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A Price Is a Signal Wrapped Up in an Incentive

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    ♪ [music] ♪
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    - [Alex] A modern economy
    depends on the cooperation
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    of vast numbers of strangers,
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    but how is this cooperation
    coordinated?
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    Let's revisit the economics
    behind roses,
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    but this time,
    let's go back to 1973.
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    In the 1970s, the price of oil
    skyrocketed so it made sense
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    to economize --
    but oil has many uses.
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    So which uses should we cut back
    and which should we maintain?
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    In a market economy, no one person
    decides these questions
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    or perhaps more accurately,
    everyone does.
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    A price is a signal
    wrapped up in an incentive.
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    So when the price of oil increased,
    it signaled that oil
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    had become more scarce
    and it gave everyone
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    an incentive to listen
    to that signal.
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    It said, "Find ways
    to economize on oil
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    or develop substitutes
    and you will profit."
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    When the price of oil
    first increased,
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    most roses bought
    in the United States were grown
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    in greenhouses in New Jersey,
    in Pennsylvania.
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    The increased price of oil
    meant that it cost more
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    to heat those greenhouses,
    which meant a shift upwards
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    in the supply curve for flowers
    and an increase in the price.
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    The result was that
    it encouraged people
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    to turn to substitutes.
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    Such as chocolate and Teddy bears
    to give to their loved ones
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    at Valentine's Day --
    but the story doesn't end there.
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    Seeing the higher price of oil,
    entrepreneurs began to think
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    about other ways
    to produce flowers.
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    Instead of heating a greenhouse,
    why not use the natural heat
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    of the sun and transport the roses.
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    Entrepreneurs encouraged farmers
    in Kenya and Ecuador
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    to start growing roses.
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    And they began to invest
    in a new global infrastructure
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    to deliver roses around the world.
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    Who could have predicted it?
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    That one way of adjusting
    to a reduced supply of oil
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    was greater consumption
    of chocolate?
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    And another way,
    was by importing roses.
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    In fact, no one
    could have predicted,
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    let alone plan all the myriad ways
    in which people responded
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    to the increased price of oil.
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    That's because no one knows
    all the information
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    that the market uses.
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    Everything from the cost
    of growing greenhouses,
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    to the demand for roses
    versus chocolate,
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    to the value
    that a particular piece
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    of land in Kenya has
    for growing flowers versus coffee.
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    No single individual
    knows all of this information.
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    It's dispersed.
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    So when oil becomes scarce,
    we want people all over the world
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    to use this dispersed information,
    their information
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    and their ingenuity to figure out
    how best to economize on oil.
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    The price system does this
    in a remarkably efficient way.
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    The Kenyan farmer doesn't have
    to know anything about oil
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    to have an incentive
    to do the right thing.
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    He just sees that the price paid
    for roses has increased
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    and so following his self interest,
    he starts to produce more roses.
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    Ultimately, that frees up more oil
    to be used in the production
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    of jet fuel where there
    are fewer substitutes.
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    Millions of decisions like this
    made all over the world,
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    rearrange and reallocate
    the world's production.
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    Taking oil from where
    it has low value and moving it
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    to where it has high value
    so that we produce the most value
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    from our limited resources.
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    That is the invisible
    hand in action.
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    If it had been invented,
    the price system
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    would be one of the most amazing
    creations of the human mind.
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    But like language,
    it wasn't invented,
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    and it worked long before
    anyone had any understanding
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    of its principles.
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    As Nobel Prize winning economist,
    Vernon Smith, has put it,
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    "The pricing system
    is a scientific mystery as deep,
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    fundamental, and inspiring
    as that of the expanding universe
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    or the forces that bind matter."
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    We'll be exploring more
    about the mystery
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    and the marvel of the price system
    in the next video.
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    - [Narrator] If you want
    to test yourself,
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    click "Practice Questions."
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    Or if you're ready to move on,
    just click "Next Video."
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    ♪ [music] ♪
Title:
A Price Is a Signal Wrapped Up in an Incentive
Description:

Join Professor Tabarrok in exploring the mystery and marvel of prices. We take a look at how oil prices signal the scarcity of oil and the value of its alternative uses. Following up on our previous video, “I, Rose,” we show how the price system allows for people with dispersed knowledge and information about rose production to coordinate global economic activity. This global production of roses reveals how the price system is emergent, and not the product of human design.

Microeconomics Course: http://mruniversity.com/courses/princ...

Ask a question about the video: http://mruniversity.com/courses/principles-economics-microeconomics/price-system-spontaneous-order#QandA

Next video: http://mruniversity.com/courses/principles-economics-microeconomics/markets-link-world

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Marginal Revolution University
Project:
Micro
Duration:
04:47

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