Is There a Better Economic System than Capitalism?

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 13. 05. 2024
  • đŸ’» Try CleanMyMac X with 30% off bit.ly/EconomicsExplained2023. For limited-time offer use the code ECONOMICS.
    Over time it is almost taken as given that science and technology will evolve and improve over time. But does the same hold true for the field of economics? Will future generations achieve superior levels of wealth due to advancements in economics or have we already solved everything there is to discover?
    0:00 - 2:30 Intro
    2:31 - 4:03 CleanMyMac
    4:04 - 6:59 Purpose of economics
    7:00 - 8:58 End of mercantilism
    8:59 - 11:22 Economic innovation
    11:23 Is there a better way?
    ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
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Komentáƙe • 6K

  • @EconomicsExplained
    @EconomicsExplained  Pƙed rokem +173

    đŸ’» Try CleanMyMac X with 30% off bit.ly/EconomicsExplained2023. For limited-time offer use the code ECONOMICS.

    • @mihaicepoi5205
      @mihaicepoi5205 Pƙed rokem +4

      Link / Code doesn't work

    • @s--cn8ee
      @s--cn8ee Pƙed rokem +3

      It doesn't t work

    • @ncuco
      @ncuco Pƙed rokem

      #cleanmypc?

    • @antikokalis
      @antikokalis Pƙed rokem

      How much did you get paid to promote the climate hoax?

    • @mikeakachorlton
      @mikeakachorlton Pƙed rokem

      @@antikokalis Oh do grow up you tedious kangaroo kak

  • @1ironfist1
    @1ironfist1 Pƙed rokem +7610

    I am legitimately impressed that the words "socialism" or "communism" aren't mentioned in this video but mercantilism is lol

    • @Ruslan-S
      @Ruslan-S Pƙed rokem +545

      Glad mercantilism got a shoutout! In these uncertain times when capitalism is assumed to be the only model that can work, however horrible and unequal it might be, we need more awareness of mercantilism!

    • @sympathiser_of_Germans_in_40s
      @sympathiser_of_Germans_in_40s Pƙed rokem

      Because communism doesn't work neither does socialism.

    • @jmgonzales7701
      @jmgonzales7701 Pƙed rokem +358

      Isnt mercantilism proto capitalism? I doubt there is anything better than capitalism. Not state capitalism,socialism and communism cannot be good alternatives

    • @AndrewMellor-darkphoton
      @AndrewMellor-darkphoton Pƙed rokem +101

      The original definition of socialism is replacement for capitalism before they came up with the best replacement is seize the means of production.

    • @Ruslan-S
      @Ruslan-S Pƙed rokem +482

      Socialism is when the means of production are owned by the community. Was this ever truly the case in some country with modern economics and did not work?

  • @GrandviewKing
    @GrandviewKing Pƙed rokem +3022

    Imo the biggest blind spot in economics as a science is it’s basic premise that acquisition and accumulation of wealth is the goal/ideal as opposed to optimal utilization of a limited pool of resources for mutual benefit. Not that that will change


    • @kellym3610
      @kellym3610 Pƙed rokem +148

      Aren’t you just describing different economic systems? Capitalism and communism?

    • @badluck5647
      @badluck5647 Pƙed rokem +373

      It is about encouraging innovation and productivity. The Soviet Union had less economic inequality, but their average citizens had a poorer quality of life than America's poor. As long as everyone's quality of life is improving, why complain someone else is richer than you?

    • @stnbch3025
      @stnbch3025 Pƙed rokem +32

      @@kellym3610 No!!

    • @kellym3610
      @kellym3610 Pƙed rokem +70

      @@stnbch3025 explain why not. Don’t just say no.

    • @stnbch3025
      @stnbch3025 Pƙed rokem +144

      @@badluck5647 Nothing in your comment is coherent. It's a fact 5 million €/£/$ is more than enough personal wealth accumulation to have in life, so why the f*ck are we wasting money on greed?

  • @thomasd2444
    @thomasd2444 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci +87

    08:06 - The idea of mercantilism was that an economy should try and export as much as possible while importing as little as possible because that way you could accumulate as much gold as possible.

  • @dgomesreal
    @dgomesreal Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +42

    Thank you for the Portuguese audio option

    • @TheNandagc
      @TheNandagc Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci +6

      Eu tava confusa de como o audio era em portuguĂȘs mas tinha tantos comentĂĄrios em inglĂȘs 😂 nĂŁo sabia que o CZcams tinha essa opção

    • @dgomesreal
      @dgomesreal Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

      @@TheNandagc 😅

    • @PragandSens
      @PragandSens Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci +2

      BRAZIL MENTIONED LETSGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

  • @graphixkillzzz
    @graphixkillzzz Pƙed rokem +2512

    i believe that capitalism originally meant "what is most demanded by the market." but as soon as Edward Bernays blew open the box of advertising and propaganda, capitalism changed to simply "creation of demand."

    • @uncreativename9936
      @uncreativename9936 Pƙed rokem +31

      I checked the "Family and Education" section
      EVERY
      SINGLE
      TIME

    • @whannabi
      @whannabi Pƙed rokem +121

      @@leoniduvarov6565 if you create a problem that did not exist before then yes, you can. If you convince a big enough group about something, the people not following the trend will seem weird and end up conforming as well.

    • @sebastiangibson9671
      @sebastiangibson9671 Pƙed rokem +51

      @@leoniduvarov6565except you can exploit someone’s herd mentality biologically hard wired like there is a culture of buying stuff and because of that you are gonna buy it if someone you love/are friends with you are wired to want to have that so you are on the same level as them and also you kind of have to like within the feasibility of everyone else in short yes yes you do need to buy things

    • @sebastiangibson9671
      @sebastiangibson9671 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@whannabiexactly

    • @victorymokoena112
      @victorymokoena112 Pƙed rokem +5

      I feel like you hit the nail right on the coffin with that statement. ⚰

  • @ungainlytitan1460
    @ungainlytitan1460 Pƙed rokem +1831

    I think that the core problem is that economics is only one half of the issue. The other is politics or rather the political shape of society what it considers important and so on. That interacts with economics and shapes what economic questions are important.

    • @joansparky4439
      @joansparky4439 Pƙed rokem +39

      close.. economics is about the gathering / conversion / production and consumption of resources by a work sharing / specialized community that is being governed by rules that provide personal freedom and private property as principles every participant can count on.
      But this rule enforcing mechanism can also enforce rules that benefit a few at the cost of the rest.. now guess what some of us do?

    • @laaaliiiluuu
      @laaaliiiluuu Pƙed rokem +30

      The main problem is human nature. In the end every system is against human nature. If you really want a fair game then there should be neither a political, economical or justice system. Anarchy is the most dangerous but also the most natural way of life.

