honorentheos wrote:I'm pretty sure you skipped past the part regarding failure playing a healthy role in how markets behave and succeed and instead jumped to the most overly simple, cartoonish version of my point while attempting to nuance the argument for privatization by inserting in regulation and oversight to ensure the market doesn't get the final word where society has more than an superficial interest in the outcome.
That said, I have to imagine you have issues with how much government actually does to ensure food security given your libertarian leanings. Farms bills tend to get under libertarian skins.
Fortunately, the United States isn't the only country on Earth that eats food and there are other nations don't rely on our system of food subsidies while still managing to avoid famine. One would hope you don't think famine is just around the corner without subsidies because food producers don't plan around uncertainty in supply/demand. Farm subsidies in the US don't avoid famine so much as artificially enrich farmers, hurt farmers in developing nations sometimes causing famines
there, and distort the constitution of our food supply. The latter is one of the reasons why the US has relatively poor health outcomes compared to other nations. It is a direct contributor to our relatively poor diet, so it's all a wonderfully connected web.
Regarding market failures, businesses are capable of avoiding catastrophic failures (or, rather, at least as capable as public management is). They are provided incentive to avoid catastrophic failures either due to market consequences or because of external consequences in the form of regulatory penalty or civil loss. Because I didn't want to assume some cartoonish version of your point where a private company walks into catastrophe over and over of in a trial and error process, I assumed this would not need to be pointed out.
Fortunately, when people desire something, market incentives mostly align in that direction already - meaning that people attempt to negotiate contracts that ensure those desires are met.