It ain't the potential buyers who value the fire services. It is the other people in the area who need to be concerned about an out of control conflagration that threatens their property.Fife wrote: ↑Wed May 16, 2018 6:56 pmLike everything, "it depends." Do the people who are potential buyers value fire/emergency services at a level to justify paying for what might be to other people appear as prohibitively expensive? What kind of insurance against loss is available, or even desirable?Hanarchy Montanarchy wrote: ↑Wed May 16, 2018 6:44 pmI don't pretend to have the answer.
But, for fun, we can look at deregulation. In California, to develop a plot, there needs to be road access that can accommodate fire/emergency services. Building that access can be prohibitively expensive.
Good regulation?
Who should decide what is an appropriate level of fire/emergency services? The demand market, or rent-seekers who are looking for a vein to tap?
Gumdrop Candy Mountain is pretty fucking expensive. Maybe there should be some other options?
The tragedy of the commons is something a market has a hard time solving. Even if you privatize the entire commons. Fire doesn't respect property boundaries.