    • @minedgravy380
      @minedgravy380 Pƙed rokem +150

      @@laaaliiiluuu nah bruh ppl been in communities forever so to say anarchy is the "natural way" is incorrect, even cavemen have basic social systems

    • @clarestucki5151
      @clarestucki5151 Pƙed rokem +42

      There are no more "classical" economists. The so-called economists of today are really 'political economists', concerned only about redistributing income/wealth from the more productive to the less productive.

    • @titi53221
      @titi53221 Pƙed rokem +7

      The issue is thinking one is different from the other in the first place.

  • @meatsuitpilot6642
    @meatsuitpilot6642 Pƙed rokem +13

    "We cant predict the future and dont really know much about what we're doing, this is the best we've got." Feels kinda like the world is built on hopes and dreams.

    • @TSERJI
      @TSERJI Pƙed 11 dny

      Hopes and dreams are what drive people to make a better world 🙂

  • @shalottsky
    @shalottsky Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +12

    Towards the end you discuss the difficulty of studying economics - "you can't create an economy in a lab." Maybe unsurprisingly, that made me think of computer-based economic modelling, which I assume economists do a lot of. Those models though would have to be limited by the factors that economists imagine to be relevant. That got me wondering if anybody is applying AI to produce novel economic models that apply factors that maybe economists have not thought of. I imagine this would need to involved training AI on whatever data - economic, demographic, environmental, political.... the researchers could get their hands on.
    All that to say: Maybe a subject for a future video.

    • @555salt
      @555salt Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

      most MMT for examples uses models that don't take into account a persons lifespan or how spending and investing habits change over a persons life. which is huge obviously

    • @nataliasegal8674
      @nataliasegal8674 Pƙed 25 dny

      Problem might be that current AI is fairly limited in learning and based on input....so the results are only as good as the questions asked by scientists...unless economists have access to some type of AI that can somehow go beyond that? Maybe they can ask the AI what new questions to ask it. Kind of meta! lol!

    • @555salt
      @555salt Pƙed 19 dny

      with how the economy always needs to be including new products and the changes of consumers preferences. In order to do what you are saying you would need to stop all invention. and force everyone to like the same stuff in order for it to be a theoretically solvable problem.

  • @LARPing_Services_LLC
    @LARPing_Services_LLC Pƙed rokem +2275

    Not so long ago, just after having received my degree on Biology and entering the work force, I started to study economics and finances on my own. My goals were (and still are):
    1. Learn to optimize the way I allocate the capital at my disposal.
    2. Have enough knowledge to be able to understand contracts before I sign them and (hopefully) stay away from bad deals and/or frauds.
    One of the first things that "felt wrong" was the amount of economists that take their field "too seriously" (as if it was a natural science instead of a social one), and preaching their beliefs and dogmas as if they were absolute scientific truths.

    • @ricardograca1161
      @ricardograca1161 Pƙed rokem +213

      Thats completely true. I did a bachelors in engineering and changed my field with a masters in economics and I was struck by the way they even call it a science when almost nothing can be experimented in real life. However, as you say, they go around claiming that their ideas would work best as if it would be 100% true.
      They also use math in a conceptual way instead of us in engineering fields.
      Besides this, learning economics is super interesting and it allows me to put the puzzle pieces in place in my head and the fact that I know how the system works will hopefully make me able to turn this knowledge into an andvantage.

    • @praddumnvats6759
      @praddumnvats6759 Pƙed rokem +48

      Finally science people United.

    • @ETS186
      @ETS186 Pƙed rokem +18

      Just like archeologists say their findings are facts

    • @GiRR007
      @GiRR007 Pƙed rokem +97

      It feels like economics is less of a science and more of just an example of game theory.

    • @nubosite
      @nubosite Pƙed rokem +76

      Couldn’t agree more. But what I found quite disturbing was the power economics and finance have on all other fields of study, especially science. They decide who gets what resources. A scientist could invent or innovate away, the middlemen that market and finance his invention ends up with 90% of the proceeds. I just thought that was unfair. Maybe scientists should all take compulsory lessons in finance and economics.

  • @danielschein6845
    @danielschein6845 Pƙed rokem +690

    Your video reminds me about how in the late 19th century they thought physics was solved. Every major phenomenon that could be seen could be explained by classical physics. There were just these tiny little discrepancies here and there like the fact that Mercury's orbit was a little off (later explained by Einstein's theory or relativity) or the fact that radiation was behaving a little oddly (later explained by quantum mechanics). Physicists despaired that there were no go problems left to solve.

    • @SolomonUcko
      @SolomonUcko Pƙed rokem +125

      reminds me of this: "There is a theory which states that if ever anyone discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable. There is another theory which states that this has already happened." - Douglas Adams

    • @jasonhaven7170
      @jasonhaven7170 Pƙed rokem +7

      Except physicists haven't thought like that in many decades.

    • @jasonhaven7170
      @jasonhaven7170 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@SolomonUcko He's not a physicist, he did English at Cambridge. He doesn't know what he's saying

    • @frozenchicken418
      @frozenchicken418 Pƙed rokem +87

      @@jasonhaven7170 Douglas Adams was a comedic writer, he knew exactly what he was saying. The disconnect is that you've interpreted this quote as a serious scientific postulate.

    • @ricks8058
      @ricks8058 Pƙed rokem +5

      @@frozenchicken418 a better one would be the pursuit of knowledge as climbing a wall to shoot an arrow into another and climb that wall, forever repeating

  • @dianedong1062
    @dianedong1062 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci +11

    in the early 1900's a group of scientists and engineers (known as The Technical Alliance) proposed a distribution system based not on barter, but on energy accounting.

    • @youtubesucks1499
      @youtubesucks1499 Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci

      Ok as a builder... how would that work?

    • @OTG1776
      @OTG1776 Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci

      Ah yes everything given for free with no motivational factors. Of course there would be no exploitation or corruption within such a system either.
      I'm not saying it can't work but it can't work solely on its own. People demonize capitalism and socialism but the truth is both are ABSOLUTELY necessary. Well of course we could let our old work until they are dead because they aren't productive members of society.

    • @ILAptenodyte
      @ILAptenodyte Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

      The technocratic movement, which is the wet dream of the elite.

    • @pedromendonca8859
      @pedromendonca8859 Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

      maybe someone could do a simulation game to help understand these models

    • @youtubesucks1499
      @youtubesucks1499 Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci +1

      @@pedromendonca8859 There is nothing to understand Pedro because people work for money.
      Would you want to work for "energy"? How do you buy food? A house? A car?

  • @sridhargovindarajan5644
    @sridhargovindarajan5644 Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci +4

    Very interesting video. I am no economist but I have an idea that could address the gap you mentioned about resources and demand that could solve the issues of social, wealth and the role of the government. Happy to chat.

    • @legendre92
      @legendre92 Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

      I'm curious to learn what's your idea

  • @no0bw1th4gun
    @no0bw1th4gun Pƙed rokem +376

    Question: "Is There a Better Economic System than Capitalism?"
    Answer: "I don't know."
    Thanks EE

    • @jasonjungreis203
      @jasonjungreis203 Pƙed rokem +66

      Sometimes, “I don’t know” is the correct answer. He shouldn’t pretend to have an answer if he doesn’t.

