Testing the Hayek Hypothesis: Recent Theoretical and Field Experimental Evidence

Omar Al-Ubaydli, Peter Boettke, and Brian C. Albrecht

PLoS ONE 2022

Abstract

Economists well understand that the work of Friedrich Hayek contains important theoretical insights. It is less often acknowledged that his work contains testable predictions about the nature of market processes. Vernon Smith termed the most important one the 'Hayek hypothesis': that gains from trade can be realized in the presence of diffuse, decentralized information, and in the absence of price-taking behavior and centralized market direction. Vernon Smith tested this prediction by surveying data on laboratory experimental markets and found strong support. We extend Smith's work first by showing how subsequent theoretical advances provide a theoretical foundation for the Hayek Hypothesis. We then test the hypothesis using recent field experimental market data. Using field experiments allows us to test several other predictions from Hayek, such that market experience increases the realized gains from trade. Generally speaking, we find support for Hayek's theories.

Key Insight

Decentralized markets can achieve gains from trade with dispersed information and without price-taking behavior.

Keywords

  • Hayek
  • market processes
  • decentralized information
  • experimental economics
  • price discovery
  • Austrian economics

Citation

Omar Al-Ubaydli, Peter Boettke, and Brian C. Albrecht (2022). "Testing the Hayek Hypothesis: Recent Theoretical and Field Experimental Evidence." PLoS ONE. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0270489

BibTeX

@article{hayek_hypothesis,
  title = {Testing the Hayek Hypothesis: Recent Theoretical and Field Experimental Evidence},
  author = {Omar Al-Ubaydli and Peter Boettke and Brian C. Albrecht},
  year = {2022},
  journal = {PLoS ONE},
  doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0270489},
  url = {https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0270489}
}