RangerDave wrote:
I don't know, Ladas. This is just anecdotal, but in my experience, conservatives frequently respond to market failure and ToC scenarios with a simplistic, hand-wavy assumption that the market will always work itself out. And the "tax cuts pay for themselves by boosting the economy" mantra is pretty standard rhetoric on the right. Conversely, I rarely if ever hear liberals making those errors.
Aside from the fact that these are not errors (as a rule of thumb; the market cannot always work itself out but exceptions are, in fact, exceptions, not the rule) the reason you don't see liberals doing this is that they are liberals. They make their own, far worse, errors.
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It's not that liberals have some greater understanding in those cases, but rather that their policy biases lead to an instinctive assumption that markets are prone to failures, regulations are good, and lower taxes are bad. And similarly, conservatives aren't actually more knowledgeable about economics in general, it's just that their biases lead them to instinctively conclude that price controls, minimum wages, and other regulations are bad, so they got the particular questions in this survey right.
The problem with this is that we can evaluate all of these statements in terms of their actual effects, and we can see that markets are not prone to failure; they suffer occasional failures, that regulations are not inherently good; they must be carefully thought out and implemented, so regulation for the sake of regulation is, indeed, bad, and that lower taxes do, indeed, spur economic growth.