Yet one cannot deny that countries like China or India do have benefitted from the current era of globalization. The US has been the loser here, and we can see it now in the current situation the country is in.Sorry, a bit of confusion there. I mean globalism has destroyed so much. It’s not the great success story overall, i.e. American jobs, sweat shops, etc. — Brett
Yes and no.Is it about state controlled economies with just different degrees of control? — frank
Last time they had to do that was during the banking crisis in the 1990's, where state took an active role in rearranging the banking sector (unlike in the US — ssu
If this imaginary audience wants to read a more civilised and in depth discussion of related issues; which includes citations; I invite them to read here. — fdrake
Say and Say's law isn't part of the economic theory of supply and demand on which modern mainstream economics is based on. I'm not familiar with what Bastiat has said on this. — ssu
Which doesn't take into the account of demand in the equation. — ssu
Because if those costs the capitalist faces, the proletariat she has to keep alive at the bare minimum to gather those raw materials and to produce the good, is only one part of the equation — ssu
The idea that the work put into the production is a one sided model which doesn't take into account how the market mechanism and pricing works. — ssu
The price of a commodity constantly stands above or below the value of the commodity, and the value of the commodity itself exists only in this up-and-down movement of commodity prices. Supply and demand constantly determine the prices of commodities; never balance, or only coincidentally; but the cost of production, for its part, determines the oscillations of supply and demand
If that doesn't cover it, then the good won't be manufactured in the first place. — ssu
Yes you can. They're called co-operatives. — Kenosha Kid
I wouldn't presume to discourage the imagined audience from doing so, but would merely point out that it is assumed that any disparity is the consequence of discrimination - conflating effect with cause. It is not assumed that person Y has a personal responsibility to qualify for the loan, or the job, or not commit the crime. It is not allowed that X doesn't have a discriminatory opinion of person Y. If it's not explicit, it's implicit, it's institutional, it's subconscious, but it's definitely discrimination. The one thing disparity cannot be, is the consequence of person Y being judged fairly on merit - even while, disparities are bound to result from people being judged fairly on merit, because any one person is different from any other. — counterpunch
Well no, this is putting the cart before the horse. The upper limit cost of what the general consumer is willing to put up is only known in the last instance, i.e. the products have to be produced and in market for sale. This requires that the wage labors have already been hired and have done the work and need to be compensated, the machines have been bought the land rented etc. and everything has been put into use. The capitalist doesn't have otherworldly foresight into what the general population within a market is going to purchase and what they are willing to spend. And, more often than not, this is a crises that occurs for pre-existing markets, e.g. a consumer technology is that suddenly rendered obsolete by new technology so that demand sudden falls for the older product. — Maw
Discouraging the tendency toward consolidation would be precisely fighting against capitalism, because capitalism just is that consolidation; which is why, just as you say, capitalists fight so hard to destroy the competition that threatens it. Competition is only possible among peers, which is to say, people who are roughly equals. — Pfhorrest
My personal pick for the big bad behind capitalism is rent, including rent on money i.e. interest, precisely because that creates a tendency toward consolidation. — Pfhorrest
You seem to be under the impression that the politicians need to be kept "under control", but they aren't the ones who have all the capital, are they? What about keeping the capitalists under control? — Echarmion
Capitalism takes the very natural inclination of humans to accumulate resources and turns into a tool to drive the economy.
There are, however, other approaches that are also meritocratic and market based and not top-down economies. There are already businesses right now that are not capitalist and yet compete in the same market as everyone else.
Great, seems that you've found to copy paste the crucial part from Marx (I remember one Lizard brain berating me on an internet quote, but anyway).Does this help? — Maw
but the cost of production, for its part, determines the oscillations of supply and demand — Maw
Yes. And there's a lot of products of which price can already be quite well known in the market when the capitalist makes the calculation to invest or not. If your planning to mine a natural resource or start a dairy, I guess the price of milk or the price natural resource is quite well known to you. One dairy or mine will likely not alter the price so much.Well no, this is putting the cart before the horse. The upper limit cost of what the general consumer is willing to put up is only known in the last instance, i.e. the products have to be produced and in market for sale. — Maw
Systemic discrimination is absolutely explicit. See this World Health Organisation report charting systemic sexism and its causes; gender stereotypes make glass ceilings and maternity is an employment opportunity "tax"; gender as a societal process apportions men and women differentially into different jobs and gets them treated differently within them regardless of individual merit.
