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In the fitful debate about the role of the market in the financial crisis, the efficient-market hypothesis looms as a sort of loyalty test. If you're a conservative, free-market type -- a Randian, Austrian, Milton Friedman-meets-Ronald-Reagan Chicagoan with a supply side streak -- you view the notion of market efficiency as broadly correct; the market really can process available information "efficiently," certainly better than cartoon bureaucrats in Washington can, and thus produce roughly "correct" prices (this is also one explanation for why the market is so hard to beat). If you're more distrustful of the market, brought up short by Stiglitzean market breakdowns and convinced of imperfect competition and wandering equilibria, you view the efficient market, and its accomplice, the rational-expectations hypothesis, as dangerous fantasies belied by empirical reality. Not surprising, that latter point of view has been accumulating adherents after a period in which the efficient-market hypothesis seemed to reign supreme. That reign ended with the kind of market breakdown that proponents of the "strong" version of the efficient hypothesis had all but ruled out as impossible. This has proved to be a problem for the efficient crowd.
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