It changes who gets the foreign products, but it’s equivalent to just having a string of trades so that the guy who you gave a product to actually gets what he wants. It doesn’t make things worse for anyone.
Yes, but that string of trades is increased velocity, which is a very significant effect on economies that you wouldn’t get to the same extent if you just gave the final person what they want.
Each trade is apparently beneficial, to irrational actors, with potentially large power/exploitability differences (eg lottery tickets are “beneficial”), and values that differ from what you might care about (eg Pedophile rings have some “beneficial” trades involved).
That, said, it’s probably actually beneficial overall. Just that the simple proof doesn’t get you there.
Each trade may be beneficial to the parties involved (although even this isn’t necessarily true for the ordinary sense of the word “beneficial”), but it need not be beneficial to the economy as a whole. Trades can have negative externalities.
It changes who gets the foreign products, but it’s equivalent to just having a string of trades so that the guy who you gave a product to actually gets what he wants. It doesn’t make things worse for anyone.
Yes, but that string of trades is increased velocity, which is a very significant effect on economies that you wouldn’t get to the same extent if you just gave the final person what they want.
Is it a bad effect?
Each trade is beneficial, or it wouldn’t happen.
Each trade is apparently beneficial, to irrational actors, with potentially large power/exploitability differences (eg lottery tickets are “beneficial”), and values that differ from what you might care about (eg Pedophile rings have some “beneficial” trades involved).
That, said, it’s probably actually beneficial overall. Just that the simple proof doesn’t get you there.
Each trade may be beneficial to the parties involved (although even this isn’t necessarily true for the ordinary sense of the word “beneficial”), but it need not be beneficial to the economy as a whole. Trades can have negative externalities.
They can, but it’s not the sort of thing that you assume when you don’t have proof otherwise.