It's been said that prices are not need to manage resources because needs and wants can be managed by government better, through statistical gathering. What's wrong with this analysis?
What analysis? What statistics?
What do you mean?
You survery americans and they want 300 million cars, 300 million houses, free education, free healthcare, and free hamboigas. What do?
Mr. Statistician, I want a free Ferrari 458 Italia.
Another Ferrari here. If you promise me one I will vote for you.
From what time period will we use statistics to represent real-time prices? Numbers by themselves don't mean anything if they don't represent the actual value attributed to them through exchange. Can statistics, or by what you mean arbitrary numbers assigned to various goods with no real meaning that will not fluctuate with the demands of the market, replace the price mechanism? No. Here's a recent thread on what you're asking for.
So little, Ghandi? I want the world.
Statistical gathering (by a coercive institution) cannot be done without changing the needs and wants it is measuring.
Statistical gathering (by a coercive institution) cannot be done without changing the needs and wants it is measuring
Oh well.
Statistics simply can't replace the role of price as a rationing (or economizing) mechanism. How will one accurately weight opportunity cost? What will replace profit and loss? What will replace the uniformity-of-profit principle as what guides the distribution of capital in the market? How will statistics flexibly respond to a change in preference?
For example, the government knows there is a demand for a postal service. Yet, it has been unable to provide this service in an economical matter, and in the long-run this has brought about both an unprofitable government organization and one that does not meet the demand of its consumers (it really has no incentive to do so, either way).
You should ask soviet bureacrats about that.
It's just never been done right.
Clayton -
It's been said that prices are not need to manage resources because needs and wants can be managed by government better, through statistical gathering.
I heard different - I heard that needs and wants can be managed by government better, through my grilled cheese sandwich.
What's wrong with this analysis?
It's not one.
Statistics can show trends, but don't necessarily show what people value the most. And this is very important when you consider two or more "trends". Where do you allocate the most resources the most efficiently when there are hundreds of statistical "trends"?