    • @sedatmehmed4371
      @sedatmehmed4371 Pƙed rokem +18

      @@jasonjungreis203 Not in this case though. He could have showed different takes on what has been tried and some theories instead of a brief history of mercantilism and capitalism

    • @BeSk9991
      @BeSk9991 Pƙed rokem +24

      @@sedatmehmed4371 The question was, if there's a better economic system (as in, allowing more growth and wealth). Which there isn't. Communism and socialism has been tried and it achieves worse results. So there is no better system currently than Capitalism.

    • @sedatmehmed4371
      @sedatmehmed4371 Pƙed rokem +21

      @@BeSk9991 Communism was never tried and things become much better in Scandinavia where they included socialist elements. So yes, there is a lot to be discussed

    • @rofllmao7657
      @rofllmao7657 Pƙed rokem +16

      @@sedatmehmed4371 well true capitalism was never tried either, soo it is actually the best system

  • @jabbadabbajew6035
    @jabbadabbajew6035 Pƙed rokem +555

    Economists are the one set of professionals who continuously get it wrong and never get fired.

    • @chillaxter13
      @chillaxter13 Pƙed rokem +85

      What about the weather reporter? 😆

    • @LilOtakuAngy
      @LilOtakuAngy Pƙed rokem +80

      Any career dealing with forecasting faces this, economists aren’t psychic

    • @nickiacovou2846
      @nickiacovou2846 Pƙed rokem +1

      The thing is, they don't actually care if it's "wrong" because they serve ruling class interests. The economists have always been right when it comes to the rich getting richer, they just pretend they care about the welfare of all and when their theories fall flat they just shrug their shoulders and say "oh well". Mainstream economics is there to enrich the wealthy while convincing the poor they are being considered đŸ€Ł

    • @BiggusDiggusable
      @BiggusDiggusable Pƙed rokem +25

      @@chillaxter13 They get it right more than they get it wrong

    • @BladeValant546
      @BladeValant546 Pƙed rokem +23

      @@chillaxter13 They are right 80% of the time lol.

  • @ianmcbride1000
    @ianmcbride1000 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +63

    Hey mate, love your work! Quick note, the machines made by ASML are called “Lithography” machines. They are typically the most complex machine in semiconductor factories which are called “Fabs”.

    • @danguee1
      @danguee1 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci

      Topical! Just today I topped up my ASML by ÂŁ30k. Not a particularly cheap price - but I feel there's 'quality' there so I'm not as grumpy about the highish share price as I might otherwise have been....

  • @rfvbosse
    @rfvbosse Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +7

    This was really well done, much appreciated đŸ‘đŸŸ

  • @simrock_
    @simrock_ Pƙed rokem +870

    What weirds me out to this day in economic science (as a former STEM major) is just that the field has quite a lot of formulas where you plug in values to calculate something or other. Then you go ask your profs where those values come from and he honestly tells you that someone just comes up with them and they approximately match what they expect to come out of the formula. And those values and formulas change every couple years...

    • @GiRR007
      @GiRR007 Pƙed rokem +95

      Can you even honestly call something like that a science?

    • @signalworks
      @signalworks Pƙed rokem +147

      @@GiRR007 of course, science is all about modeling the world with hypothesis and checking them. The fact that modes change is a sign of good health in a scientific field. If things progress into entrenched dogma, progress stagnates and science starves

    • @reheyesd8666
      @reheyesd8666 Pƙed rokem +26

      That's how I feel about mathematics, someone just makes it up and it works
      I am joking of course.

    • @transcrobesproject3625
      @transcrobesproject3625 Pƙed rokem +46

      All disciplines use tools to make measurements, and those measurements are then put into models. No measuring tools are perfect, and nor, in principle, can they ever be (particularly in a quantum universe). We need to realise that there are hidden ideologies in our measuring tools and also our theories. As finite beings, it couldn't be any other way. That's fine, as long as we are aware of it.
      The problem with most of the social sciences is that a lot of the measuring is done by very fallible, very ideologically driven humans using things like surveys, where you are basically inventing data because doing properly randomised control tests is economically or morally impossible. Even then it wouldn't be so bad but most of the participants actively try and hide this fact, including when you ask questions as a fellow academic at academic conferences. Everyone looks at you like you are a murderer when you bring up such issues. It is truly depressing.

    • @toddfennimore6625
      @toddfennimore6625 Pƙed rokem +54

      The problem isn’t with using mathematical models as a tool; it’s the set of assumptions built into the models and how those assumptions often do not reflect economic reality that is the core issue. Assumptions around markets always reaching equilibrium or economic agents acting rationally to maximize utility are faulty and misguided- and lead to models that do a poor job of prediction and guiding sound economic policy. Trends in the discipline such as behavioral economics are beginning to challenge these assumptions and replace them with more sound premises - but we have a long way to go before these trends are formalized as rigorous, quantifiable models.

  • @IamMrSimQn
    @IamMrSimQn Pƙed rokem +662

    Every video when EE doesn't peddle a fine art scam is a W in my book

    • @otrebla8944
      @otrebla8944 Pƙed rokem +87

      Are you referring to MasterWorks? Lol.

    • @IamMrSimQn
      @IamMrSimQn Pƙed rokem +165

      @@otrebla8944 I don't even have to mention it for you know to what I mean

    • @leovalenzuela8368
      @leovalenzuela8368 Pƙed rokem +60

      @@IamMrSimQnyeah it’s pretty gross.

    • @benknights286
      @benknights286 Pƙed rokem +108

      I suspect its the next established titles

    • @shotelco
      @shotelco Pƙed rokem

      You guys simply don't get it. EE's *Brilliant* use of "W" is an *Audible* lesson which he is *Skillshare (ing)* this reminder of the speculative frenzy in 17th-century Holland; Tulipmania - a kind of mass delusion, a frenzy for tulips which over time, and took the economy of Europe down like a *Nord VPN* node. One must be living in a vacant *SquareSpace* not to see how CZcams creators all think they can get rich - thus taking the Worlds economy down with them, to a point we're re all just left with one *Dollar Shave Club* in our pockets.

  • @Sm0kerza
    @Sm0kerza Pƙed rokem +4

    Hey EE, one thing you mentioned around creating wealth where there isn't. I guess one gap I'm seeing is in the banking sector, where once you deposit a certain amount, that bank can then give out your money as a loan to somebody else, while paying you a nominal fee for leaving you cash with them. Realistically that's where bank runs become so scary.
    I guess this is just an isolated case, however and is not indicative of the theory itself

    • @NeovanGoth
      @NeovanGoth Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +2

      BTW, most money banks loan out doesn't come from deposits, but is borrowed from the central bank. It's actually a pretty neat way to scale the amount of money in circulation with the needs of an economy and keep prices stable: With lower interest rates, more loans are created and money flows into the system, with higher interest rates more has to be paid back and money is taken out of the system.
      The issue with bank runs is more about liquidity. Customer deposits are usually invested in particularly safe ways like government securities. A bank run can destroy a perfectly healthy bank by forcing it to convert those securities into cash on short notice, accepting far lower returns than were previously calculated with.

