We have never had this much money circulating in the economy, we also have never been as productive as we are right now. The gross domestic product is rising everywhere, but the profit only goes into a couple of hands. — lucafrei
Private wealth held offshore represents “a huge black hole in the world economy,” Henry said in a statement.
sales of luxury items that only the very rich can afford will decline, and they will decline to the degree that the wealthy are, so to speak impoverished. — Janus
impoverished — Janus
The only hope would seem to be that everyone very gradually reduces their level of consumption, particularly of fossil fuels; — Janus
Let me respond as a semi-untrained economist: The current taxation level on the rich is about 30%. It used to be closer to 90%. And you know what? When it was at 90% there were still rich people getting richer. Granted, it might have taken more work on their part to get rich, and their children may not have been made quite as rich through inheritance, but they made do. They recycled their mink coats into mink stoles, their silk gowns into fancy curtains (the opposite of Scarlett O'hara in Gone With the Wind), and so on. The Gold Corvettes could eventually be used for grocery shopping instead of lavish display, etc. — Bitter Crank
Just to alert the rich to the risks they face, "after another 5 seconds of whining about being impoverished, we'll just blow your tits apart". If they don't shut up, fire away. — Bitter Crank
OK, so here you have stumbled upon an inconvenient truth: The present level of consumption (all goods and services) is unsustainable. Global warming is a reality, and one way or another consumption is going to get cut -- probably by some unpleasant process where heat and high water eliminates large batches of consumers from existence. Fossil fuels are not just our achilles heel, they are the bulging aneurism in our aorta that will burst, bringing this whole fandango to an abrupt and clumsy finish. — Bitter Crank
Fossil fuels are not just our achilles heel, they are the bulging aneurism in our aorta that will burst, bringing this whole fandango to an abrupt and clumsy finish. — Bitter Crank
But, "consume less"! Not really, just change the means of production to robots and the endless demands of productivity increases and all boats will rise. — Wallows
I'm just going to be blunt and call you out on your catastrophizing here. The markets have lifted countless people in India and China out of destitute poverty. — Wallows
Yes, Wallows, but where are the resources, both economic and energy, not to mention scientific and technological, going to come from to build all those robots? — Janus
Where is the willingness to sacrifice our precious lifestyles, not to mention the knowledge as to precisely how and to what degree to do it going to come from? — Janus
"Oh, well we should try to look on the bright side", because that would likely be nothing more than wishful thinking. — Janus
It seems to me that we would do better to think that collapse, or at least a great and rapid reduction and transformation, of civilization as we know it is inevitable, and perhaps much sooner than we think, and to try to prepare as best we can for that, than to vainly hope that we can sustain "business as usual" indefinitely into the future. — Janus
Nothing needs to be sacrificed. That's a myth that I see pushed by nay-sayers of the economic system that governs capitalism. We will simply adapt and change the way we behave. — Wallows
Are you saying that we will not need to drastically reduce consumption (the reduced consumption that I refer to as "sacrifice:) or that we will not see the drastic reduction of consumption as a sacrifice? — Janus
You or I may not see such a reduction of consumption as a sacrifice, but how can you be confident that no one will, or that most, or even many, will not? — Janus
It seems to me you are just assuming that we will be able to do all these things without being able to give a plausible explanation as to how we will be able to do them. — Janus
So, you are saying that the complex system we call the global economy will always be able to adapt, despite diminishing resources and their consequently increasing costs, to sustain something that will continue to possess all the positive attributes and benefits of what we call civilization? — Janus
I would agree that such a thing might happen, even if I don't think it looks likely, if some new cheap energy resource, like for example workable fusion, suddenly comes into play. Even then I think it would be a challenge. — Janus
What cogent reason do you have for your apparently great faith in human resourcefulness? — Janus
People want too much, and can't carry the burden of it.What do you think brought us to this state? — lucafrei
Generosity.And how can we make a change? — lucafrei
To sound philosophical there's an unsatisfiable desire for "more" than what people already have. This breeds discontentment ... — Wallows
at this moment, there is a dramatic shift in the market towards a more sustainable future due to a rise in the efficiency of existing products — Wallows
The questions you raise are so complex and multi-faceted that I'll have to be a bit overly simplistic.
What brought us to this state is the triumph of the American Empire (let's call it AE). AE became the dominant global power in the aftermath of WW2. And following the collapse of the USSR, AE's global supremacy was basically unquestioned. However, America doesn't like to think of itself as an empire. AE doesn't conquer nations or set up colonies. Rather, it rules by trade. AE dominates other countries by giving them no other option than to business with it. And when you do business with AE, you do business on AE's terms. — Dusty of Sky
But, "consume less"! Not really, just change the means of production to robots and the endless demands of productivity increases and all boats will rise. — Wallows
I'm just going to be blunt and call you out on your catastrophizing here. The markets have lifted countless people in India and China out of destitute poverty. You might brush that aside and counter with another knee jerk response that this has happened at the cost of the environment, especially in China. But, it goes without saying that there is no free lunch and we might as well accept the fact that the world is becoming a better place despite what Marx or Engels might have said some 100+ years ago. — Wallows
I would agree with you that economic activity in China, India, SE Asia, Korea, and elsewhere has indeed lifted many people out of destitution over the last few decades. Trade has helped, internal consumption has helped. — Bitter Crank
The inequality of today is bigger than it was in Ancient Rome when slavery was still a total normality. — lucafrei
And you think I'm dreaming! — Bitter Crank
That's fine; you don't have to believe whatever catastrophizing I do here. — Bitter Crank
Economic development, in general, has tended to be a dirty game, because whether in a command economy or a capitalist economy, managers prefer to externalize costs by throwing waste into the river. — Bitter Crank
We already may be past the point where strenuous reductions of CO2 will prevent a sharp rise in global average temperature. Strenuous reductions would certainly be a good idea, but we might get the consequences of CO2 increase before we experience the benefit of CO2 decline. — Bitter Crank
The only hope would seem to be that everyone very gradually reduces their level of consumption, particularly of fossil fuels; just to the degree that avoids collapsing current industries. But it would seem to be impossible to enforce, such a "rationing", or even quantify how austere would need to be, and people generally seem too complacently self-centered and unable to sustain voluntary cooperation for such a thing to come about through the "will of the people", anyway, even if they could know just how frugal they needed to be. — Janus
It would seem to require a rather drastic shift in values, and that takes time, probably much more time than we have left before the shit hits the fan. — praxis
Oddly, I think people would generally be much happier if their values were shifted toward seeking meaning and happiness, rather than wealth, status, and distraction. In a culture that values meaning and happiness, "rationing" may not feel like rationing but simply living cooperatively for mutual benefit. — praxis
In my opinion, we as humans have to escape the illusion everyone lives in, try to see the bigger picture and maybe remember where life started, because strictly speaking we are all related to each other, it does not matter if you believe in science or in any religion. We are a “being family”. Empathy has gotten lost or it may have never been around in the first place. Therefore I am not happy with our world even though I grew up in Switzerland where you can say the welfare is extremely high. No one has to suffer in terms of essential needs and everyone gets help if its needed. — lucafrei
Why don’t we think about how the human family can live together in peace, sharing knowledge and thoughts? Imagine we include the brilliance of every human individual and put this together. I see humanity working with nature, as if they were one, I see humanity exploring space, making new discoveries, extending their knowledge. I see humanity as one nation but still with different cultures. — lucafrei
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.