Iron Bridge wrote:Then what do you think they are? Do you think they opposed markets or favoured them? Do you think Nazi Germany was more of a free market economy than the Weimar Republic? It's all vacillation and deliberately twisted and misleading statements from you.
There's nothing misleading; the Nazis, like already explained, obviously kept a market economy for their own goals. Before the war mobilization, when all powers who went on total war footing had to expand direct controls, Germany was using a version of an indicative planning. As one can see, private property was not abolished in Germany, so trying to say the Nazis had a command economy would be a deliberate
lie. Building grandiose government projects inside the framework of a market economy with a mix of soft and hard controls is something which long predates Nazi Germany - Britain, the USA and France all did this with some success both before and after the Third Reich.
Iron Bridge wrote:To the last one, no not really, since all military spending is by the government.
The contractors offer price bids to the government on a given project. That's the difference between a market system and a planned one. In a market system, the price of goods is determined at the transaction. In a planned system, the price is fixed in advance by a planning agency which also fixes all other prices in the economy. Do you understand this, or are you simply economically illiterate? Does the US determine in advance the price of a missile supplied by a contractor? No. It makes a buyer's offer; the sellers then make their offers and the final price is fixed by a written supply agreement. A planned economy would say X missiles at the price of X should be supplied from factory X, and that would be it. There's almost no bidding in the system; the planning agency estimates the costs of making missiles on certain enterprises and takes their best shot. Perhaps the enterprises may even provide the planning agency with cost figures, but they do not make profits; reinvestment is likewise done by the planning agency.
This is very basic stuff, something that a person even in the first year of study of economics is supposed to know. So once again I'm wondering - did you skip your classes or something?