Fair enough.
01-24-2018 09:02 AM
#226
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Fair enough. | |
01-24-2018 11:23 AM
#227
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That's probably wrong. Depends on what you mean by "energy". There's a difference between Exxon and your electric company, even though both provide "energy". |
Last edited by BananaStand; 01-24-2018 at 11:32 AM. | |
01-24-2018 11:47 AM
#228
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Oversight without regulation seems pointless. Can you clarify? | |
01-24-2018 11:55 AM
#229
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You're not wrong, but you're really splitting hairs. There are consequences. The word "regulation" isn't entirely irrelevant. |
01-24-2018 12:05 PM
#230
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Thanks for the response. I'll think about that. |
01-24-2018 12:20 PM
#231
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01-24-2018 12:26 PM
#232
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You mentioned two ways monopolies develop, (1) fixed costs, (2) government regulation. |
01-24-2018 12:27 PM
#233
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01-24-2018 02:57 PM
#234
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they are absent. Using the same example of the electric company....there is no competition. |
01-24-2018 03:04 PM
#235
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The existence of a direct competitor is not a necessary condition for the market forces to be working. Indeed a market might function best with only one firm in it all the while market forces would be working. |
01-24-2018 03:40 PM
#236
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We're gonna talk in circles here wuf, but I think it's time we just agree that there is such a thing as....I don't know what you wanna call it......pick a word.....Imperfections.....Conflicts.....Undesirab le effects.....in a completely free and unregulated market. |
01-24-2018 03:47 PM
#237
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01-24-2018 03:57 PM
#238
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There are undesirable results. If we're trying to figure out the best policy, we balance the results, desirable and undesirable, of each against the other. I would never claim a free market is perfect. It's not. But I do claim it's better than an unfree market. |
01-24-2018 03:59 PM
#239
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So I've given this example before, but I guess I'll repeat it again. Tell me how the market would solve this problem on it's own..... |
01-24-2018 04:17 PM
#240
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I would like to understand the point you are making and I don't currently understand some of these premises. If you could clarify that would be great. |
01-24-2018 04:31 PM
#241
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Ok |
Last edited by BananaStand; 01-24-2018 at 04:38 PM. | |
01-24-2018 04:48 PM
#242
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The return on each dollar change is marginal. I'm not sure why the firm assessed that if it just invested more it would profit more. |
01-24-2018 04:57 PM
#243
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Because that's how you determine a price in a situation like this. You can't just try to pinpoint what you think customers are willing to pay. That's a dangerous game when your product is inelastic. |
01-24-2018 05:29 PM
#244
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I'm trying to figure out why they assessed the same rate of return for investments that should be expected to have different yields. In the hypothetical you provided, it appears to me that the "electrical doohickey" and the "pulling poles out of the ground five years too early" were assessed at the same rate of return by the firm. It's quite unlikely that would be a market rate, which is exemplified in the oversight board declaring that the "benefit" of each activity is not the same. |
01-24-2018 07:49 PM
#245
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I'm not being ignorant, I'm just too tired to read all that economics stuff and make sense of it. | |
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01-24-2018 08:12 PM
#246
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01-24-2018 08:13 PM
#247
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It's super cool that you're working btw. Good job on that. |
01-24-2018 08:31 PM
#248
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-42808302 |
01-24-2018 08:35 PM
#249
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Why? It doesn't matter. And in real life, they probably aren't the same. The actual process of making what's called a "rate case" is alot more extensive and nuanced than I'm willing to write in a forum post. Just know that it takes many meetings, and many pages of figures. Maybe the investments have various classifications that demand different returns on invested capital. It's really not important. what's important is the concept. |
Last edited by BananaStand; 01-24-2018 at 08:42 PM. | |
01-24-2018 09:01 PM
#250
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What caused the difference in this instance? |
01-24-2018 09:19 PM
#251
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01-24-2018 09:34 PM
#252
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01-24-2018 09:39 PM
#253
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I dont know. And maybe they werent. The problem was the incompetence involved in the way they incentivized the project manager. |
01-24-2018 09:45 PM
#254
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01-25-2018 06:22 AM
#255
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01-25-2018 06:43 AM
#256
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Ok so I took the time to read this post and try to absorb it. The first point is very easy to understand. I was kind of hitting on this point without realising by referring to the infrastructure necessary to deliver an essential service. | |
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01-25-2018 06:44 AM
#257
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Sorry banana haven't time for your post. | |
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01-25-2018 08:23 AM
#258
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01-25-2018 08:28 AM
#259
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I used to have a long commute. At the end of a long day there really is nothing like sparking up a joint, turning on an OAR album and driving the speed limit for over an hour. I think it's good for the soul or something. |
01-25-2018 09:15 AM
#260
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Ugh. Commuting is the worst fucking time sink in life; not that there aren't worse ways to waste time, but just that it's frequency is so high. An hour commute both ways is 10 hours a week of your life spent in traffic, and basically makes your job 10 hours/day instead of 8. Music and a doobie might help, but nothing you can do in a car or on a train can ever truly balance that equation. | |
