You need to disprove the above in order to prove your claim that government is not a monopoly, and as we were discussing the UK, that can be your example if you wish.
jog on
duc
Duc,
I'm happy to discuss Business Economics / Oligopoly / Monopoly and economics but as I said to you pretty much earlier on - I'm not prepared to go down this ridiculous route.
1. I don't understand the way stuffy way question is put. Can it be simplified please?
2. I need to disprove to prove the above which I do not understand to start with.
I've also seen some of your other posts
The a priori of monopoly « ducati998 and your views are very specific to further your agenda.
To gain a monopoly position, all competition must be eliminated. Free market mechanisms cannot succeed, nor be utilised to eliminate competition, as free market mechanisms rely upon ‘out competing’ the competition through ‘lower price, higher quality’ or a combination of the two. With ‘free entry’ to the ‘market’ as ‘profit margins rise’ due to an expansion of market share, or product dominance, competitors are attracted to the high returns available, particularly if the demand curve has areas of inelasticity. THIS IS CLEARLY A FALSE ASSUMPTION TO BASE YOUR ARGUMENT ON.
I do not wish to go back to reading my old books but thanks to Wikipedia here some real live examples.
Anti-competitive practices
These can include:
Dumping, where a company sells a product in a competitive market at a loss. Though the company loses money for each sale, the company hopes to force other competitors out of the market, after which the company would be free to raise prices for a greater profit.
Exclusive dealing, where a retailer or wholesaler is obliged by contract to only purchase from the contracted supplier.
Price fixing, where companies collude to set prices, effectively dismantling the free market.
Refusal to deal, e.g., two companies agree not to use a certain vendor
Dividing territories, an agreement by two companies to stay out of each other's way and reduce competition in the agreed-upon territories.
Limit Pricing, where the price is set by a monopolist at a level intended to discourage entry into a market.
Tying, where products that aren't naturally related must be purchased together.
Resale price maintenance, where resellers are not allowed to set prices independently.
Also criticized are:
Absorption of a competitor or competing technology, where the powerful firm effectively co-opts or swallows its competitor rather than see it either compete directly or be absorbed by another firm.
Subsidies from government which allow a firm to function without being profitable, giving them an advantage over competition or effectively barring competition
Regulations which place costly restrictions on firms that less wealthy firms cannot afford to implement
Protectionism, Tariffs and Quotas which give firms insulation from competitive forces
Patent misuse and copyright misuse, such as fraudulently obtaining a patent, copyright, or other form of intellectual property; or using such legal devices to gain advantage in an unrelated market.
Digital rights management which prevents owners from selling used media, as would normally be allowed by the first sale doctrine.
Through history the theory of monopoly can be seen to drive the ever shrinking number of ‘States’ into ever larger territorial areas that are exploited by monopoly government. There have been stunning reversals, the Soviet Empire imploded of course, but the historical dialectic has been towards consolidation through war and aggression. The inelastic demand curve is inelastic as of course it is 100% coerced. The revenues generated are called ‘tax’.
You do realise tax revenue is fed back to the people one way or another based on manifestos of the elected party. I don't see Monopolies donating profits to charity do you?
Monopoly through coercion has a logical conclusion: one world government. Steps have of course been underway for a long time towards this ‘ideal’ using the fiat currency as the primary weapon. Bretton Woods saw the hegemony of the US. drive the implementation of the US dollar as the ‘world reserve’ currency, much as prior to WWI Britain held the unofficial world reserve currency.
This one World government I think would be a good system imo. Do away with a lot of issues.
I see your name plastered all over google Duc. You get off on this or what?
Be good if you could speak regular lay man's English instead of stuffy nonsense.