NobleSavage
Veteran Member
why restrict to billionaires?
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It's just a convenient way to look at. No more arbitrary than saying the top 600 families or the .01% or whatever.
why restrict to billionaires?
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Have you considered that wealth can increase worldwide over long spans of time? And a transitional period can last generations? So that wealth is effectively zero sum for many people during their life time. Its like you're asking why don't we observe evolution in real time.If you agree that we're better off than cavemen (or 198th / 19th century farmers) on average, then economy since then has not been a zero sum game. Why do you think that it is a zero-sum game now? When did economy become a zero sum game? 50 years ago? 10 years ago? Last tuesday?
No, games that are scored have winners and losers. The winner just has a higher score. With that said wealth is mostly zero sum. Obviously it can grow overtime with population, improvements in labor efficiency etc but there are limits.
If it's not infinite then it has to be zero sum whether it's growing or not.
The US economy generates about $16 trillion in income a year. The net worth of households and non-profits is about $55 trillion. That's a really big, finite number. If 600 families control the vast majority of that wealth then that leaves less for everyone else. And if those 600 families are able to increase their share, which they have been, then less and less will be left over.
That sounds like zero sum to me.
why restrict to billionaires?
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By the way, I nailed it. The argument is that the aristocracy deserves to be rich, everyone else deserves to be poor, therefore the economy is not a zero sum game. As stupid as the logic of that argument is, that is exactly the argument that is being made in this thread as far as I can tell. Taxes are stealing!
Our FFers went to war over taxes, so there is precedent. The reason that the poor aren't still rebelling like they did over 100 years ago is because they know your argument isn't true and that they could be worse off then they are.
The question was asked upthread how there can be winners and losers without it being zero sum.
Lets try a simple game: You roll a die and advance that many steps. The first to the end is the winner.
Note that there's no way to go backwards even if there are variations in what the various players can roll. Thus it's clearly not zero-sum, everyone makes progress. Yet it also clearly has a winner.
Almost everyone, your link notwithstanding.Why should I accept that "standard of living" is the measure to use to decide if the economy is zero sum or not?
And who says our standard of living is increasing?
On a longer time scale is clear that it's not a zero sum game. But on a longer time scale it is not an economy what determines it, it's technology and technology is clearly a not a zero sum game.
On a shorter time scale it is clear that big chunk of the "economy" not only is zero sum but in fact negative. Look at Wall Street and banking,
On a longer time scale is clear that it's not a zero sum game. But on a longer time scale it is not an economy what determines it, it's technology and technology is clearly a not a zero sum game.
On a shorter time scale it is clear that big chunk of the "economy" not only is zero sum but in fact negative. Look at Wall Street and banking,
"technology" and "economy" are not two different things.
Technology is part of the economy.
"technology" and "economy" are not two different things.
Technology is part of the economy.
Yes, technology is the part which works, the rest - no so much.
And your point is....?Yes, technology is the part which works, the rest - no so much.
Technology is not a separate thing from the economy it is part of it. Time and resources spent developing a technology could be spent on something else. Like, for example, food - without which many technologies seem less important.
And your point is....?Yes, technology is the part which works, the rest - no so much.
Technology is not a separate thing from the economy it is part of it. Time and resources spent developing a technology could be spent on something else. Like, for example, food - without which many technologies seem less important.
And your point is....?Technology is not a separate thing from the economy it is part of it. Time and resources spent developing a technology could be spent on something else. Like, for example, food - without which many technologies seem less important.
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And your point is....?Yes, technology is the part which works, the rest - no so much.
Technology is not a separate thing from the economy it is part of it. Time and resources spent developing a technology could be spent on something else. Like, for example, food - without which many technologies seem less important.
Wall Street is zero sum game. Wall street is a part of the economy, therefore economy is zero sum game, done!And your point is....?Yes, technology is the part which works, the rest - no so much.
Technology is not a separate thing from the economy it is part of it. Time and resources spent developing a technology could be spent on something else. Like, for example, food - without which many technologies seem less important.
The economy is not a zero sum game. See topic.
Wall Street is zero sum game. Wall street is a part of the economy, therefore economy is zero sum game, done!