Lord Zentei wrote:Stas Bush wrote:Lord Zentei wrote:No. I'm saying that a hell of a lot can be monetized, and that doing so as much as possible is desirable, since then we gain a mechanism to measure the relative benefit of diverse goods which otherwise would be ad-hoc and arbitrary, thus leading us to question whether we're really making a rational decision at all.
Monetization is prone to the same ad hoc and arbitrary judgements were the value of monetized good, service or an entire sector can evaporate overnight. More than that, monetization only reflects profitability; if something is not monetized, it is most likely it is not profitable. But so what?
Bottled water which we all know and love
not has a value which is reflected in the price. However, in my view the
investment in that sector is counterbeneficial and stupid. Profitability suggests it is beneficial; I think it is not.
No. Just... no. Monetization is not prone to the same ad hoc and arbitrary judgements as non-monetized sectors, and it's frankly bizzare to say that they are. And what do you mean by saying that the investment sector is counter-beneficial? As if your opinion counted as fact.
Re-read the above. I'm not sure how one can read "investment in that sector" as "the investment sector". Besides, if you're saying that this mechanism "measures the relative benefit" in a rational fashion, you simply cannot explain market bubbles that are as large as the economy of certain nations. The recent 2008 crisis which destroyed Lehman Brothers that was
supposedly worth a multibillion sum is a prime example. Either you admit that irrationality in the system can reach levels that imply enormous amount of value is determined irrationally, or you are faced with a supposedly rational system in theory which generates irrational outcomes in practice.
Lord Zentei wrote:Oh, for fuck's sake. A agrarian society does NOT have zero GDP, nether is anyone claiming that they have zero life standard.
A
subsistence society (subsistence != agrarian, although all subsistence societies are agrarian) would have a GDP of zero, because none of the product is commodified. The GDP of that society would be only
estimated, not calculated, in a backwards fashion, by
trying to determine how much they produce in natural amount of grain, rice, etc. and then apply certain prices to their produce. If you ever read any World Bank papers on estimating the GDP of African nations, e.g. Kenya, where subsistence farming consistutes a large share of activity, you would note that they specifically say non-market activities cannot be measured as part of GDP, and their value is estimated via various approximations. In a direct calculation, any non-market activity is excluded from the GDP explicitly. That's fucking economics 101.
Wikipedia wrote:Note that if you knit yourself a sweater, it is production but does not get counted as GDP because it is never sold.
Therefore, not just any subsistence activity, but any non-market activity and any value that is created, but not sold, is excluded from the GDP. If people's incomes are zero and they get all their goods from rationing, the
directly calculated GDP of the system would be zero. End of story.
Lord Zentei wrote:Though I daresay that their life standard is inferior to that of a society with an active manufacturing and service sector. Moreover, it's painfully obvious that GDP is crucial to evaluating the performance of an economy, since this measure is the aggregate of the market value of the production - and the market value of the production is defined by people's desires and the scarcity of what is produced.
One does not dispute that subsistence farming offers an inferior life standard to an industrial economy with trade of commodities. What is fucking obvious, however, is that the GDP, when measured up front, if the economy is a complete subsistence economy with no market trade, or if market trade is a very small portion thereof and commodities are few, the GDP would be zero or close to zero, which
does not reflect the life standard of the people and
does not reflect the entirety of production. The GDP makes sense only for a market economy. If something is not sold, or worse yet, produced and consumed directly, it is not included in the GDP. It is absolutely irrelevant if what is produced is necessary or not. The GDP measure would not include that.
Lord Zentei wrote:Is this meant to refute the point? If you don't have an alternative, there is nothing to discuss. End of story. Claiming that the other side has "rigid thinking" and "requires a market to exist" is a bullshit dodge.
I already said that alternatives actually exist. Command economies, imperfect as they are,
actually work. Claiming that they're "non-functional" while at the same time spending every bit of effort to make sure they never arise in practice and even if they do, they should be destroyed, is a very nice position.
And yes, "rigid system of thinking" is one that excludes alternatives even before considering them. That is not a dodge. Unless people think and develop alternatives in theory, they will never exist in practice. That is obvious as day.
Lord Zentei wrote:So? How does this refute the point I made? I said: "You may then assume in addition to this, that people are entitled to such and such additional benefits, but these must be gauged against the property of the people who are being taxed to pay for said benefits, otherwise, there's no way of adequately determining whether you are indeed improving things." Saying that a starving person is worse off than a taxed person does nothing to refute that.
"There's no way to determine" if I'm improving things by
taxing one person to make sure another person is
not malnourished?
