Again, investment is spending. It has only an incidental relationship with saving.
You need to spend savings to get investment. You're so locked into your fiat paradigm, you tilt any time someone uses language differently than your paradigm.
You saying something is wrong doesn't make it wrong.On the contrary, you are so locked into your classical paradigm that you literally cannot accept that it is simply wrong.
Lex was being specific to macroeconomic policy, and was being specific about fiat. But even mmt pundits recognize that people have the urge to save, so we can look back at people's writings to say that mmt is stupid because allowing for people's desire to save is suboptimal
You saying something is wrong doesn't make it wrong.
I imagine the neural wiring for defending property is the same as animals defending territory or a mate. Humans are cooperative and competitive, altruistic and ruthless. Everyone is a different recipe and what comes out depends on how it's stirred (epigenetics) but as El Mac says 'it's all society/nurture' is simply a religion. And religion is usually a fear based reaction in denial of a complex reality (based on some kind of idealism, if we could all act like Jesus the lion would lay down w the lamb, if we could abolish class differences from the top down covetousness would disappear, etc)
Lol wut?Humans are not a territorial species
Lol wut?
Nothing to do w being nomadic, so are chimps and they're tribal and territorial. Early humans were likely far more so (your #1 cause of death as a male was interpersonal violence).We weren't even sedentary until maybe 13,000 years ago
My response to inno on the previous page.@innonimatu Collectivism seems to ignore the variety of human needs, especially at later stages of life. State mandated "production" (of services and products) is not able to meet the variety of demand humans desire. Your system will always curtail peoples' wants to those planned by the State. Person A will want to retire to a quiet life in the country after 40 years in the city; Person B will want to take 2 $10,000 vacations a year in distant places. Person C will want to move to be with grandchildren. Now multiply that by a few million other options. The state has a record of being able to meet collective needs (keep the trains running on time) but but fails miserably at meeting individual needs. It is those individual needs that increase the happiness of people and families.
Personal savings are similar to corporate investments but just happen on a different scale. by not consuming now I hope to put off that consumption until later when I can better enjoy it or will need it. Should delaying such consumption earn a saver any reward? (interest) Is there a risk to the saver's delay? (inflation) Is there a cost to the saver? (penalty) Does your system allow private companies? If so, can they save for some future need? Scaled up from personal savers. Where do such savings sit? Do I keep the $10 not spent under my mattress? Does the state just not give it to me? Where does a company keep its money not spent?
Maybe your system does away with money altogether. I don't know. You talk a lot at the macro level, but people don't live at the macro level. They live at the micro level where each transaction is important to them. Can you describe how your collectivism works at the individual level? I work in some factory or service run by the state. How do I plan and pay for the 300 person wedding in Cancun for my daughter? How many different kinds of cars will be available for me to buy? Do I get a benefit from consuming less than average? I could go on. Your socialism is like a big puzzle that you have put all the pieces together, but when that is done, there is no picture. It's blank. The pieces all fit but....
Both ownership and sharing are built into what we are. It is clearly seen in personal history and evolutionary history. Property rights are just one step further along the ownership path. Family and community are just other steps on the sharing path. Those paths can be quite entangled.We will always tilt on this. You need to spend savings to get investment. You're so locked into your fiat paradigm, you tilt any time someone uses language differently than your paradigm.
If you can't flit between macro policy that uses sovereign currency vs externally controlled currency vs real output, you're limiting all the conversation to a handicapped paradigm.
You can't plant crops unless you have saved corn.
We can disagree on whether there's an instinctive grasp of property rights. The ease of training something is a function of underlying instincts, and they have a genetic basis. Phobias vs snakes are easier to train than phobias to flowers because there's an instinctive component. Learning to understand speech has a genetic component or else your cat could really be listening to everything you say.
This whole "it's all trained" is why extremists inevitably apply too much useless violence.
So, broken and unproven paradigm plus the belief that it's all trained is a recipe for disaster.
You need a success story. Just prove it elsewhere
your #1 cause of death as a male was interpersonal violence
If you've ever been in a school cafeteria, on a bus (or even a car, 'shotgun!'), or basically anywhere humans congregate you can see it.
Obviously we have to repress it in artificial human society (especially big cities) but it's a very obvious feature of humans. Think of pretty much every sport, board game even, it's a contest over territory (including civ of course)
Even here in this strange virtual space the territory is the ideas and cliques form to argue over intellectual territory.
We also share a large genetic overlap with cows, and that's three ticks for cows there. Does that make us cows? Or bulls, I guess, if we're going to get picky over it.Fear of outsiders. Competition for mates. Aggressive competition for food when scarce?
What apes are you looking at?
my timetable for that crisis moved up a bit after seeing gpt write papers better than most college students can, and machine learning beat pros at fairly sophisticated games despite incomplete information. you don't need to be comparable or better than top pros in irl vocations to displace...nearly the entire labor force in a particular one. you probably don't even need to be above average, considering the cost of running a machine for the tasks. machines don't eat, sleep, ask for wage increases over time, retire, or need training nearly as frequently etc. they require maintenance, but not to the extent of people.In some ways, imo, the argument about investing the savings from labor is kinda moot. The socialist forces are pretty slow from where I am, and Automation-Induced Unemployment is such a looming crisis.
I'm assuming I don't need to tell you the long list of things we don't have in common with cows, but the main overlap is really just genetics (and uh being a mammal with a vertebrae, I guess). That's kind the point. We have a lot in common with cats, too, but we also have a lot that's different.We have more in common with cows and bulls than not. I don't see how that isn't obvious. And yes, they have circumstances in which they are exceedingly territorial.
Although it’s been 20 years since reading, in his main book, Marx came to a conclusion (paraphrasing) that pressure from oppressed underclasses is the force that drives the change in economical-political system. When critical mass of oppression is reached, revolution can happen, shifting distribution of resources/liberties in a society away from ruling classes, towards the working classes. This process has been objective throughout history. Through slavery, feudalism and capitalism the working classes suffered, fought, and, as a result, won more and more freedoms.
(not asking anyone specific) Do you honestly think the process, the dynamic of power leakage, let’s say, has stopped, the grinding wheel of oppression has stopped spinning, the working classes stopped dreaming for more rights, more ownership, more participation and we’re sitting here, at the summit of the welfare mountain enjoying the last political-economic system we’re going to have for the rest of eternity ahead of us? Because capitalism is beautiful? So beautiful.
Or, maybe, the thousands of years old dynamic continues; and, as a result of aforementioned pressure, that never, for a second, stopped, socialist systems begin popping up. We end up in a socialist world, just like we ended up in capitalist world once, then pressure will lead us to the next most suitable, energy-efficient formation. Communism, anarchy, whatever.
It’s interesting to me to know how You see this. From reading history, looking around, I see socialism slowly making an entrance during last 200 years. Billions of people today, more than ever, in absolute or proportion, live in countries, which experiment w/socialism with various degrees of success. I suppose some people see it the other way - socialism discrediting itself, slowly dying off in favour of revitalising the older formation.