Germany isn't exactly a homogeneous country you know, there are still massive East/West disparities even 20+ years post-reunification...
Agreed, but Germany (and most European countries individually) is (are) significantly more homogeneous than the United States.
I would, however, point out that in the modern era, it's much harder to maintain a monopoly precisely because of the government's ability and willingness to prosecute anti-competitive practices, and not so much because of any intrinsic features of capitalism. ... (Do you happen to know any good investigative pieces or even books on that ULA thing? That sounds like it'd be really interesting to study the history of.)
I doubt there has been much in the way of investigative pieces or books with regards to the Space Launch market. In 2006, a nascent SpaceX brought suite against Boeing & Lockheed Martin for forming ULA (
link). Today, the US Government launches any large scale satellites with ULA. The
wikipedia article is probably the best starting point.
The government's ability and willingness to prosecute anti-competitive practices is not universal, as the ULA example shows (the US government currently only launches with American companies and is barred from launching on foreign launchers by law, hence a monopoly). It could be argued that Boeing has a monopoly in the US when it comes to large scale commercial airplanes, luckily the government does not buy fleets of those. Thus Boeing has a few international competitors (which it operates at an arguable disadvantage against*).
Also, monopolies are why I have an issue with unions. Strong unions create a monopoly on manpower and can result in the same ills that come with a monopoly in any industry. Many locales protect unions and their monopoly on manpower.
And now to get to the point where we really disagree, so I'll go ahead and quote:
Capitalism, raw capitalism, allows for people to take high risk and be highly rewarded. By placing security nets (bail outs) the risk is lowered / shared by others. It is a trait of it, not necessarily whether it is working or not. It is not working if higher reward does not have higher risk or if low risk allows for a higher reward than a higher risk activity.
You are absolutely right, bailouts lead to socialized risk. It's that moral hazard thing, which is definitely, in and of itself, bad. But (always a but) that chance of damaging other parts of the economy that I brought up earlier is also a form of socializing risk. Just like the practice of originating a sketchy loan and then turning around and repackaging and selling it (with the partly-incompetent, partly-unethical help of ratings agencies saying it's just as good as US treasury securities). Or releasing toxins into the environment during your firm's production process.
Point is, there are lots of ways that a purely laissez-faire system allows risk to be socialized, even without government intervention. So my next question is this, do you support (in the abstract) government action to prevent these risks from being socialized? (In economics, we call it a negative externality, or a cost borne by a third party who doesn't benefit from a transaction.)
In the abstract, I do not support
government action, especially on the scale of 300+ million people. Whether or not it is to prevent risks from being socialized or maintenance of local/regional infrastructure.
Maybe it has not come across, but I am very much in favor of small government. But I am also very much in favor of local governance. When a distant capital dictates, it does so without an understanding of local conditions and creates general solutions which can make some situations actually worse.
At the end of the day, we have to answer the question: Which is higher, the cost of allowing firms to fail and harm innocent (more or less) third parties, or the cost of allowing them to think they'll get a government bailout when they blow it? Some of that can be answered by good social science, but some of it too is a value judgement that we're unlikely to ever agree on.
You are correct, it is a value judgement.
In general, I do not think anyone knows better than I what is best for me (or for you). Whether it is a god or some politician, they do not know what is best for the individual or a group of individuals.
I think there are ways to encourage desired behavior and discourage undesirable behavior besides government action.
Sharing information and developing positions among citizens is critical and the internet is great for doing so. If anything comes out of Occupy, I hope it is a willingness to discuss both
government and corporate behavior among citizens/customers.
I want to see a push for action at lower levels of governance - what can your city or town do to help with unemployment or the environment or whatever issue it is?
The central government should enable us to do things that no one community can do, like establishing rules & guidelines to integrate local/regional infrastructure (FAA rules for flying) into a national network or establishing a navigation & timing network (GPS Constellation). The central government should not have to worry about the conditions of every bridge across the nation, a general solution just does not work there (made up example: like every State gets X dollars for road work when the roads in Arizona only need to be repaved very decade, while in Michigan they require annual maintenance).