You must have been aiming for a Misantropy Ph.D. when you wrote that, right? Once again: anything that results in decreasing extreme, biological suffering is
a net gain. A system with zero malnourishment and a heavily taxed rich clas is preferrable to one where the rich aren't taxed, but malnourishment is rampant. In fact, a poor, but non-malnourished command economy is preferrable to a market economy where malnourishment remains. End of story. Anything which removes extremities of suffering (preferrably
forever) is good.
Lord Zentei wrote:In other words, basic survival. Here's wondering what mechanisms are most effective at realizing that potential in a society.... presumably ones that maximize production. Rejecting markets outright is not going to help.
So why is Cuba the only nation with zero child malnourishment in Latin America, despite being
hellishly poor?
UNICEF wrote:The existence in the developing world of 146 million children under five underweight contrasts with the reality of Cuban children, recognized worldwide for not being part of this social evil. Alarming figures appeared in a recent report by the United Nations Fund for Children (UNICEF), entitled Progress for Children, a report on Nutrition, launched by the UN headquarters.
The report said the percentage of underweight children is 28 percent in sub-Saharan Africa, 17 in the Middle East and North Africa, 15 in East Asia and the Pacific and seven in Latin America and the Caribbean. The picture is completed by Central and Eastern Europe, 5 percent, and other developing countries, with 27 percent.
Cuba has no such problems, and is the only country in Latin America and the Caribbean that eliminated severe child malnutrition, thanks to government efforts to improve the nutrition of people, especially the most vulnerable.
... The harsh realities of the world show that 852 million people suffer from hunger and that 53 million of them live in Latin America. There are 5.2 million malnourished persons in Mexico and in Haiti, three million 800 thousand, while in the whole world more than five million children die of hunger every year.
According to UN estimates, it would be very expensive to get basic health and nutrition for all peoples of the Third World. However, it would be enough to meet the goal with 13 billion dollars per year in addition to what is intended now, a figure that was never achieved and it is tiny compared to the trillions that are spent annually on advertising, the 400 billion turnover by selling drugs or up to eight billion that are spent on cosmetics in the United States.
For the satisfaction of Cuba, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) also recognized that this is the country with the greatest progress in Latin America in the fight against malnutrition.
I'll choose that over sweatshops that make "necessary goods" and "maximize production" for the White Mister while people remain malnourished, thank you.
What I mean to say is: with adequate distribution mechanisms, malnourishment can be eliminated even in a very poor nation. Therefore, the idea that you
need to tolerate malnourishment is absolutely preposterous. If a small and poor nation in a complete economic embargo can eliminate malnourishment, then sure as hell nations that are under no embargo
have no excuse. But they still have malnourished children.
You said Somalia is crap because children are malnourished. Now that is an acceptable price for "maximization of production"? I see, I see.
Lord Zentei wrote:It utilizes self-interest to achieve the desired result of the system, instead of having to work against it at every turn. It's not so much an ethos as fuel. The notion that the market is an amoral construct is a questionable one too, as its objective is to optimize people's individual desires. And if you mean to judge a system to the point of wanting to throw it out, then OBVIOUSLY it's relevant to point out the lack of adequate alternatives. Also, you didn't answer the question - what concession are you referring to.
So do people outside of Cuba
desire to be malnourished? Or their desire not to be malnourished is simply of a lower priority than the desires of the rich, and since the market gives
priority to effective demand, there will be a distribution that is unfavorable towards the lower classes? As for the concession:
Stas wrote:If you fire your workers according to rules of the contracts made with the workers and sell your factory that doesn't change the nature of the act. Property creates no obligations. ... Even if your act is clearly malevolent but you don't break any laws and infringe on property rights of others, from a pure "property rights" ground one may not and will not be able to criticize the act.
Zentei wrote:Of course. But why should anyone have the power to dictate how you shall use your property within what is allowed by law? The ability of others to dictate how you use your property can just as easily be abused as your non-use of your property. Moreover, contracts can be expanded if they are found wanting. As an aside though, your hypothetical capitalist doesn't exactly strike me as a typical profit maximizer.
So you admit that malevolent actions which do not directly break any laws and infringe on people's property rights cannot be criticized. That is all.
Lord Zentei wrote:Self-damaging behaviour? Sure it happens. All systems have it, but what's that supposed to prove? That capitalism is somehow inferior to alternatives? Or that it happens principally in capitalism and that this somehow invalidates it?
