Unbridled Deregulation and the Hunt for Profits
- Share via
What a great juxtaposition of articles on your Feb. 13 Commentary page. James Pinkerton explains how deregulated electricity, at its best, saves the average household $10 a month--while minimizing the billions that it costs when deregulation is at its worst (“Enron Is but a Pebble in the Wave”).
Bart Kosko, on the other hand, explains the Nobel Prize-winning Nash equilibrium, showing “how selfish competitors should act in relation to those whom they compete against” (“How Many Blonds Mess Up a Nash Equilibrium?”).
Consumers would be like the rabbits and deer in Kosko’s article. When deregulated suppliers compete individually, they each get rabbits and consumers save their $10 a month. When deregulated suppliers cooperate, they get a deer and consumers pay billions.
Deregulation unleashes the hunt for deer among infrastructure suppliers and traders. Only regulation can keep them satisfied with rabbits.
Christopher Plourde
Venice
More to Read
Inside the business of entertainment
The Wide Shot brings you news, analysis and insights on everything from streaming wars to production — and what it all means for the future.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.