Do sneezes and coughs happen? Enough said. Free Market Response It's 100% certain the free market response would not have been the government's response to date. And what about my proposal of flight bans from epidemic countries? Government mandated is not free market by definition. But, it's entirely possible my solution is what the free market would have arrived at! Three Questions I Asked Previously
Those are common sense questions that airlines may have asked themselves. Airports may have asked similar questions. But airlines do not initiate travel bans in this over-regulated society. Neither do airports. I read a comment that airlines are being greedy. How so? Airlines are not in position to ban flights from specific countries for medical reasons. And the last thing airlines need is plane decontamination efforts to fill an extremely tiny number of seats from those arriving from select African countries. I pinged Pater Tenebrarum at Acting Man with this comment "I believe the free market response is that airlines would have banned travel from certain African countries." He responded "Absolutely, but there are many other ways in which we could expect an unhampered market economy to respond to such a situation. In fact, I intend to take up the challenge and write a post about it." Was I correct? We will never know. I simply proposed what I thought the free market solution would be in absence of protocols from the center for disease control. I look forward to reading Pater's response. In the meantime, we know with absolute certainty the government's response was pathetic. We also know McCain's Proposal for an Ebola Czar is equally, if not more pathetic. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
Irony of the Day: Yellen Moans About Income Inequality; Seven Things That Cause Inequality Posted: 17 Oct 2014 10:30 AM PDT Those seeking the irony of the day will find it comes straight from the mouth of the Fed Chair. Please consider Janet Yellen Bemoans Rising US Inequality. Janet Yellen decried rising inequality on Friday in an unusual speech that may lead to accusations of politicising the US Federal Reserve.Look Inward Janet! Instead of bemoaning income inequality as "incompatible with American values", the Chair ought to look at the cause of it. Seven Things That Cause Inequality
Is Inequality Always a Bad Thing? Notice, I said seven but only listed 6. Here's the bonus 7th: Innovation. Those who invent better ways of doing things (or simply do things better than anyone else) often succeed wildly. But the 7th is the way it should be. It is the essence of free-market-capitalism. Looked at properly, income inequality is actually a necessity! It's the way income inequality is achieved that makes it good or bad. Of seven major things that cause income inequality, four are Fed-sponsored, two are government-sponsored, and one is as it should be. Which one does Yellen bitch about? The 7th of course. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com |
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