Prediction markets generate information. Information is valuable as a public good. Failure of public good provision is not a failure of prediction markets.
I think you’ve slightly missed my point. My claim is narrower than this. I’m saying that prediction markets have a concrete issue which means you should expect them to be less efficient at gathering data than alternatives. Even if information is a public good, it might not be worth as much as prediction markets would charge to find that information. Imagine if the cost of information via a prediction market was exponential in the cost of information gathering, that wouldn’t mean the right answer is to subsidise prediction markets more.
I think you’ve slightly missed my point. My claim is narrower than this. I’m saying that prediction markets have a concrete issue which means you should expect them to be less efficient at gathering data than alternatives. Even if information is a public good, it might not be worth as much as prediction markets would charge to find that information. Imagine if the cost of information via a prediction market was exponential in the cost of information gathering, that wouldn’t mean the right answer is to subsidise prediction markets more.