    • @Sm0kerza
      @Sm0kerza Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +1

      @@NeovanGoth cool comment! Thanks for giving more light 👍👍👍

  • @Robertgriffinne
    @Robertgriffinne Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +104

    What is the best way to profit from the current market, meanwhile I'm still undecided about investing $400k in my stock portfolio to get some dvidends and minimize risk

    • @BenjaminMcLeod815
      @BenjaminMcLeod815 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

      Remember that investing in the stock market carries risks, and it’s important to do your own research and consult with a financial advisor before making any investment decisions.

    • @kurttSchuster
      @kurttSchuster Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

      Pls who is this coach that guides you? I’m in dire need of one

    • @kurttSchuster
      @kurttSchuster Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

      I just looked her up on the internet and found her webpage with her credentials. I wrote her a outlining my financial objectives and planned a call with her.

  • @ScienceTechComputers
    @ScienceTechComputers Pƙed rokem +750

    The only issue with calling economics a science, is the meaning of science which is a process that makes predictions off of repeatable results. Economics is primarily case studies so it doesn’t get any chances to concretely test it’s theories.

    • @mattackerson6728
      @mattackerson6728 Pƙed rokem +74

      Perhaps economics is as much a science as astronomy, which also can't make predictions of repeatable experimentation? Instead both rely on making predictions, then making observations to determine if those predictions are supported or not.

    • @atrueghost6450
      @atrueghost6450 Pƙed rokem +18

      I think it's interesting to look at the languages of each. The hard sciences use mathematics which has rules and relationships while economics uses a lot of statistics with averages and outliers.

    • @ScienceTechComputers
      @ScienceTechComputers Pƙed rokem +103

      @@mattackerson6728 As a basis Astronomy uses physics, chemistry... etc to breakdown pretty much everything in outspace. So its kind of a subset of these other fields of study and can be put into repeatable experiments for example a planet orbiting a star will not stop orbiting unless a force is acted upon said planet causing an outward or inward spiral. If anything Economics is more akin to a social science like psychology where you try to predict human behaviours as an agregate, but becomes a pseudoscience when you try looking at the individual level like cognitive psychology.

    • @yuehan6711
      @yuehan6711 Pƙed rokem +33

      Soft sciences still use the scientific method, it's just harder to create experiments and verify things through experimentation. Not calling economics a science would be like not calling advanced particle physics a science because both are difficult to test. There are also cases where case studies convieniently happen to be control and variable experiments by chance.

    • @una3450
      @una3450 Pƙed rokem +13

      Would be easier to do actual economic experiments if we had a based authoritarian government

  • @murrayg
    @murrayg Pƙed rokem +49

    What I found missing here was a recognition of the role of politics in deciding which economic theory is *applied*. Living in a country which has declined over decades of neoliberal destruction of the state in favour of rigged markets, its clear that one of economics' greatest challenges is that the motivations of those that implement its theories, and bankroll its theorists, need to be taken into account. Economics' unfortunate insistence that it is a "science" plays into this problem, by helping obscure the political dimensions to its arguments.

  • @cameronkeenan7766
    @cameronkeenan7766 Pƙed rokem +5

    That was very informative. Thank you :)

  • @dianedong1062
    @dianedong1062 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci +1

    Howard Scott, along with M. King Hubbard, Thorstien Veblin, and several other technical professionals proposed a distribution system based not on barter, but on energy accounting.

  • @regndeer
    @regndeer Pƙed rokem +890

    "nobody can tell the future, least f all economists"
    "is there a better economic system than capitalism?"
    "idk"
    well done mate

    • @frenchguitarguy1091
      @frenchguitarguy1091 Pƙed rokem +60

      Well sometimes it's better to admit a group don't know rather than clasp onto straws and argue that some obscure form of socialism is this answer, as no one can honestly know for sure, just as if you'd ask a king or his court what the next system in the 1500 his only honest answer is 'i dont know'. Economist are not tarot readers and anyone who says they know the future of a particular field is probably not well enough read on the subject to know the basics or worse potentially a shill of some kind. If people are wondering a certain question but no one has the answer to it do you think it's better to admit a blind spot in a field of study or to Lie and offer up hypotheticals instead?
      May I ask what is your knowledge level on economics? And bonus points if it isn't copied from online amateurs with certain political points to make. I used to stupidly believe that abolition of the housing market would fix homelessness because of online communicators, however that communicator didn't know basic economics (they are however smart in areas that they specialise in) but for several reason all this isn't true at all, the most basic being- you need a exchange of housing as different stages of life need different housing, you can't bring up a family in a flat designed for some 18 yr old uni student.

    • @Johnny_Savage
      @Johnny_Savage Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +31

      ă€ï»żïœ–ïœïœïœïœ’ïœ—ïœïœ–ïœ…ă€€ïœ“ïœïœƒïœ‰ïœïœŒïœ‰ïœ“ïœă€‘

    • @johndionisio9192
      @johndionisio9192 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +3

      Nice rainworld pfp

    • @regndeer
      @regndeer Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +2

      thanks

    • @regndeer
      @regndeer Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

      thanks

  • @matthewiskra771
    @matthewiskra771 Pƙed rokem +196

    I have often said, as an un-degreed historian, that "soft technology" advances are often overlooked. Along with your thesis here about Economics, I would also include such woefully underappreciated soft technology such as filling systems (filing cabinets, manila folders, serial numbers) and library organization (Dewey Decimal, etc.).

    • @hellNo116
      @hellNo116 Pƙed rokem +16

      I feel that this video though ignores and communism in general which basically ignores the other tried alternative of the last century. one that gave us many of the measures that were tried and used by countries in the west before the collapse of soviet union. not even acknowledging is not like ignoring more than a century of theory and a whole economic system that can and solved many problems with completely different way to completely different results. many of which I don't care to defend under any circumstances. I will be caught dead, before covering for stalin and his crimes. however many of the measures work. based on statistics at hand cuba which has pretty much the same gdp with my country of greece enjoys a better quality of life.
      I don't say this is the end system but maybe some ispiration is in order.

    • @sarahrosen4985
      @sarahrosen4985 Pƙed rokem +3

      Did you read Tim Harford's Fifty Inventions That Made The Modern Economy?

    • @Pushing_Pixels
      @Pushing_Pixels Pƙed rokem +3

      The advent of compulsory public education has drastically changed society in so many ways. It's only been a thing for 150 odd years, first with only primary/elementary, then only in the 20th century did compulsory secondary education become a thing. Having everybody be basically literate and numerate is a huge change from 200 years ago. Plus all of the great minds that would've languished without access to education.