And I have no idea how you've come through COVID and BLM without gaining even a cursory understanding of the empirical realities that systemic racism refers to.
Your position requires sanitising history, something you allegedly dislike; it begs you to answer the question of how we could emerge from an imperial history, a global slave trade, and enter into a post-colonial present without the expropriated, undermined groups of all that suffering under the weight of that history. It beggars belief that all of this can neatly be explained by differences in individual merit. — fdrake
Not necessarily. For example, anti-trust laws and other methods of preventing monopolization — synthesis
It seems as if almost every industry is dominated by two or three players (at most) anymore. — synthesis
many people are not in a position to own (just starting-out or whatever) so there must a supplier of all things that rent involves — synthesis
My own pet peeve is the stock market where people "earn" money passively (rent, again). Getting paid for doing nothing is perhaps the greatest con of all-time! — synthesis
Because they cannot alter change, and due to a fondness for authority and order, conservatives are often the hand-maiden of socialism, insofar as compromises and appeasement have led to greater state control (See Bismarck and the foundation of the modern welfare state). — NOS4A2
Great, seems that you've found to copy paste the crucial part from Marx (I remember one Lizard brain berating me on an internet quote, but anyway). — ssu
Yet a change in demand can perfectly happen without any link to the cost of production. This is modelled in neoclassical economics as simply the demand curve moving. (And that is btw was the Menger's point: if a diamond is just picked up by accident by a passer by (with no work) or is found after a large diamond mine operates for ages (with a huge amount of work), the price of the diamond is the same). — ssu
I guess the price of milk or the price natural resource is quite well known to you. One dairy or mine will likely not alter the price so much. What you refer (if I understand again correctly) would be true in a product that has never been on the market, I guess. That is the case very seldom. — ssu
In all countries over the course of recent history they have benefitted from capitalism in that it has brought people out of poverty. It doesn’t matter whether you agree or not, I’m just making myself clear. — Brett
Even without any mediation, labour values capture about 91 per cent of the structure of observed market prices. This alone makes it clear that it is technical change that drives the movements of relative prices over time, as Ricardo so cogently argued (Pasinetti, 1977, pp. 138-43). Moving to the vertically integrated version of Marx’s approximation of prices of production allows us to retain this critical insight, while at the same time accounting for the price-of-production-induced transfers of value that he emphasized. On the whole these results seem to provide powerful support for the classical and Marxian emphasis on the structural determinants of relative prices in the modern world.
Co-ops work well in distribution (especially food) — synthesis
not so much on the production end — synthesis
What is quite presumable is your condescending attitude. But I guess that's the style here now. Anyway, and it's an interesting discussion.It's hilarious how you clearly have no idea what you are talking about. — Maw
The way I see it, It's basically a critique of the theories of Ricardo. But to your example:Menger's diamond example fallaciously attempts to conflate an explicitly non-capitalist exchange with a capitalist one — Maw
True, but you are forgetting that you need a buyer here also.Now both go into the market to sell. The non-capitalist does not have a price floor because there was no cost in extracting the diamond for him. He can sell for a $1 and therefore profits $1. However, capitalist does have a floor price because there is a cost to the extraction process. — Maw
Yet his production is dependent on the demand of (mined) diamonds. The idea of not thinking about the demand side (and the reasons for the demand) here, but making this economic model using just the supply side costs and labour doesn't catch many important aspects. The so called input costs don't determine the final prices.In this one instance of a competitive transaction, the non-capitalist can therefore undersell the capitalist, but then what? He can't create any additional demand, he doesn't have a mining operation to continue to extract raw diamonds. He created one instance of demand which was concluded at point of sale. That's it! But the capitalist, while not making a sale in this one instance, can continue putting raw diamonds up in the marketplace and finding demand (safe to assume non-capitalists aren't continuing to randomly come across raw diamonds on the ground) because she has a mode of production in place that can continue this process.
