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The Tyranny of the Market
By
Joel Waldfogel
Description
Economists have
long counseled reliance on markets rather than on government to
decide a wide range of questions, in part because allocation through
voting can give rise to a \\\"tyranny of the majority.\\\"
Markets, by contrast, are believed to make products available to suit
any individual, regardless of what others want. But the argument is
not generally correct. In markets, you can\\\\\\\'t always get what you
want. This book explores why this is so and its consequences for
consumers with atypical preferences.
When fixed costs
are substantial, markets provide only products desired by large
concentrations of people. As a result, people are better off in their
capacity as consumers when more fellow consumers share their product
preferences. Small groups of consumers with less prevalent tastes,
such as blacks, Hispanics, people with rare diseases, and people
living in remote areas, find less satisfaction in markets. In some
cases, an actual tyranny of the majority occurs in product markets. A
single product can suit one group or another. If one group is larger,
the product is targeted to the larger group, making them better off
and others worse off.
The book
illustrates these phenomena with evidence from a variety of
industries such as restaurants, air travel, pharmaceuticals, and the
media, including radio broadcasting, newspapers, television,
bookstores, libraries, and the Internet.
Contents
Part I: Theory
1. Markets and the
Tyranny of the Majority
2. Are \\\"Lumpy\\\"
Markets a Problem?
Part II: Empirical Evidence
3. Who Benefits
Whom in Practice
4. Who Benefits
Whom in the Neighborhood
5. Preference
Minorities as Citizens and Consumers
Part III: Market Solutions and Their
Limits
6. Market
Enlargement and Consumer Liberation
7. Fixed Costs,
Product Quality, and Market Size
8. Trade and the
Tyranny of Alien Majorities
9. Salvation
through New Technologies
Part IV: Policy Solutions and Their
Limits
10. Government
Subsidies and Insufficient Demand
11. Books and
Liquor: Two Case Studies
Conclusion
Notes
References
Index
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