Once again - the capitalist did not damage
his own life. In fact he may have improved it and his personal satisfaction is greater than it was. He did damage society, though, but from an egoistic point of view if he broke no contracts and did not infringe on property rights of others you cannot criticize him. He was acting with his own interest in mind and he valued his own preferences higher than those of the body corporate he had. That happens quite often. The recent saga of "golden parachute"-CEOs is just another sad chapter in the tale. And no, it does not happen principally in capitalism. However, in capitalism you have no grounds to criticize such behaviour if
no contracts were broken and no property rights infringed. In essence, no matter how cruel and senseless the act, if the law is silent and nobody's property is damaged, there's no grounds to criticizes. A destructive price war to annihilate your competitor? So as long as you only use prices and your own size, there's no grounds to criticize. Destroy factory to buy a yacht and a villa? No grounds to criticize so as long as you paid out the wages to the last dime - irrelevant what happens to workers thereafter. Speculation? As long as you speculate within what is allowed by the law, no grounds to criticize, even if that speculation can be disruptive even to non-speculative economic activity.
Lord Zentei wrote:The market doesn't "glorify" personal self interest in the way you're insinuating - it utilizes personal self interest AND transactions made with mutually voluntary and informed consent. That's a pretty huge difference there.
The market does not itself glorify self-interest and individualism. The market is the mode of operation; the corresponding ideology of laissez-faire and individualism glorifies the market and exists to justify the market. You have to be blind to ignore the fact that the market has an ideological apparatus to support itself and a horde of ideologues tirelessly extolling its basic principles, self-interest being one of them. The market lashes out agressively against its enemies. Market economies work wonders to annihilate non-market ones, they spend so much effort on destroying every vestige of non-market mechanisms, be it feudalist remnants in the colonies or former colonies, or former "real socialism" from the Warsaw Pact and its dying remnants. Capitalistic nations annihilated any competition by applying violence whenever they met any resistance. To say that capitalism lacks an ideology is to deny the reality. Capitalism has an ideology, it has a huge ideological apparatus dedicated to the support and preservation of both capitalism itself as a system and its ideology. Capitalism has everything from theory to practice to ideology that supports the practice. It is not some sort of apolitical machine; the market violently works to destroy any barriers that politicians may erect out of populism or ideological dedication to non-market systems. Capitalists will organize economic warfare and blockades against non-market economies, they will tirelessly work to destroy any non-market economies, they would attempt to grab anything that is operating in the state sector and force privatization. They will not do so in person, perhaps, but they will do it through myriads of think-tanks which are funded by their corporations, they will do so through their loyal media and the entire apparatus devoted to the propaganda of capitalist ideology with core principles: market, individualism, economic freedom. Capitalism is not neutral. As any system it fights for survival tooth and nail, and doomed is the foe of capitalism who comes lightly armed to the battle.
Lord Zentei wrote:Of course there's a way to put the capitalist out of power. It's called "competition". WTF do you mean by "shitting on the workers is considered good", since when is that the case?
Since Union Carbide. *laughs* And "competition"? Please. Only
inefficiency will be punished by competition. Not evil or utilitarian harm.
Who put Coca Cola out of power because of their shenanigans in India? Nobody. Are you seriously suggesting that a company is going to be outcompeted for evil acts? You're crazy. IBM's complicity in the Holocaust and BAYER's Nazi doctor chief, blood money in the closets of a whole plethora of uberpowerful corporations suggests that, in fact,
evil pays. And indeed, why would competitors punish a company which commited an evil act and went unpunished by the consumer, if that means they can get away with the same? Absolutely zero incentive.
Lord Zentei wrote:A bureaucrat does NOT answer to the people below him. He answers to the people above him. Neither are democratic mechanisms necessarily more effective, and it seems pretty slanted to judge system A because it doesn't use the methods of system B.
Non-elected bureaucrat does not answer to people below him. That means you have to create a system that wouldn't have too many levels of control. Non-elected bureaucrats should be replaced by elected ones wherever possible. And yes, of course dictatorial methods can be more effective - it mostly hinges on the exact persons in power. I'm not sure, though, how this refutes my point that capitalism by default rejects democratic control of the administration; politics at least envisions a possibility of such.
Lord Zentei wrote:It doesn't make provisions for it either. That's a fail.
Making provisions for something which is detrimental to the existence of a non-market system can lead to destruction. I agree that this requires thinking on how to make such systems more resilient. I'm spending quite a bit of my time thinking about that thing exactly. *laughs*
Lord Zentei wrote:I've already pointed out how corporate bodies are responsible for their own internal regulation. The person at the top of the corporation is essentially a hireling, and his employers are responsible for maintaining scrutiny. These employers are the owners of the capital.
The owner of the capital can be also the person at the top. The CEO may not always be a hireling, although sufficiently large and developed corporations tend to use hirelings. It is never a given, though. Jobs isn't a hireling.