    • @Pushing_Pixels
      @Pushing_Pixels Pƙed rokem +3

      @@DesertsOfHighfleet That's one way of looking at it, but it was not the only motivation. There was also a genuine desire to try and uplift the lower classes and give opportunity to the smart ones among them. It's all well and good to "want to be wise", but if you can't read you're going to have a hard time of it.

    • @lucasferreira8115
      @lucasferreira8115 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@DesertsOfHighfleet Liking or not, everybody needs logical intelligence to even survive, imagine being wise without knowing how to math, for instance. Without logic, there is no way to evaluate things in life.

  • @DmitryGoncharovskiy
    @DmitryGoncharovskiy Pƙed rokem +1

    Could you tell, please, which service did you use to make animation like this - 04:34?

  • @thomasd2444
    @thomasd2444 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci +1

    07:31 - And it's possible that tomorrow some brilliant economist(s) will come up with a system that revolutionizes the way that we manage economies to such an extent that it'll be like entering the space age.

  • @stefankachaunov396
    @stefankachaunov396 Pƙed rokem +186

    Just a correction on the semiconductor technology part. The machines made by ASML are referred to as 'steppers' or 'scanners' or more generaly 'tools', they are then shipped to foundries like TSMC which install them into their "fabs" and use them with other "tools" to create chips.

    • @andrewdunbar828
      @andrewdunbar828 Pƙed rokem +6

      Yeah I thought that sounded odd as he was saying it.

    • @rbaile508
      @rbaile508 Pƙed rokem +1

      Also Intel is a Chip Designer and Fab. They don’t really send any designs to TSMC to make. Only their non existent failure of Arc GPUs.

    • @larryc1616
      @larryc1616 Pƙed rokem +4

      @@rbaile508 Intel can't make their smallest and most advanced chips they designed. They get TSMC to make it for them like many others who just design.

    • @jasonhaven7170
      @jasonhaven7170 Pƙed rokem +1

      He's being quite Eurocentric talking about amazing European and North American (Canada and USA) universities like Taiwan, South Korea and Japan's universities haven't been doing cutting-edge research

    • @joshuamaka876
      @joshuamaka876 Pƙed rokem

      Also the rare earth minerals are mined by child slaves in Africa. Are we still talking about capitalism???

  • @ticktricknik
    @ticktricknik Pƙed rokem +319

    The thing is, that from my understanding of my field, economics is not just about studying the economy but almost every other social interaction aswell.
    Economics is all about utility of the society. Therefore we just use economic Situations, since it is a easy way to put things into numbers and values, that can be calculated

    • @ollielon5926
      @ollielon5926 Pƙed rokem +9

      Well, not really. Many disciplines can be broad enough to apply to all society. But once that happens, it loses all value. Economics is simply the study of the allocation of scare resources. It studies what to produce, how to produce it, and for whom.

    • @ticktricknik
      @ticktricknik Pƙed rokem +5

      @@ollielon5926 this is the common definition. But models like hendersons spatial eqilibrium are about all utility of are presentative inhabitant. So the allocation of the ‚scarce people‘ can only be understood, if all sources of utility are looked at.
      Also macroeconomists will not agree either, since the effects in the aggregate are much different an often have to be looked at through an institutional lense

    • @coolioso808
      @coolioso808 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

      A real economy calculates nature, resources and human social sciences together. As we can see better in the presentation by Peter Joseph called "Economic Calculation in a Natural Law Resource Based Economy." See for yourself. Doesn't it make more sense than the monetary-market system of capitalists looking to profit off of everything?

    • @viktator4205
      @viktator4205 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci +2

      I think the easiest way to account for your critique is to say that, rather than a study of value, things of value and their allocation, economics can also be understood as a study of incentives. I.e. how do people make decisions, what influences their decisions and how to make systems which result in better decisions being made? What incentivizes corruption or crime for instance, or how do we get people to cooperate and make compromises? What is a good justice system or a good electoral system? All of these are very much problems that, while less mainstream in economics, can absolutely be tackled with economic tools.

    • @ticktricknik
      @ticktricknik Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci

      @@viktator4205 this is absolutly true. Well said!

  • @RealWorldMusicTheory
    @RealWorldMusicTheory Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci +1

    There could be a way to test economies in a lab.
    During my time at university I researched virtual economies like those in MMORPGs. The trick is: People behave pretty similar in a simulated world as in a real one. And we could induce economic shocks to economies with thousands of players to see what would happen.
    I proposed these kinds of simluations to the European Central Bank. And while they found it fascinating, they told me they couldn‘t use these simulations. As I remember, they said that their economic models have to be deterministic (i.e. be repeatable and produce the same result).
    I still think virtual economies could be a new and fascinating way to research new economic theories. Maybe even a way for some machine learning algorithms to experiment rapidly and learn to present us with a better economic theory. What do you think?

  • @CarlosjavierChavezRamirez
    @CarlosjavierChavezRamirez Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci +1

    That was very informative, Thank you

  • @Arterexius
    @Arterexius Pƙed rokem +377

    The historic period where merchants wealth outpaced the noblemen, was absolutely insane. It's one of my favorite examples whenever I talk with others about how an economic revolution would completely reshape our world, hopefully for the better of course. Imagine if what is now the middle class, suddenly had the means and the wills to gain vastly more wealth than the upper class. I cannot even describe in words how insane that would be. But it would be wild

    • @animalia5554
      @animalia5554 Pƙed rokem +2

      Sounds like too much responsibility if you ask me.

    • @Arterexius
      @Arterexius Pƙed rokem +64

      @@animalia5554 life, in general, is about taking responsibility. There is nothing you do, that can be done, if you don't take responsibility and do it. Add it all up and you have a far greater responsibility, than what this could ever be

    • @animalia5554
      @animalia5554 Pƙed rokem +3

      @@Arterexius Perhaps, Expectations would have been a better word choice then responsibility. As it’s a subtle but distinct difference.

    • @animalia5554
      @animalia5554 Pƙed rokem +6

      If you look at resposnibilty, as helping others, then that’s something I am more then willing to do. Expectations, on the other hand, is more like fitting a mold.

    • @Arterexius
      @Arterexius Pƙed rokem +4

      @@animalia5554 I agree on expectations. Most expectations are a result of social constructs that everyone just accept without question, even when they're doing more harm than good, which is particularly annoying, since all social constructs are just things we at some point sort of agreed as a society to do and then we leave it there. It's pretty f'ed and to make it worse, we probably all have our own expectations to things. Whether we choose to rely on those expectations is, of course, a matter of its own, but I believe we all have our own expectations to how things should be and then we can choose to follow them or simply use them as a guide, while relying on our responsibility to ourselves and others to craft a better future

  • @penguindrummaster
    @penguindrummaster Pƙed rokem +445

    I was hoping this video would have covered other proposed economic models. The one I've heard the most about is the Doughnut model, but I'm sure there are others worth discussing.
    Maybe a future video? 🙂

    • @copacelu93
      @copacelu93 Pƙed rokem +48

      Degrowth and Doughnut are really cool and I'd love a video on them as well

    • @Coecoo
      @Coecoo Pƙed rokem +113

      Yeah, kinda funny how he named the video "is there a better way" just to blabber about the current system and not go into other ways. Him saying economics "can't create wealth when there is none" while banks exists speaks volumes about inadequate knowledge on the subject.

