One of these days, some empirically-minded political economist is going to assert that the great turn towards markets that occurred around the world during the 1970s and 1980s can best be understood as a relative price phenomenon, a matter of taxes and prices -- the cost of collective provision of certain goods having become too expensive relative to the benefits to be obtained from self-reliance.
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The Great Can-Opener
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One of these days, some empirically-minded political economist is going to assert that the great turn towards markets that occurred around the world during the 1970s and 1980s can best be understood as a relative price phenomenon, a matter of taxes and prices -- the cost of collective provision of certain goods having become too expensive relative to the benefits to be obtained from self-reliance.