this post was submitted on 27 Feb 2024
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I may have misread the end of your comment but are you implying that a market can exist without private property?
Not implying, outright stating!
Colloquially private property means like "stuff I have exclusive or near exclusive rights to" but that's not what we mean when we talk economic systems. Something like your clothing, or that neat pot you made is personal property. Private property is a legal construct wherein someone is allowed to claim ownership over means of production, like "this field is mine, it doesn't matter if I'm using it or not, I have the legal right to control what happens there".
So an example of a market without private property might be something like:
Obvs that's simplified but it's a rough sketch of how farming used to work! you earned a right to use land by using it directly and what you grew on it was yours to do as you see fit (often a maniac with a horse and sword would take some portion first though. Because they're just better than you or whatever)
So what changes personal property to a "means of production"?
Probably start here for a general overview https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Means_of_production
A market can exist without private property by having capital be collectively owned and continuously up for auction to the highest bidder. Basically, each holder of means of production self-assess the price at which they would be willing to turn over that capital to another party, they pay a lease payment based on a percentage of that self-assessed price, and if someone comes along willing to pay that self-assessed price, require that they turn it over to that party
Maybe I'm not getting it, bu that just sounds like capitalism with extra steps.
In what I described, the differences are:
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