That is a great point about the long-term implications of structural adjustments in the economy.
It certainly places the closure of factories and entire industries in a very different light when you realize that many of
the laid off workers will never be rehired at a comparable wage level. Businesses can make a very calculated
short run cost decision while bearing almost none of the downstream costs to the communities affected.
I have tried to rethink this issue by taking the exact opposite point of view that I described above.
What if clinging to the economy as it is now is the entirely wrong reflex?
Is it actually correct to assume that it would be best to fossilize our economy and society in the state that they now exist?
When we look back in time, it is clearly true that at no time in history would societies have actually been better off if they had
rejected the future. Why should we expect that something that has been true through all of time will not also be true this time around?
Economists often embrace a creative destructive model when considering vibrant market economies.
Focusing one's gaze on the welfare of workers and not on that of consumers typically does not help anyone.
Consumers need to be at the center of any real economy.
When consumers are not at the center of the universe, all you have is a pretend economy.
Workers, while possibly working quite hard, only become actors in an economic drama which in productive terms is largely hollow.
Potemkin village economies typically become increasingly unstable.
How could such a fanciful invention be anything else?
There are still such economies in the world today.
Some economies exist almost exclusively on the basis of subsistence agriculture.
In any modern productive sense such an economy is also a pretend economy.
I am trying to rewire my brain to think in this fairly radical mode of thought.
In this new state of consciousness, I imagine myself trashing our modern increasingly hollow economy, so that a new economy can emerge.
Economic anarchy!
Why should the kids have all the fun?
I mean life is largely a game of chicken anyway, isn't it?
If you know even a little bit of monetary policy, fiscal policy, the use of financial leverage, then you could do a fairly good job of sweeping aside all of
the cobwebish thinking that is keeping us from having an economy that is actually based on what consumers want.
When the kids see that their parents could be as bug eyed nuts as they sometimes pretend to be, I am sure that the kids would finally getting around
to cleaning their rooms and doing their homework.
The obvious low hanging fruit in such a rampage would be the distribution/transport/spatial organization economy that I have talked about many times before.
If we were to stress the central spoke of modern economies, economic anarchy would not be far behind.
Real estate would become almost worthless: perhaps you could buy land for a box of breakfast cereal.
If location location location were no longer true, then the financial system would soon collapse.
Real estate is mostly valued on the basis of location which is only relevant when there is a specific spatial organization
in the urban landscape. Such spatial organization would quickly disappear once transbots emerged.
The whole rationale for this economic anarchy is to move the economy back to being a real economy where consumers
are offered products and a lifestyle that they want.
If we are still left with a pretend economy in some respects fine!
Jobs could be created that fulfilled the needs of those who needed to pretend.
Why have a pretend economy in which consumers do not even get what they want?
Transbots would be a massive windfall for giving consumers a service that would make their lives better.
I would love to have an transbot economy!
There would be simply overwhelmingly massive demand for such a service.
An economy based on actual consumer demand has (from past experience) always ultimately benefited workers.
What we probably should focus more on as we approach the Singularity is that the fear response could stop us from
going through the creative-destructive process. It is critically important to rejuvenate our economy in order to have a true
(and not a pretend) economy.
Otherwise we are all going to sit around eating sucky burgers in suckyville, when there are so many opportunities for wealth creation at hand.
Edited by mag1, 16 June 2016 - 04:17 AM.