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All four perspectives on nonmarket deal with the failure of either societal integration, efficiency-oriented pure competition, under-or over-socialized
economic action and of institutions themselves. Since they all fail, one should not assume that “nonmarket” government, civil society and culture stand unfailingly ready to correct the shortcomings of “
market” institutions and organizations.
I'm not an economist, but to my untrained eye this looks like it's advocating market solutions over non-market solutions. If the sources quoted in the article do say that, this can be re-added with proper citation. Alternatively, it can be reworded to avoid the "one should not assume" phrasing (something like "Market economists [or whoever] caution that “nonmarket” government, civil society and culture are themselves subject to possible failure, and as such may be imperfect correctors of "market" institutions and organizations." would be OK, with a citation).