    • @roberthiggins8234
      @roberthiggins8234 Pƙed rokem +33

      @@Coecoo im guessing you are referring to banks printing money? They are not creating wealth. Except maybe to the extent of distributing resources more efficiently. Which printing of money is independent of distributing the wealth more efficiently.

    • @daszieher
      @daszieher Pƙed rokem

      @@copacelu93 "degrowth" is BS fed to us by elites, who want to remain on top.
      However, there is an element of truth at the same time: if people learned that they don't have to always "up their game" to lead a fulfilled life, much could be done for society and the environment. That, however, does not have to entail an actual reduction of life quality. Some of the positive aspects conveyed by the proponents of "degrowth" can actually be achieved by simply behaving in an economically more conservative sense, i.e. not always having to have the newest gadget and chucking it after a short time.
      I just think it just cynical to be lectured by the rich, who travel via jet on what I should or shouldn't aspire to. If I want to and can afford it, I'll also get myself a jet to travel the world. I just don't always have to have the newest and latest model of everything. 😉

    • @shayan_idk
      @shayan_idk Pƙed rokem +25

      @@roberthiggins8234 banks today create credit out of nothing but faith. credit which if intelligently used creates more wealth than would have existed without it. "printing money = inflation" is an incredibly uninformed and contextually lacking understanding of today's economy.

  • @JP-zp5ic
    @JP-zp5ic Pƙed 2 měsĂ­ci

    Great essay. It's also important to keep in mind that in modern scientific advances, it is usually the case that new theories provide a model that explains the exceptions in a way that elaborates on the old theory rather than casting it aside.
    Rather than the transition from geocentrism to heliocentrism, I think a better analogy for what we may expect of future advances in economics is the transition from Newton Physics to relativity and quantum physics. Everything contained in Newtonian physics is still basically upheld for things that a working in what we consider normal conditions, but we now understand the exceptions and were able to develop a ton of new technology.
    I see the basic ideas of capitalism and Keynesian macroeconomics as we have it today sticking around, with new advancements providing profound insight into where those models fall short. Then too, if we move the goalposts of what we want as a society, the present system would change a lot in response to that as well.

  • @juanandresdiaz7869
    @juanandresdiaz7869 Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

    Me parece increĂ­ble que este canal tenga varios idiomas disponibles para el video 10/10 , gran contenido

  • @pointbite
    @pointbite Pƙed rokem +218

    Some feedback, if you want to use chapters, you should indicate in the video when you transition from one chapter to the next, or summarize them at the end. I don't think you ever explicitly answered the question about infinite growth in a finite world, for example. Anyhow, good video overall, I enjoyed it. Keep up the good work.

    • @IAMNOTGOODWITHCOMPUT
      @IAMNOTGOODWITHCOMPUT Pƙed rokem +14

      That was a rhetorical question, limitless growth in a limited world is never going to be possible by definition of terms

    • @mikea5745
      @mikea5745 Pƙed rokem +13

      He actually answers it almost immediately, at 4:35. It was an offhand comment, although probably an obvious answer

    • @zzzyyyxxx
      @zzzyyyxxx Pƙed rokem +5

      @@IAMNOTGOODWITHCOMPUT I never understood this sentiment. Yes, literally infinite growth is not possible, but we are so early technologically speaking, as a species. We are not even a type 2 civilization on the Kardashev scale, we haven't even harnessed all of the energy on Earth, nor do we have AGI, or fusion power etc. All of those come from a mix of gov grants as well as private investment, ie modern day capitalism.

    • @HOOLIGANSSSSss
      @HOOLIGANSSSSss Pƙed rokem +3

      @@zzzyyyxxx close to type 2 more like not even close to 1 😭

    • @perafilozof
      @perafilozof Pƙed rokem +3

      He never answers his own questions properly. I don't know does he even write his own scripts, because there is never a clean connection between the questions and the answers.

  • @jphw
    @jphw Pƙed rokem +610

    i’m impressed that in a video titled ‘is there a better alternative to capitalism’, that they do not mention a single alternative and pretend that ‘we don’t know’

    • @dagilimous
      @dagilimous Pƙed rokem +28

      Exactly

    • @angeljoachin1962
      @angeljoachin1962 Pƙed rokem +42

      Economists have been trying so hard about socialism, and it’s possible but politic system is really dangerous, our actual system can’t handle a economy like that.
      The worst part: the free market is living

    • @hiwelcometochillis2579
      @hiwelcometochillis2579 Pƙed rokem +31

      This is a leftists propaganda Channel you can tell this is not even economist narrating the video 😅
      It's silly

    • @hiwelcometochillis2579
      @hiwelcometochillis2579 Pƙed rokem +11

      @@LakeofCrystalclan i know you readed that post saying to ask people for sources 😅
      And that's how brainwashed whole generation it is
      But anyway the channel doesn't show the real name and have to put disclaimers on videos about not being financial advisor
      And also in general if you do s class of any topic you make it more complete about 2 sides
      Also if you want to be more complete you have to add the future point of view of the topic
      So that's how you can identify political videos that are sad because they're missinformation

    • @hiwelcometochillis2579
      @hiwelcometochillis2579 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@LakeofCrystalclan also if you want to know about economy state ik 2023 we are going to a 4th stage in capitalist
      But most politics economy videos like this created the idea of "late stage capitalism" just to create the illusion of "something" that could be many things but they mainly use it for get votes of people that are mad about their money
      But is sad they don't talk about china owning middle Africa with super strong contracts that they basically own ports airports high ways and industries of plastic and metals , do they're exporting the sweatshops china standards to Africa
      And that's the new phases of capitalism expanding to third world countries and avoiding contamination lawsuits because they would mask pollution levels in countries that had lower levels , and also they mask the bad work conditions like that, because African sweatshops owned by china make look good the sweatshops of china that make your sneakers and parts of phones

  • @danielschoch9604
    @danielschoch9604 Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci +1

    Another splendid episode of EE. Yes, economists should not try to forecast the future, but assess the present, as there are no dynamic laws as in physics. But you CAN create and test economic systems in the lab. It has been done since the 1960s and Vernon Smith and Daniel Kahneman, among others, deservingly got their Nobel Prize. Experiments encompass Markets, Self-Governments, Macroeconomic Policies, and many others.