01-25-2018 09:19 AM
#261
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01-25-2018 11:41 AM
#262
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01-25-2018 01:41 PM
#263
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01-25-2018 02:13 PM
#264
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01-25-2018 02:15 PM
#265
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01-25-2018 02:47 PM
#266
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I really don't mind commuting to work as long as I'm not on completely packed public transport or having to walk a lot. Driving in traffic sucks in comparison to being sat on a train doing puzzles/listening to podcasts/finishing off work etc. |
01-25-2018 03:01 PM
#267
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01-25-2018 03:17 PM
#268
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Did it say anything about the value of getting spanked with a magazine with your daughter's face on the cover? | |
01-25-2018 03:26 PM
#269
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01-25-2018 03:27 PM
#270
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I think it's a simple as that money that is paid in dividens, that profit, would be better spent on investment, whether that be R&D or lower prices. I fail to see how these companies have earned the profit. Just by taking risk? What risk? Their profit is guaranteed. The only risk they're taking relates to their competence, and even that isn't a deal breaker. | |
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01-25-2018 03:28 PM
#271
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01-25-2018 03:29 PM
#272
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Last edited by spoonitnow; 01-25-2018 at 03:32 PM. | |
01-25-2018 03:30 PM
#273
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The commutes haven't started yet. I'll be lucky because I'll be passenger and I can smoke... so I can chill the journey. And it's not quite an hour, it's perhaps under 40 minutes on a good day, but you gotta account for traffic, which is dreadful once you hit town at rush hour. | |
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01-25-2018 03:34 PM
#274
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Well if their profit is as hard earned as your regular man's business, I might soften my tone somewhat. But I fail to see how it isn't guaranteed, or at least close to. Ok a nuclear meltdown or an oil slick is going to eat into their profits somewhat, but they lack the competition to pay the ultimate price for their failure. See BP for example. | |
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01-25-2018 03:35 PM
#275
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If that's the case, why would the shareholders of these companies invest at all? Who would invest in a train with a 0% return when they could invest in....literally anything else....even treasury-bonds.....and earn a profit? |
01-25-2018 03:41 PM
#276
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The higher the risk of investment, the higher the dividends if you want to keep investors on. It's that simple. | |
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01-25-2018 03:45 PM
#277
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01-25-2018 03:46 PM
#278
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01-25-2018 03:57 PM
#279
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01-25-2018 03:58 PM
#280
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01-25-2018 03:59 PM
#281
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01-25-2018 04:09 PM
#282
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That's not much incentive. |
01-25-2018 04:09 PM
#283
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01-25-2018 04:10 PM
#284
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01-25-2018 04:13 PM
#285
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you could say this about anything |
01-25-2018 04:28 PM
#286
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Here's why government doesn't make pencils: there isn't one single person alive who knows how to make a pencil. It takes knowing how to cut down trees, which takes know how to build saws, which takes know how to mine ore. To use the trees, it takes know how to process the wood, know how to transport it. The other components -- graphite, rubber, etc. -- also take unique know how from people all across the world. Selling it in stores takes know how. |
01-26-2018 03:14 AM
#287
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01-26-2018 03:23 AM
#288
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Of course it is, it's the same as profit, because it is capital gain. | |
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01-26-2018 03:48 AM
#289
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That's not why governments don't (usually) make pencils though. | |
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01-26-2018 03:55 AM
#290
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One person? In many countries the top position, be it president, king or whatever, is usually the most powerful, but in most countries apart from dictatorships you definitely cannot say one person is in charge. In most democracies the powers are severely limited, even in the US where undeniably the president has an unusual amount of say in things. In more and more countries the "top" position is largely ceremonial and more a PR position than anything. The "one person in charge" is a much more relevant concept in business. | |
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01-26-2018 11:03 AM
#291
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http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment...n-couples.html |
01-26-2018 11:55 AM
#292
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01-26-2018 12:05 PM
#293
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You mean the fact that by many arguments on this forum, ong had no incentive to ever get himself off the gov't dole, and yet here he is, not only getting off the dole, but feeling good about it. | |
01-26-2018 12:09 PM
#294
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Week 1, I give it 2 months. |
01-26-2018 12:20 PM
#295
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01-26-2018 12:25 PM
#296
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01-26-2018 12:48 PM
#297
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In this situation, the pencils still need the price system to get made according to preference and at greater benefit than cost. Every firm in the world that knows everything about making pencils still don't know what to make, where to put it, when to do it, etc., without the price system. |
01-26-2018 12:49 PM
#298
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01-26-2018 12:50 PM
#299
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01-26-2018 12:56 PM
#300
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