That sounds like an exaggeration in order to make an unrelated point.
Why would people sell equity in their company except for cash, and why would you pay cash for ownership in a company except for the stream of income it represents and the secondary market for that ownership?
How come people decided it is illegal to trade ivory from an elephant killed a couple hundred years ago? Was it made illegal to possess child pornography that was already created only because it is morally toxic, or does said consumption also induce demand for additional victims?
Even though debt markets have a lot more to do with day to day financing of corporations, equity markets have a great influence on terms. Furthermore, the unavoidable importance of secondary markets for debt and their derivatives can be understood by considering the importance of secondary markets with respect to prices of homes, automobiles, or any other large consumer purchases.
I didn't mean to imply that stock markets were not important, just that "allocating resources" in the sense that parent meant, e.g. "How many people does a company making spoons gets to hire or should we put more of them on webforum moderation ?", being its primary purpose seems like a stretch (except for the occasional new IPO / stockholders' meeting). If anything, venture capital and as you mentioned, debt markets are closer to this idea of allocating resources.
My main point really was that the examples parent gave seemed much closer to examples of market economics in general and would hold true, with or without stock markets.
I can see the limitations in equating stock price directly with GM retooling a factory for a new model year, but it is a far more accurate depiction of what is going on, even if a little abstract, than to say that they have nothing to do with each other and even spelling it out letter by letter. Saying that it is basically a closed system is even more bizarre.
Why would people sell equity in their company except for cash, and why would you pay cash for ownership in a company except for the stream of income it represents and the secondary market for that ownership?
How come people decided it is illegal to trade ivory from an elephant killed a couple hundred years ago? Was it made illegal to possess child pornography that was already created only because it is morally toxic, or does said consumption also induce demand for additional victims?
Even though debt markets have a lot more to do with day to day financing of corporations, equity markets have a great influence on terms. Furthermore, the unavoidable importance of secondary markets for debt and their derivatives can be understood by considering the importance of secondary markets with respect to prices of homes, automobiles, or any other large consumer purchases.