The wine buyer is not rewarded for buying from a wine maker that will make a better wine bottle tomorrow though. Think for a bit on if she was.
I’m not sure if the velocity of money is a result or a cause of economic activity, but my reason tells me that if it is flowing faster, ‘I’ have a better chance at having some flow to me. P(making 100k at mv 6) < P(making 100k at mv 12)
Can you name a form of non artificial capital that is a cash equivalent? Maybe gold? Any non elements that aren’t subject to entropy? Ultimately, yes, I think all artificial forms of ‘store of value’ should have an artificial form of entropy added to them because that is the way the world works.
I bet if you don’t know what good value is that you at least know bad value when you see it.
I talk more about the full output of labour in this paper: https://www.dropbox.com/s/k97dzssxc58ux1s/hypercapitalismwpv1.1.pdf?dl=0
...as for the robots. I’m a little serious. If agi emerges into a world where economic nodes are dependent upon each other and it has more to gain from cooperation than dominating, it might buy us a few years to find a balance.
Yes, exactly. Most economic theory assumes ‘in the moment’ and a bit of God like reach. In the real world we have to deal with time and space.
For most of us working stiffs, when we go to the store to buy milk we are charged an large amount of economic rent to buy it cold, in a container, near our home. Despite the fact that you really need to drive an hour or more to find a cow. Given infinite time and teleportation, we’d hit the farm and get it for much, much less. You only have to look to digital assets to see how this plays out. This isn’t a bad thing. We want the farmer, the pasteurizer, the delivery man and the grocery store to stay in business, but we also want them to do it better, faster, cheaper next time. General market dynamics cause this to happen a rate. I want it to happen at a faster rate.