If they fail then the negative impact ripples through the economy due to misallocation of resources.
consider all the companies in a market and those that feed that market to be one virtual mega company, add up all the valuations and revenue streams, costs, etc and aggregate all the investors into one. Nothing changes about the picture I drew. We simplify models to make the real world understandable.
>negative impact ripples through the economy due to misallocation of resources
free or relatively free financial markets are the only way, the best way, the ne plus ultra of ways we know to allocate capital, we have no better way than for the owner of the capital and the reapers of the loss or reward to make a considered opinion that is risk "impedance" matched. By definition, the market does not "misallocate" capital, it optimally allocates it.
your theory is that we could somehow know the future, but that's a fallacy.
Free market efficiency is inherently tied to having multiple companies. Treating the entire economy as a single company gives nonsensical results because it fundamentally differs from what actually occurs. You might as well compare the economy to a game of tick tack toe, inherent complexity isn’t something you can simplify it has meaningful consequences.
Your ideas like many other ideas are simply wrong.
> could somehow know the future
Perfect accuracy isn’t the only possibility here, there’s levels of error.
Our system involves intermediaries between the actual owners of capital and the allocation of that capital who have very different incentives. When the worst possibility is missing a bonus there’s little difference between losing 10% of an investors money and 100%. That results in inefficiency through the misalignment of incentives.
That is actually true, and thus there’s no way to gloss over that truth without simply being wrong.
trust me bub, I've studied much more econ than you. If a competitive market sets the prices (check, that's what is happening), and you want to analyze statistics of a sector (check, that's what we are doing), you can take those competitive prices as "given" and hold them constant, and consolidate the assets of in industry into one virtual entity. No claims were being made about competition, the claim is that "it is validate to consolidate statistic of what you are trying to study.
"how much did the AI sector make last year? how much will it make next year?" is not answered by running a simulation of competitive marketplace with production functions.
>>could somehow know the future
>Perfect accuracy isn’t the only possibility here, there’s levels of error.
if you deviate from the market's prediction of the future, you are increasing your levels of error; why do that?
Let me guess, you sit down next to Kobe Bryant and start by saying you're going to tell him about winning basketball?