The “invisible hand” proposed by economist Adam Smith sounds mystical, but it is actually happening around us. Simply put: Everyone pursues their own interests, which ultimately promotes the effective operation of the entire market.
How does it work?
Imagine a fiercely competitive vegetable market. Vendors, driven by profit, actively improve the quality of their vegetables, lower prices, and enhance services—no one forces them to do this; profit motivates them. Buyers seek cheap and fresh produce, voting with their money to support good stalls. What is the result? Resources automatically flow to efficient merchants, while the inefficient are eliminated. The entire system self-regulates through countless individual decisions, without the need for government direction.
The investment market is the same. Investors place their bets, stocks that are favored are sought after and their prices rise, while the stocks of poor companies decline in price—this process automatically guides capital towards quality enterprises, forming a price discovery mechanism.
But reality is more complicated
This theory has a fatal assumption: the market is always rational, information is symmetric, and there are no external harms. What is the reality?
The market will have bubbles and crash (due to irrational emotions)
Monopolistic enterprises can set prices at will (insufficient competition)
The costs of pollution and climate change are not borne by anyone (negative externalities)
The gap between the rich and the poor is widening, and vulnerable groups cannot afford basic needs (the market cannot solve all problems)
Bottom line
The invisible hand explains why the market can efficiently allocate resources, but it is not a panacea. Reality requires a mix of market and moderate regulation to both preserve the vitality of competition and fill the blind spots of the market.
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The Invisible Hand: How the Market Automatically Balances Prices
The “invisible hand” proposed by economist Adam Smith sounds mystical, but it is actually happening around us. Simply put: Everyone pursues their own interests, which ultimately promotes the effective operation of the entire market.
How does it work?
Imagine a fiercely competitive vegetable market. Vendors, driven by profit, actively improve the quality of their vegetables, lower prices, and enhance services—no one forces them to do this; profit motivates them. Buyers seek cheap and fresh produce, voting with their money to support good stalls. What is the result? Resources automatically flow to efficient merchants, while the inefficient are eliminated. The entire system self-regulates through countless individual decisions, without the need for government direction.
The investment market is the same. Investors place their bets, stocks that are favored are sought after and their prices rise, while the stocks of poor companies decline in price—this process automatically guides capital towards quality enterprises, forming a price discovery mechanism.
But reality is more complicated
This theory has a fatal assumption: the market is always rational, information is symmetric, and there are no external harms. What is the reality?
Bottom line
The invisible hand explains why the market can efficiently allocate resources, but it is not a panacea. Reality requires a mix of market and moderate regulation to both preserve the vitality of competition and fill the blind spots of the market.