Thanks, have to look at that.You'd enjoy the paper I linked to Maw. It concludes: — fdrake
The way I see it, It's basically a critique of the theories of Ricardo. — ssu
but likely he or she would simply ask what the buyer is willing to pay for it. The fact is thatbuyer hardly is interested on how much work was put into finding the diamond. The diamond has subjective value to the buyer(s), either he might be looking for diamonds used by industry or interested in it as a luxury item or an eccentric store of wealth. This value has nothing to do with the amount of work put into mining the diamond (or the luck finding of it). — ssu
making this economic model using just the supply side costs and labour doesn't catch many important aspects. — ssu
That which is asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence. — fdrake
Not necessarily. For example, anti-trust laws and other methods of preventing monopolization
— synthesis
“Not necessarily” what?
Anti-trust laws are a check against capitalism.
It seems as if almost every industry is dominated by two or three players (at most) anymore.
— synthesis
As is the natural consequence of capitalism. — Pfhorrest
many people are not in a position to own (just starting-out or whatever) so there must a supplier of all things that rent involves
— synthesis
People not being in a position to own is precisely the problem, and the existence of rent exploits and exacerbates that problem.
If rent was not a legally enforceable arrangement, everyone who owns properties to rent out would have no better use for them than to sell them, and nobody to sell them too but the people who would otherwise have been renting (since nobody else is going to buy just as an investment when they in turn can’t rent it out either). This creates incentive for landlords, banks, etc, to sell off properties on terms that are as affordable as renting.
Conversely, compared to that kind of market, the existence of rent creates an incentive for the rich to own more property than they need for their own use, and gives them a means of accruing more and more, which raises prices, and leaves everyone else unable to afford to buy. — Pfhorrest
My own pet peeve is the stock market where people "earn" money passively (rent, again). Getting paid for doing nothing is perhaps the greatest con of all-time!
— synthesis
Stocks are actually qualitatively differently from rent and interest and I have no objection to them. That is the legitimate way to invest, rather than lending at interest.
With a loan, you give someone money and in return they owe you back more money, regardless of whether the loan actually benefits them or not: if they borrow and fail they still owe you even more than they borrowed. That’s really money for nothing. — Pfhorrest
With stock, you’re literally going into business with them, becoming a co-owner of their business in exchange for funding it, and only if their business succeeds do you succeed. For smart stock owners with diverse holdings, like with index funds, your success is tied to the overall success of the market, so the good of the whole economy is in your best interest. — Pfhorrest
You demand I answer for the actions of my ancestors? My working class ancestors built the Labour Party from nothing to represent their interests relative to the owners of the means of production. And you've abandoned us, to weep bitterly and constantly on behalf of everyone but us - while the owners of the means of production have privatised everything, sold off council housing, destroyed the unions, cut pensions, ended job security, imposed zero hours contracts...etc, etc, and I'd still vote for them before a Labour Party overrun by people like you! — counterpunch
And finance. The most successful co-ops are banks, insurers, etc. Energy too. — Kenosha Kid
I suppose just about anything would work in banking, after-all, creating one's product out of thin air would seemingly open up a great deal of possibilities. — synthesis
Let me draw an analogy. Everybody has a tendency to go towards death. But what people do in their lifetimes can greatly affect the quality as well as the quantity of time they remain their present form. — synthesis
Capitalism certainly tends towards accumulation, no doubt about it, but there are things that can be done to attenuate this tendency — synthesis
Then how would folks acquire property or any business tools when first starting off? — synthesis
Most of the problems that have to do with housing are caused by [...] banking — synthesis
For those who are unable to purchase a house, a rental market makes a great deal of sense — synthesis
Apparently you've never received one of those letters from a bankruptcy court telling you that the money owed to you has gone up in smoke. — synthesis
You're only going into to business with them if you own a huge block of stock. — synthesis
Otherwise, I see little difference between the two besides agreeing on a return up-front. — synthesis
Regardless, the ultimate human fantasy of making it possible to get "something for nothing" is (IMO) the greatest impediment to capitalism being accepted by a larger percentage of the population. Any something for nothing scheme stinks and people can smell it a mile away. — synthesis
Hopefully the next system (another fantasy) will reward its participants proportionally for the their labor-value added while cutting all parasites out of the deal. — synthesis
Which raises the obvious question: why does anyone rent? — Pfhorrest
not everyone wants to own a property — Brett
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