Economics is not zero sum in the long run, but in any given time, it is. And, people can bid up the price of essentials as they rise in wealth. A subsistence farmer can never compete with you for a barrel of oil, but a Chinese industrialist can.
Economics is not zero sum in the long run, but in any given time, it is. And, people can bid up the price of essentials as they rise in wealth. A subsistence farmer can never compete with you for a barrel of oil, but a Chinese industrialist can.
How do I benefit from other people having less? To put it another way, I have nothing to gain from making sure that others can't enjoy a standard of living comparable to those in the industrialized world.
subsistence farmers don't use oil...
That's like, 99% of the point. The subsistence farmer doesn't compete with your for essentials. If that farmer ever becomes non-subsistence, then suddenly he's helping bid up the price of oil.
Hence "usually". Principled anti-egalitarians I have at least a little time for.How do I benefit from other people having less? To put it another way, I have nothing to gain from making sure that others can't enjoy a standard of living comparable to those in the industrialized world.
Economics is not zero sum in the long run, but in any given time, it is. And, people can bid up the price of essentials as they rise in wealth. A subsistence farmer can never compete with you for a barrel of oil, but a Chinese industrialist can.
But the rise in wealth of Chinese industrialists means that the average Brazilian can now afford more barrels of oil, even if they also rose in price. Prosperity is good for everyone.
How do I benefit from other people having less?
Well, everyone on CFC benefits from inequality. If wealth were distributed more evenly we'd all be poorer.
Actually, It was Schumpeter who warned that capitalism, because of its success, would ultimately end in socialism because of the institutions it creates and intellectual (Piketty) and political class it promotes (Elizabeth Warren).
Just read their conversation yesterday.
Deirdre McCloskey seems to maintain that the pursuit of economic equality isn't a valid one, and that what matters more than anything is the elimination of poverty - both a worthwhile and realizable goal.
She describes herself as a "Christian libertarian"; there is little that CFC could add to such damning self-evaluation.
Doesn't the 'feminist woman who was once a man' even it out?
What about them?
Tears holllow?
Do you mean "this vale of tears"? And why 360 billion?