A Son of Liberty
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- Joined
- Feb 26, 2010
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- 6,514
I don't understand the question.
For what good is the accumulation of money?
I don't understand the question.
Gold isn't worth shit if you don't have stuff to consume.
If that's the question, then it's not yet relevant to the discussion. It may later become relevant. At this point I'm simply trying to establish a foundation we can debate upon.
At this point I am simply trying to establish that consumer transactions (in general) are a transfer of wealth. If that cannot be agreed upon, there is no point in pursuing further debate.
The thread is about free trade and your assertion is free trade is making the country poorer somehow.
And the response from the capitalists in this thread is people can now consume more stuff which means they are wealthier. And the reason they can is in part because goods are produced more efficiently and that is demonstrated by the idea of comparative advantage.
You must spread some Reputation around before giving it to Krugminator2 again.
By the same token, if Mercedes cars were extremely cheap due to automation and only cost $1000 a piece,
you would not be considered "wealthy" if you didn't even have the money or means to afford such a low price.
For what good is the accumulation of money?
The thread is about free trade and your assertion is free trade is making the country poorer somehow.
And the response from the capitalists in this thread is people can now consume more stuff which means they are wealthier. And the reason they can is in part because goods are produced more efficiently and that is demonstrated by the idea of comparative advantage.
Money? Or wealth more broadly? As we both agree - wealth is more than just money. I would much rather have productive factories than cash under a mattress, but both are wealth.
The "good" of accumulation of money... is just a store of value, to be later spent. Which is fine and laudable.
The "good" of accumulation of wealth... has the benefit of both being a store of value, and a productive asset, which generates more wealth. So the "good" of accumulation of wealth, is that it accumulates more wealth.
I would consider that person wealthy but that is because I view the world rationally and look at things in absolute wealth.
because even Adam Smith would agree that a lawn chair is not $#@!ing wealth
That said, I'm not sure that I would agree that wealth can be so narrowly defined. As I've mentioned earlier in the thread - and here's where we're going to start talking over each other again - I think there are various ways which we can distribute our wealth. We're not all just shipping our wealth (as you define it) to China, full stop.
A lawn chair is, again, absolutely wealth. How do you acquire a lawn chair, [MENTION=33245]TheTexan[/MENTION]?
[MENTION=33245]TheTexan[/MENTION]
You have a lawn chair. I want a lawn chair. I have 20 bucks. You want 20 bucks.
Where is the problem?
Ok, sure, let's see how this plays out:
I have a lawn chair. You want a lawn chair. I want 20 bucks. You have 20 bucks.
Ka-ching! I have 20 bucks. You have 80 bucks left in your bank account.
I have a plastic dildo. You want a plastic dildo. I want 20 bucks. You have 20 bucks.
Ka-ching! I have 40 bucks. You have 60 bucks left in your bank account.
I have a funny electric talking fish mounted on plywood. You want a funny electric fish mounted on plywood. I want 20 bucks. You have 20 bucks.
Ka-ching! I have 60 bucks. You have 40 bucks left in your bank account.
I have a set of nice steak knives. You want a set of nice steak knives. I want 20 bucks. You have 20 bucks.
Ka-ching! I have 80 bucks. You have 20 bucks left in your bank account.
I have a set of Egyptian cotton sheets. You want a set of Egyptian cotton sheets. I want 20 bucks. You have 20 bucks.
Ka-ching! I have 100 bucks. You have 0 bucks left in your bank account.
I have a set of power tools. You want a set of power tools. I want 20 bucks.
You don't have 20 bucks. You're out of money.
I have 100 bucks. I want a CNC milling machine. Sin-hua Jing-son has a CNC milling machine. He wants 100 bucks.
Ka-ching! I have a CNC milling machine. Sin-hua has 100 bucks.
I use my CNC milling machine to build a lawn chair. I sell it to some random dude in America for 20 bucks.
Ka-ching! I have a CNC milling machine and 20 bucks.
I use my CNC milling machine to build another lawn chair. I sell it to some random dude in America for 20 bucks.
Ka-ching! I have a CNC milling machine and 40 bucks.
I use my CNC milling machine to build another lawn chair. I sell it to some random dude in America for 20 bucks.
Ka-ching! I have a CNC milling machine and 60 bucks.
I use my CNC milling machine to build another lawn chair. I sell it to some random dude in America for 20 bucks.
Ka-ching! I have a CNC milling machine and 80 bucks.
I use my CNC milling machine to build another lawn chair. I sell it to some random dude in America for 20 bucks.
Ka-ching! I have a CNC milling machine and 100 bucks.
x10,000,000,000,000
I use my CNC milling machine to build my 10,000,000,000,000 lawn chair. I sell it to some random dude in America for 20 bucks.
Ka-ching! I have a CNC milling machine and 1,000,000,000,000,000 bucks. America has 0 bucks.
Mohammed Abdul Jabeeb has 30 nuclear missiles. I want 30 nuclear missiles.
Ka-ching. I have a CNC milling machine and 999,999,000,000,000 bucks and 30 nuclear missiles.
You have a plastic dildo. Russia has anti-nuclear-missile technology. Russia wants 30 billion dollars. You have a plastic dildo.
Do you see yet where this is going?
But, as I have explained, that is a semantic circle jerk, and is no foundation for any kind of debate. When I say "wealthy" think more "Jeff Bezos" and less "health-conscious hipster who happily lives with his dog"
Well, I could have paid $50 for it, if it would have been made by some chump who was making $20/HR in the US (WHOOORAY!! USA!!), but instead, I only paid $20 bucks for it from you. So I'm up $30 bucks, still making $20/HR fixing your roads.
NO, I don't see where this is going, because you're presuming this is a zero sum game, and it's not. Neither of us are right, in this simplistic scenario.
But ugh, Jeff Bezos is wealthy because of what he can buy with is wealth. Under your system he would have green squares that he could use to purchase fewer things than he can buy now.
I do not fundamentally disagree with anything you just said but it's more complicated than that. We cannot however go into the details of that debate if we can't agree on the below assertion:
"Consumer transactions are a transfer of wealth"
As I've said before, the above statement is as true to me as 1+1=2, so if we can't agree on the above statement, there is no point in further debate.
This is precisely the point of contention. Consumer transactions are not TRANSFERS of wealth. They are EXCHANGES of wealth. They would not occur otherwise.