  • @LarsvanZon
    @LarsvanZon Pƙed rokem +52

    What I totally missed was the 'why'. If we want to improve the existing system or come up with something better, what is it we want to achieve. And at what time. For example, the problem of 'negative' impacts become more easy to incorporate if you look at long term results. Another example, if we have a system that increases the differences in allocation of resources between population groups, we create an instability that in the past always resulted in a violent correction that destroyed a lot of resources. So limitation of that allocation difference would be a long term goal, but short term counter productive.
    Another item is sub-optimization. A company wants to make higher profits, but for a society overall that does not need to be the best case.
    And the elephant in the room is of course that we take a 'materialistic' view. Is a long and healthy live a price we want to pay for having more 'resources'? Or is 'more' live better then 'good' live?
    Different systems will bring different results. The average European is happy to exchange some 'resources' for more certainty in 'long term' security, and that in the most optimal way. In the US that is seen as 'socialism' and 'counterproductive'. As long as we cannot agree on a desired outcome, how are we going to improve?

    • @NeovanGoth
      @NeovanGoth Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci +8

      Thing is that a long and healthy life also depends on the economy. Decent food, healthy living conditions, or medical treatments don't come out of nowhere, but have to be obtained. Yes, work to get more resources also harms, but over all it's a net positive, at least in industrialized countries, where a significant amount of the wealth generated literally goes into extending people's lives. And people not only life longer, they also age slower. Nowadays 60 isn't "old" anymore and even 80somethings get cancer treatment and new hips. That's a result of economic growth, which allows even poor people to live a significantly more comfortable life in most respects than even a king two hundred years ago. Even being a leftist, I can't blame capitalism for being tremendously good at providing goods and services. I blame society for not being willing to control and use capitalism in a way that yields the best outcome for the vast majority of people. The highest tax rate for rich people the US had was 94% (!) and it didn't lead to economic collapse, but a golden age and the most prosperous country in the history of mankind. It's not capitalism that's bad, it's allowing the capitalists to get all the fruits.

    • @bgiv2010
      @bgiv2010 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci +1

      ​@@NeovanGothwhat do you think capitalists think capitalism means?

    • @tellmemoreplease9231
      @tellmemoreplease9231 Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

      @@NeovanGoth Well said....

    • @NeovanGoth
      @NeovanGoth Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci +3

      @@GypsyHaze Again: It's the society that allows that. Why is food in Europe more healthy than in the US? It's the same capitalism, even with the same multinational companies. The difference lies in the regulations the EU imposes on the capitalists, compared to the "do whatever you want (as long as you don't sell Kinder Surprise)" in the US.

    • @lisaphares2286
      @lisaphares2286 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci

      @@GypsyHazeby taxing the billionaires and multimillionaires at 75-94% including dividends and other compensation, we can improve life for all Americans and provide almost free healthcare, public transportation, and support disabled and retired people. We could also provide housing to all so there would be no homeless people.

  • @koakie1
    @koakie1 Pƙed rokem +109

    "...national economies aren't going to change how they operate, just to test a theory.." Mao and his brilliant plan for the great leap forward: "hold my pijiu"

    • @VenomSnake420
      @VenomSnake420 Pƙed rokem +2

      Mao didn’t kill enough birds and that’s why communism failed in china

    • @christianfaux736
      @christianfaux736 Pƙed rokem +25

      And it worked out great....

    • @specialaccount7631
      @specialaccount7631 Pƙed rokem +21

      "so uh basically we gonna have our farmer society build their own makeshift factories. yeah."

    • @InsTance888
      @InsTance888 Pƙed rokem +32

      Mao: steel = economy
      Farmer peasants: guess we'll eat air for dinner

    • @IndependenceCityMotoring
      @IndependenceCityMotoring Pƙed rokem +21

      Except it's even worse because he didn't test a theory...the theory already failed in the Soviet Union by that point!

  • @Cr4y7-AegisInquisitor
    @Cr4y7-AegisInquisitor Pƙed rokem +61

    This will be so ironic when the next once-in-a-century financial crisis hits

    • @chillaxter13
      @chillaxter13 Pƙed rokem +10

      "Once in a century" seems to be becoming "Once in a decade" slowly... We're not quite that bad yet, but we certainly seem to be working hard on it... That's the drawback of globalism that the earlier theme of mercantilism didn't suffer from. The highs are better for everyone, but the lows hit more people for much more.

    • @Cr4y7-AegisInquisitor
      @Cr4y7-AegisInquisitor Pƙed rokem +6

      @@chillaxter13 I think it's the drawback of central banking - crises delayed but exacerbated

    • @vorynrosethorn903
      @vorynrosethorn903 Pƙed rokem +3

      It already is hitting.

    • @JoshuaC923
      @JoshuaC923 Pƙed rokem +3

      Aka 2020😂

    • @badluck5647
      @badluck5647 Pƙed rokem +3

      The speculation bubble will pop one after another

  • @smokythebearreal1181
    @smokythebearreal1181 Pƙed rokem +1

    I think you forgot about the people who got the short end of the the stick

  • @karamvirgill8218
    @karamvirgill8218 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

    i love ur content, plz don't stop making these types of videos

  • @shariqhasan6220
    @shariqhasan6220 Pƙed rokem +197

    I look at it in this way, no matter how perfect a system is, it would still at the end of the day would be managed and enforced by humans and humans have flaws. So ultimately the performance of any system is determined by the type of people that run it.

    • @jwkprod9540
      @jwkprod9540 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci

      This is the answer. Humans are bound for self destruction if we don’t realize that we have to raise better children and be better people.

    • @akispag1519
      @akispag1519 Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci +17

      ok, sure . However, having this in mind we can "make" for our selfs a system where these human flaws affect less (in comparison) so it is worth it to try find the "best" even though we know it will not be perfect :)

    • @little_lord_tam
      @little_lord_tam Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci

      The best System is able to take flaws into Account. Hence why Power is divided in our nations. And hence why communism simply cannot work.

    • @daniloribeiro5372
      @daniloribeiro5372 Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci +5

      Imagine If they Apply this logic to airplane safety well If It fall It Falls humans have flaws😂😂😂

    • @Bitcoinnaut_
      @Bitcoinnaut_ Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci +2

      “those who think that it is not the system which we need to fear, but the danger that it might be run by bad men are naive utopians who will forever be disappointed by the socialist outcome.” - Hayek

  • @tomakavonius5496
    @tomakavonius5496 Pƙed 26 dny +1

    After the 2007 crash queen of England asked: "Why did nobody notice it?" and the answer was basically "it was an outside shock". But outside of what? The economy or the model that is economic theory? If your model doesn't include private debt or money, its probably not a very good model. To change the economic system, you need to understand it first. MMT at least has private debt and money in its model.
    Also, at 10:50 mark "...economies continue to grow over time by taking advantage of both the natural booms and busts that comes with an economy runoff debt." So, why do we have an economy with runoff debt?

  • @ppacal1098
    @ppacal1098 Pƙed rokem +2

    And WHO benefits/profits from the goods being produced ... the owners or laborers ? Amazing this is omitted from your thesis.

  • @ignacioalmada7140
    @ignacioalmada7140 Pƙed rokem +165

    I think it might be interesting if you addressed the assumption you stated about people having "infinite desires". As someone studying psychology, I don't think that's necessarily the case.

