“…At any rate, this opinion can be found in numerous textbooks on economics, the authors of which define the market as an "informal institution for handling the allocation process". [6] The most appropriate and fair form for this is the perfect market, which, however, only functions under very specific, idealized conditions: an infinite number of market participants on both sides, no objective, temporal or personal preferences, the possibility of free market entry or exit, and complete information about the conditions under which other exchange partners are prepared to enter into transactions. In a perfect market, therefore, all the above conditions must be met.…”