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I have heard grim accusations of pharmaceutical companies or health insurers who have an incentive to keep people sick. It's one thing to profit from the eventuality, it's another to cause the eventuality that leads to profit. I have assumed that many of the anti prediction market arguments are the latter.
I'd argue that financial incentives within the medical industry do influence decision making towards hte more profitable outcomes.
It's not quite as far as saying they cause the medical problems, but it is going as far as to say their treatment decisions are influenced by the financial incentives, and that some of those treatment decisions may lead to worse outcomes for the patients.
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I think it's also safe to assume the industry doesn't invest in finding unprofitably cheap cures.
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it's another to cause the eventuality that leads to profit
I totally agree, but this isn't entirely the fault of prediction markets. Acts that should be criminal, starting wars for instance, are immune from justice.
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Acts that should be criminal, starting wars for instance, are immune from justice.
This made me think for a while. I didn't really consider it that way before.
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I have heard grim accusations of pharmaceutical companies or health insurers who have an incentive to keep people sick. It's one thing to profit from the eventuality, it's another to cause the eventuality that leads to profit. I have assumed that many of the anti prediction market arguments are the latter.
The article raises the concern that prediction markets will incentivize the leaking of state secrets -- I don't find this compelling. If the state can't prevent its employees from participating in markets with insider knowledge, how can they prevent them from accepting bribes?
But I am more interested in the idea that prediction markets can give people an incentive to influence the outcome. This is true, I think. I may even be fine with it as a new force in society.