The black market or underground market is the part of economic activity involving illegal dealings, typically the buying and selling of merchandise or services (for example sexual services in many countries) illegally. The goods may be inherently illegal (e.g. weapons or illegal drugs); the merchandise may be stolen; or the merchandise may be otherwise legal goods sold illicitly to avoid tax payments or licensing requirements, such as cigarettes or unregistered firearms. It is so called because "black economy" or "black market" affairs are conducted outside the law, and so are necessarily conducted "in the dark", out of the sight of the law.
Black markets develop when the state places restrictions on the production or provision of goods and services. These markets prosper, then, when state restrictions are heavy, such as during a period of prohibition, price controls and/or rationing. However, black markets are currently present in any known economy.
Goods acquired illegally can take one of two price levels. They may be less expensive than (legal) market prices because the supplier did not incur the normal costs of production or pay the usual taxes. Alternatively, illegally supplied products may be more expensive than normal prices, because the product in question is difficult to acquire or produce, dangerous to deal with, or may hardly be available legally.
In the former case, however, most people are likely to continue to purchase the products in question from legal suppliers, for a number of reasons:
In the latter case of a black market for goods which are simply unavailable through legal channels, black markets will thrive if consumer demand nonetheless continues. In the case of the legal prohibition of a product viewed by large segments of the society as harmless, such as alcohol under prohibition in the United States, the black market will prosper, and the black marketeers often reinvest profits in a widely diversified array of illegal activity well beyond the original item.
Black markets can be reduced or eliminated by removing the relevant legal restrictions, thus increasing supply and quality. People who advocate this may believe that governments should recognize fewer crimes in order to focus law enforcement effort on the most treatable dangers to society. However, this can be seen by some people as the equivalent of legalizing legal crime in order to reduce the number of "official" criminal delicts — in other words, a concession that in their view only makes matters worse because of a perceived disappearing of their moral values. Alternatively, the government could attempt to decrease demand. However, this is economically out of fashion and not as simple a process as decreasing supply.
The Term "Black Market" also applies to illegal monetary exchange outside the authorized institutes (Banks or Legal Exchange Offices)
Another classic example is Burma under the rule of Ne Win. Under his "Burmese Way to Socialism", the country became one of the poorest in the world, and only the black market and rampant smuggling supplied the people's needs.
Nowadays in many countries, it is argued a "war on drugs" has created a similar condition for drugs such as marijuana, heroin and cocaine that existed under the alcohol prohibition years/decades before. Despite ongoing law enforcement efforts to intercept illegal drug supplies, demand remains high, encouraging organized criminal groups to ensure their availability. While law enforcement efforts capture only a little percentage of distributors of illegal drugs, the high and very unflexible demand for such drugs ensures that black market prices will simply rise in response to the decrease in supply—encouraging new distributors to enter the market in a perpetual cycle.
Similarly, since prostitution is illegal in many places and yet market demand for the services of prostitutes remains high, a black market inevitably results.
Black markets can also form near when neighboring jurisdictions have substantially different tax rates on similar products. Products that are commonly smuggled to fuel these black markets include alcohol and tobacco.
Black markets flourish in most countries during wartime. The rationing and price controls enforced in many countries during World War II encouraged widespread black market activity. Due to severe shortages of consumer goods, black markets thrived in communist Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union.
Markets | Social ethics | Underground
سوق سوداء | Schwarzmarkt | Mercado negro | Marché noir | Pasar gelap | שוק שחור | Zwarte markt | Czarny rynek | Svart marknad | 黑市
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Black market".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world