Reinventing the Bazaar

A Natural History of Markets

John McMillan

Publisher: Norton, 2002, 278 pages

ISBN: 0-393-05021-1

Keywords: Biography

Last modified: Aug. 1, 2021, 2:29 p.m.

From eBay to the stock market to the unexpected twists of the world's post-communist economies, market structure has suddenly become quite visible. We have occasion to wonder, "What makes markets work? How important are they? What can we do to improve them? And how can we harness them to other applications?"

In something akin to a nature walk, John McMillan takes us on a guided tour, pointing out features of the landscape we rarely notice. With examples ranging from a camel trading fair in India to the $20 million per day Aalsmeer flower market to the global trade in AIDS drugs, McMillan shows us markets in all their varieties — the small and the large, the simple and the overwhelmingly complex, the successful and the unsuccessful. Further, he brings them together to show how these markets combine to form the global economy.

Markets provoke clashing opinions. Critics denounce them as the source of exploitation and poverty. Extreme proponents extol them as the font of liberty and prosperity. Eschewing ideology, McMillan spells out why markets are neither magical nor immoral, but rather imperfect yet vitally important tools. They can fail, and often do, but they represent the best way we've discovered thus far for improving our living standards.

  1. The Only Natural Economy
  2. Triumphs of Intelligence
  3. He Who Can't Pay Dies
  4. Information Wants to Be Free
  5. Honesty Is the Best Policy
  6. To the Best Bidder
  7. Come Bid!
  8. When You Work for Yourself
  9. The Embarrassment of a Patent
  10. No Man Is an Island
  11. A Conspiracy against the Public
  12. Grassroots Effort
  13. Managers of Other People's Money
  14. A New Era of Competition
  15. Coming Up for Air
  16. Antipoverty Warriors
  17. Market Imperatives

Reviews

Reinventing the Bazaar

Reviewed by Roland Buresund

Decent ****** (6 out of 10)

Last modified: May 21, 2007, 3:20 a.m.

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