In a recent links roundup post at Astral Codex Ten, Scott Alexander links to this piece with the following commentary:
One of the most common objections to libertarianism, right after “but who would fund the roads?”, is “wouldn’t a private fire department leave your house to burn if you hadn’t paid?” Here is a very long investigation by someone who has investigated the history of private fire departments and says that - at least in early modern England - the answer was no. I don’t want to argue with this detailed historical scholarship, but I notice I am confused - if the private fire department would save your house whether or not you paid, what was the incentive to pay? [update: see here for answer, the companies sold fire insurance]. Related: government fire department lets man’s house burn because he hadn’t paid a $75 fee, and there was no procedure for allowing him to pay on the spot.
If you don't know about the story, this was a government fire department, refusing to service a house in an area that previously got no fire department services at all. This is more a reflection of the DMV model of customer service than it is or untrammeled free markets. It is typically governments that decline to provide service even when there is an obvious deal to be made that would benefit both parties. In contrast, markets usually find a way.
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