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- Market_distortion abstract "In neoclassical economics, a market distortion is any event in which a market reaches a market clearing price for an item that is substantially different from the price that a market would achieve while operating under conditions of perfect competition and state enforcement of legal contracts and the ownership of private property.In this context, "perfect competition" means: all participants have complete information, there are no entry or exit barriers to the market, there are no transaction costs or subsidies affecting the market, all firms have constant returns to scale, and all market participants are independent rational actors.Many different kinds of events, actions, policies, or beliefs can bring about a market distortion. For example: almost all types of taxes and subsidies, but especially excise or ad valorem taxes/subsidies, asymmetric information or uncertainty among market participants, any policy or action that restricts information critical to the market, monopoly, oligopoly, or monopsony powers of market participants, criminal coercion or subversion of legal contracts, illiquidity of the market (lack of buyers, sellers, product, or money), collusion among market participants, mass non-rational behavior by market participants, price supports or subsidies, failure of government to provide a stable currency, failure of government to enforce the Rule of Law, failure of government to protect property rights, failure of government to regulate non-competitive market behavior, stifling or corrupt government regulation.".
- Market_distortion wikiPageID "7761402".
- Market_distortion wikiPageLength "1874".
- Market_distortion wikiPageOutDegree "30".
- Market_distortion wikiPageRevisionID "606626770".
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Ad_valorem_tax.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Asymmetric_information.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Barriers_to_entry.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Barriers_to_exit.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Category:Financial_markets.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Complete_information.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Constant_returns_to_scale.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Contract.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Currency.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Excise.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Excise_tax.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Exit_barriers.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Government_regulation.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Illiquidity.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Information_asymmetry.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Legal_contract.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Market_(economics).
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Market_clearing.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Market_liquidity.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Money.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Monopoly.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Monopsony.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Neoclassical_economics.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Oligopoly.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Ownership.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Perfect_competition.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Private_property.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Property_rights.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Rationality.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Regulation.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Returns_to_scale.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Right_to_property.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Rule_of_Law.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Rule_of_law.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Subsidies.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Subsidy.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Tax.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Taxes.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Transaction_cost.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLink Uncertainty.
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLinkText "Market Distortions".
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLinkText "distorting effect".
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLinkText "distortions".
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLinkText "economic distortions".
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLinkText "market distortion".
- Market_distortion wikiPageWikiLinkText "price-fixings".
- Market_distortion hasPhotoCollection Market_distortion.
- Market_distortion wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Econ-stub.
- Market_distortion wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Unreferenced.
- Market_distortion subject Category:Financial_markets.
- Market_distortion hypernym Actors.
- Market_distortion type Article.
- Market_distortion type Person.
- Market_distortion type Article.
- Market_distortion type Market.
- Market_distortion comment "In neoclassical economics, a market distortion is any event in which a market reaches a market clearing price for an item that is substantially different from the price that a market would achieve while operating under conditions of perfect competition and state enforcement of legal contracts and the ownership of private property.In this context, "perfect competition" means: all participants have complete information, there are no entry or exit barriers to the market, there are no transaction costs or subsidies affecting the market, all firms have constant returns to scale, and all market participants are independent rational actors.Many different kinds of events, actions, policies, or beliefs can bring about a market distortion. ".
- Market_distortion label "Market distortion".
- Market_distortion sameAs m.026c58s.
- Market_distortion sameAs Q6770798.
- Market_distortion sameAs Q6770798.
- Market_distortion wasDerivedFrom Market_distortion?oldid=606626770.
- Market_distortion isPrimaryTopicOf Market_distortion.