The only reason I see for you to produce more than what you eat is either because someone outside your tribe need this and is unable to acquire it on time on itself, or because you found another individual like yourself that has at the very least another kind of food or shelter (and you engage in trade). — Zehir
They are now so out of step, the financial economy could never pay back the debts it owes. — Antidote
The wealth we perceive is an illusion because it cannot be repaid. — Antidote
That, or start a massive war and hope they can kill off hundreds of millions of people and therefore the wealth will be destroyed by destroying the depositors instead. — Antidote
Why are we assuming debts must be repayed, or repayable? — Echarmion
So my car, my TV and this computer are all illusions? — Echarmion
How would that work, exactly? — Echarmion
Food and shelter are not the only things you can trade. What about tools. Or shiny things? — Echarmion
Perhaps because prestige is the primary source of wealth? — Zehir
Is there no prestige without wealth? Is prestige just "what you think other people think about you". For instance, does prestige have a place on a desert island on your own? Does it have a place in anything other than a group of 3 or more people? I'm not sure I follow this, so I will also define what I understand wealth to be. — Antidote
Now, as I mentioned before, if you have more than you need, why not give it away? It seems most logically.
Because the piece of paper we call "money" is an I.O.U. — Antidote
None of the items are wealth. The illusion is that if 5 people each have a ticket that says they are owed £1000, but there's only £2000 available, £3000 is an illusion in that it doesn't exist (times this by a billion). The items are all consumables items, continually devaluing to nothing. It would be hard to even call them assets, because they do not increase in value year on year. — Antidote
However, history tells us (taking Germany in the 1930s) that when you have nothing to lose, because their economy was so bad after WW1, war is a big boost to the economy. — Antidote
Of course. Food and shelter is not the only thing to trade. This is why this example takes place in early humanity, where few other necessities existed at the time.
Remember that many of our needs are invented as we go along.
In my example, the technology in had is very limited to the needs. — Zehir
What I think you're missing is that trade need not be limited to necessities. Why not use your surplus to buy that nice shiny rock the neighboring tribe has found? — Echarmion
I do believe that shiny rocks became a thing way after the concept of trade and wealth. — Zehir
Salt was also a thing to store value but I could see mischievous children destroying stored wealth with water. — Zehir
While money is fundamentally connected to debt, it hasn't been directly convertible for decades. And even when it was, it was mostly a theoretical exercise. Money works regardless. — Echarmion
You have unusual definitions for both "wealth" and "assets". What I was going for is this: I can actually use my wealth to acquire things I want. Therefore, it can't be all illusory, can it? — Echarmion
Tim Morgan — Antidote
It is a debt on the future economy, i.e. you will call the debt in (ask for the value) at a future point. — Antidote
Ask your bank who owns your deposited money? They own it, not you. You are their debtor! — Antidote
What a clever move by the bankers. Imagine I could have a business and get that type of guarantee, it would make life a lot easier because now I have no responsibility for your deposit what so ever. If it fails, so what, the tax payer picks it up. — Antidote
Why would a bank fail? Because now they own your money, they can sell it to other people (loans). You carry the liability, their earn the interest/reward. — Antidote
You see, anyone with wealth has one objective, to hold on to that wealth for as long as possible (delayed gratification). — Antidote
The fact you say you can buy stuff with your wealth, suggests its not wealth, it just savings, or money in the bank. Will your wealth be able to buy you the thing you want in 20 years time? In 40? In 3 generations. That's what wealth is. — Antidote
Assets are things that make you income. Yes you can pretend that your TV and your car and all that "stuff" is an asset because someone said it is, but its not. It doesn't generate income, instead it ties up your capital (an bad thing) and then loses money whilst making you no money. Do you see? — Antidote
To be honest, you could google search this one to get the answer. War boosts an economy like nothing else. Read a little history and you will see very clearly. — Antidote
The sysem of money is a closed loop. — Antidote
Indeed. Neoliberalism has been taken too far, and that is one result. — Echarmion
That makes no sense to me. It's my money, therefore they owe it to me, not the other way round. — Echarmion
That's really a problem with a capitalist economy in general, not specifically with fiat money. — Echarmion
And your justification for that claim is? — Echarmion
I think what you're describing would commonly be referred to as "capital". Investments that keep generating returns. — Echarmion
echnically my car makes money, because it gets me to work. And if we're treating individuals like a business, all the necessities of life would be assets, since they are required for you to function. One might exclude stuff like TVs or gaming consoles, of course. — Echarmion
examples of wars helping an economy (like the US in WW1), but for the countries that the war is fought in, it's usually pretty terrible economically (see all other participants of WW 1). — Echarmion
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.