An abstract economy always faces at least material constraints. The 1 st and 2 nd Arrow theorems give us a set of conditions under which one can ‘easily’ achieve any physically permitted Pareto-optimal distribution he needs. In reality, a big part or nearly all of these conditions are violated. Still, laissez-fair policy advocates consider such circumstances as widespread but particular exceptions, that can potentially be fixed by "appropriate institutions". Here we demonstrate a set of universal constraints (not always active) like possible labor excess, price stability constraint (with volatility generation layer as a Hardin‘s’ barrier-punishment function), and additional liquidity constraint system (unifying both material and non-physical aspect) that are a concrete and nearly unavoidable consequence of the current state of market-running mechanisms. This circumstance makes one deeply pessimistic about libertarian deregulation principles’ applicability. Here we make an effort to present these constraints in one set of variables.