The Tyranny of the Market: Why You Can't Always Get What You Want

The Tyranny of the Market: Why You Can't Always Get What You Want

by Joel Waldfogel
The Tyranny of the Market: Why You Can't Always Get What You Want
The Tyranny of the Market: Why You Can't Always Get What You Want

The Tyranny of the Market: Why You Can't Always Get What You Want

by Joel Waldfogel

eBook

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Overview

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.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674044791
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 07/01/2009
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 216
File size: 475 KB

About the Author

Joel Waldfogel is Professor of Business and Public Policy at The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania.

Table of Contents

Contents Preface Introduction 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

What People are Saying About This

The Tyranny of the Market presents a fascinating account of why the market fails to satisfy preference minorities.

Austan Goolsbee

This is a book for all the people out there who sit down and flip through hundreds of channels but never seem to find something they like. In it Joel Waldfogel, one of America's most interesting economists, shows exactly how many people in the marketplace end up stranded, unable to get what they want. It's a provocative statement on why free markets don't necessarily make everyone better off.
Austan Goolsbee, The University of Chicago Graduate School of Business

Fiona Scott Morton

The Tyranny of the Market presents a fascinating account of why the market fails to satisfy preference minorities.
Fiona Scott Morton, Yale School of Management

Matthew Kahn

The Tyranny of the Market conveys an exciting debate focusing on whether "the market gets it right," allowing each type of consumer to achieve his own goals through participating in markets. An important book.
Matthew Kahn, University of California, Los Angeles

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