The Source of Economic Growth
No school of economic thought is consistent with Objectivism, which is why Ayn Rand, in the very first sentences of Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal, said “This book is not a treatise on economics. It is a collection of essays on the moral aspects of capitalism.”
Patent attorney and novelist Dale Halling proposes a science of economics that is consistent with Rand’s philosophy. The path to that understanding of economics results from examining the source of real per capita increases in wealth, which puts man’s mind at the center of economics. No other school of economics puts emphasis on man’s mind, which is one reason why Rand had a tenuous relationship with even free market economists, see, for instance, Milton Friedman on Rand and Mises (YouTube) and "Can the Ideas of Mises and Rand be Reconciled?" by Edward Younkins.
Based on Dale's latest non-fiction title "The Source of Economic Growth"
Patent attorney and novelist Dale Halling proposes a science of economics that is consistent with Rand’s philosophy. The path to that understanding of economics results from examining the source of real per capita increases in wealth, which puts man’s mind at the center of economics. No other school of economics puts emphasis on man’s mind, which is one reason why Rand had a tenuous relationship with even free market economists, see, for instance, Milton Friedman on Rand and Mises (YouTube) and "Can the Ideas of Mises and Rand be Reconciled?" by Edward Younkins.
Based on Dale's latest non-fiction title "The Source of Economic Growth"
SOURCE URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HBS7VVsoKg0
If in economics, A+B=C does A+B always equal C?
If man is at the center of economics, isn't he a variable? Just asking.
Most of economics is based on a technologically static world and therefore of little relevance to most people and fails to explain most of what has happened that is interesting in economics. Supply and Demand has nothing to say about creating weaving machines, steam engines, SEMs, microprocessors, etc.
So, while supply & demand can tell you about existing products, it cannot tell you about new products until they have been put into the marketplace. Enter stage right -- advertising.
I'll let Dale respond, but yes, he would say that we treat it as a social science and it should be treated as a hard science.
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So, you see, none of this can be true.
I think of "perfect competition" (discussed starting at 27:30) as being what happens when you cannot differentiate your product. If you're selling something commoditized (i.e. non-differentiatable) like gold coins, you have perfect competition. This is not desirable. The market pushes you to think of some way to differentiate to make something different and better that people will pay more for.
It reminds me of Clay Christensen's model of a cycle of commoditization/decommoditization from the Innovator's Dilemma. Christensen says technologies are constantly mature and commoditized, and at the same time some other technology decommoditizes.
This talk is about how that growth and that cycle are powered by invention.
Of course, most economists start arguing from the middle. what is demand? At the most fundamental levels of economics there is no demand. I am reminded of Father Guido Sarducci (maybe someone put the link in here) his 515 minute college degree. "everything you need to know about economics? supply and demand." Disruptive invention changes that completely.
And as to that "problem", too bad for the crony capitalists ;P
Yes. I can't think of any examples, but usually the real disruptive innovations are not a better or cheaper version of something already existing but rather a way to meet people's wants/needs approaching them from a new angle.
"At the most fundamental levels of economics there is no demand."
No demand? This is completely new to me and probably merits its own thread.
Economics, at the macro level, is influenced by the decisions made by every buyer of an item or service, and those decisions are likewise influenced by the needs or decisions of other buyers or associates, who in turn are influenced in their decisions by a wider population, and that's just the demand side. The flow of wealth is also influenced by decisions of the supply side on what and how many products or services are to be offered. To make this even more complicated, third parties, called regulators, attempt to influence the trajectory and volume of wealth, and they are in turn influenced by economic theory, legal restraints, and political agendas, however impractical. Again, too many variables, and there's even less chance of an exact prediction of the wealth vector between even just one supplier and one buyer, due to the wide variability in human personalities.
The strength of capitalism is that it makes acceptance of the uncertainty in the flow of wealth an absolute principle (Smith's "Hidden Hand"), which requires willingness to "go with the flow". Most other economic models fail horribly because they either refuse to acknowledge uncertainty, or attempt to control the wealth vector enough to reduce uncertainty. The capitalist is like a gambler who lives by Heinlein's credo: "Of course the game is rigged, but you can't win if you don't play." He bets that his understanding of economics as a shifting field enables him to adapt to unexpected change and win enough to gain profit. The followers of non-capitalist models are like the gambler who believes that a rigid system of betting will unquestionably guarantee him a win. Guess who's best equipped to win more than he loses?