rainbow wrote:Forty Two wrote:Scot Dutchy wrote:42 seems to think that pure capitalism is a fair deal when it further from the truth. In pure capitalism it is dog eats dog which leads to monopolies which leads to high prices and exploitation of the work force or is that too advanced thinking?
This is not accurate. In the real world, free market capitalism defeats monopolies, it doesn't create them.
Like Microsoft?
...utterly defeated.
Do you actually believe the drivel you post?
You're very difficult to talk to when you constantly spew nonsense like "do you actually believe the drivel you post?" I post complete thoughts, with support from leading economists, defining my terms and explaining what I'm talking about. You post quips and blurbs, making declarations and pretending to have established a point.
Microsoft is a large company, but they have a major competitor in Apple with OSx and there are other PC operating systems that can be installed if a person wants them. Many people install Linux, and that's not the only one. FreeBSD and others.
Look what happened with microsoft and internet explorer. It defeated Netscape only to be outperformed by other browser providers.
Microsoft has their own PC stores now, copying Apple, but many companies make PCs.
Critical even to the most rudimentary definition of monopoly is the concept of the market in which Microsoft is presumed to operate. Even if the “market” is restricted to firms selling computer
operating systems, Microsoft is clearly not the only seller, but it surely is a dominant one, given its 80 percent (or greater) share of sales. However, if the relevant market is defined more broadly, Microsoft’s dominance is not nearly so great. The company’s sales represent only 5 percent of total dollar sales in the
software market and, of course, a much smaller percentage of total dollar sales in the
computer market as a whole.).
A key economic point needs to be kept in mind: a firm may have a dominant market share, even be the sole seller, of a product not because it has acted monopolistically (i.e. garnered monopoly profits by restricting sales and raising price) but because it has done just the opposite, namely lowered its price in order to expand its customer base to encompass a large fraction of all buyers.
The original dominance of Microsoft in the operating-system market can be attributed at least partially to the pricing blunders of its competitors, most notably Apple, which adopted a strategy of restricting the sales of its operating system and then tying the operating system to the purchase of Apple computers. Microsoft licensed its operating systems to other manufacturers.
One cannot know from the observation that Microsoft has an 80 percent market share whether Microsoft is acting monopolistically or competitively, and it is altogether understandable that those who accuse Microsoft of being a monopolist also accuse it of being “brutally competitive.” The firm can be either, and the latter form of behavior could have resulted in its becoming a dominant seller without necessarily being a monopolist. It cannot be stressed enough that a firm that is a single seller, or just a dominant producer, is not necessarily a monopolist, as the term is generally defined by economists, because all definitions of monopoly presume that the firm is capable of using its market position to restrict output and increase its prices and profits, in the process creating “market inefficiency."
A firm can become large either by using resources efficiently and remaining attuned to its customers’ wants or by behaving, well, as a monopolist. But in order for a firm to act successfully as a monopolist, genuine barriers to the entry of new rivals must exist. Otherwise, any firm that seeks greater profits by reducing output and raising price can expect to attract new market entrants who seek to make the sales that the established firm has not made, and which the new entrants can make by undercutting the monopolist’s price. Without barriers to entry, the price charged by the would-be monopolist will not hold, given that the market supply is not restricted. The output of the new market entrants can be expected to neutralize, partially if not completely, the hopeful monopolist’s attempt to restrict output.
Microsoft was not a monopoly (engaged in monopolistic behavior). It had an 80% market share in operating systems. But, 20% of the market was owned by a slew of competitors. Microsoft was not able to restrict production to raise prices and distort the market or create market inefficiencies. Had Microsoft tried to raise prices, then the competitors would swoop in to reduce the price. That's why Microsoft's OS was always cheap - came installed on computers/laptops costing a few hundred dollars.
And, what did the government do about it anyway? Microsoft still has 80% market share now, even though people are free to easily use another OS system.
Neither Microsoft nor Brazil is making the anti-Capitalism-as-best-remedy-for-capitalism point.
Is anyone here actually arguing in favor of something other than Capitalism, except rainbow (who is arguing that there is no such thing as free market capitalism and that "free market" and "Capitalism" can never exist together as they are contradictions in terms)?
“When I was in college, I took a terrorism class. ... The thing that was interesting in the class was every time the professor said ‘Al Qaeda’ his shoulders went up, But you know, it is that you don’t say ‘America’ with an intensity, you don’t say ‘England’ with the intensity. You don’t say ‘the army’ with the intensity,” she continued. “... But you say these names [Al Qaeda] because you want that word to carry weight. You want it to be something.” - Ilhan Omar