    • @justanotherdm4200
      @justanotherdm4200 Pƙed rokem +14

      Agreed.
      In the sense of evolutionary desires where needs and wants change in accordance to the person and their perspective you can say that people collectively have infinite desire. This however is a distinction that I didn't see him make in the video and is a huge flaw in translating theoretical economic principals into functional socioeconomics amongst the laymen and amongst so-called experts too.

    • @kentucky4480
      @kentucky4480 Pƙed rokem +29

      All it takes is for a single person to have infinite disires for the total amount of desires to be infinite, even if the average person might not.

    • @Sundara229
      @Sundara229 Pƙed rokem +32

      He is saying that the human race, not necessary the individual, has infinite desires.
      The underlying mechanism is called hedonic adaptation, which, over time and generations, accumulates to ever greater expectations for what we would accept as a minimum standard of living aka "infinite desires".

    • @huli566
      @huli566 Pƙed rokem

      It is demonstrably false lol economists are out of touch especially capitalist economists.

    • @glos7569
      @glos7569 Pƙed rokem +24

      Most of our desires today are the result of modern marketing, they are not an inevitable aspect of human nature just something we have engineered.

  • @FunSam
    @FunSam Pƙed rokem +362

    "...I'd be collecting my Nobel prize right about now." Based on the lag time from past few Nobel prize winners in economics, I think it's more accurate to say you'd be collecting your Nobel prize in 20-30 years 😁

    • @rodwallace6237
      @rodwallace6237 Pƙed rokem +6

      Perhaps that much time is needed to see if the theory is valid.
      Or the modern crop of economists tend to fall into political camps.

    • @julianbruns7459
      @julianbruns7459 Pƙed rokem

      even Bernanke got one.. cant be that hard (jk)

  • @somebodynamedJ.
    @somebodynamedJ. Pƙed rokem +2

    Hello there, a mixed used economy system works very well. Look at Germany, I would say that we are thriving.

  • @dennisw64
    @dennisw64 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci +1

    One thing not really mentioned in this video is major differences between a barter economy vs a debt economy...

  • @Luke-zk3rf
    @Luke-zk3rf Pƙed rokem +50

    This is a great idea for a series of videos about alternatives, I'd definitely be interested in that 😊

  • @iamtree4764
    @iamtree4764 Pƙed rokem +150

    The central economic problem seems somewhat flawed. There are some people that do have ultimateited desires but not all people do. There are some people that do not always need more. I know it is a generalization but I think it kind of reinforces it. People are as much a product of the systems they live in as the shapers of it.

    • @KevinJohnson-cv2no
      @KevinJohnson-cv2no Pƙed rokem

      You literally do always need more. You cannot stagnate with your intake of resources or you die off. Go without a meal for a bit, see what happens. Factual reality does not support your moral posturing.

    • @wertywerrtyson5529
      @wertywerrtyson5529 Pƙed rokem +13

      The one who knows when enough is enough will always have enough. Mei Ling from Metal Gear Solid quoting some Chinese philosopher. There certainly are monks and other people who desire little to no things. Although they typically depend on help from other people.

    • @user-gz8zo5vo9l
      @user-gz8zo5vo9l Pƙed rokem +26

      As I understood it, this wasn't speaking of a need for more, but endless need. As in, each day we wake up and all over again need Food to eat, Water to drink, power to make our devices work, things to replace our things that are broken. Even if we didn't change anything, being alive is an endless need to sustain that life (food/water).

    • @skyguytomas9615
      @skyguytomas9615 Pƙed rokem +7

      @@user-gz8zo5vo9l Unending for the living maybe, but not endless, which many a capitalist are naive to.

    • @ryanconners3048
      @ryanconners3048 Pƙed rokem

      Trueeeeee

  • @Sillysillylittleman
    @Sillysillylittleman Pƙed rokem +5

    Perpetual growth monetary system on a finite planet.........what can go wrong 🙄

    • @mb90821
      @mb90821 Pƙed 6 dny +1

      Technology makes the Earth 🌍 behaves like fractals. So you should consider resources as infinite until we reach the maximum of efficiency in resources extraction/recycling. Thereafter think of asteroid mining and humanity's future potential expansion. There is virtually no limits when technology grows exponentially.

  • @dropyourself
    @dropyourself Pƙed rokem +21

    The reason they don't try different economic theories is because it's not profitable to do so, we have optimized profit seeking so well that there is no need to try a new system, if anything we might have to go back to older practices that seek profits better but are more easily seen by the people in the country profiting as immoral (i.e. child labor or slavery in the imperial core not just in the victimized countries)

    • @gaz_bat2389
      @gaz_bat2389 Pƙed rokem

      Exactly everything is about making money off your labour, we are entirely post scarcity, except fuel(the only reason the us even involves itself in war unless they can sell people guns), which we should be working on getting rid of in exchange for renewable energy, we actually waste more food than we consume in the USA.

  • @Yubel1100
    @Yubel1100 Pƙed rokem +214

    I had a very interesting discussion with my economics professor (who is a free market economist) on the the potential effects of strong AI on the economy. The short version is he agreed with me that if strong AI reacted its potential to remove scarcity for human necessaties then capitialism would fail as it would lead to a hyper concentration in a small number of people as it would be unnecessary for the vast majority of people to work.

    • @ertymexx
      @ertymexx Pƙed rokem +51

      "Unnecessary" is not the same as "not wanting to" though. People want things to do, like to make a dent in the world around them. Now some jobs certainly would be harder to get people to do, like cleaning, mining and other hard, dangerous jobs, but there would hardly be a lack of people working with healthcare or education; indeed people already do those jobs even though they could make a lot more doing something else. People had all kinds of jobs under socialist (or state-capitalist) regimes even when all jobs earned about the same rate of pay.

    • @larry6659
      @larry6659 Pƙed rokem +3

      Very interesting. Could you expand on that?

    • @iumbo1234
      @iumbo1234 Pƙed rokem +14

      At the end it is clear that a planned economy is the best system that we could have, but only if it is applied with enough cybernetic means.

    • @christopheraaron2412
      @christopheraaron2412 Pƙed rokem +1

      More recent evidence seems to indicate that a market system with an increasingly stronger social support system will be what is needed, or that as a private sector no longer needs hardly any labor at all the public sector can put everybody to work rebuilding the infrastructure of this country and then after that moon bases Mars bases O'Neill cylinders and generational sub light starships to other star systems

    • @jacobpadilla9256
      @jacobpadilla9256 Pƙed rokem +18

      @@ertymexx ya mightve missed the point, in the society the commenter is talking about, when he says work is 'unnecessary' he means those jobs you mentioned wont exist in a scarcity-less world. People do like to do things but they would have to work for free or not work, and the few jobs in society in left are held by a couple of people, who in turn accumulate all of societies wealth. This is why people say scarcity-less capitalism is so dystopic. so uh, yeah, hes not arguing against socialism? I think thats what you thought was happening but the concept of no scarcity capitalism even being accepted as a dystopia helps to serve socialist points and movements anyway.
      edit: I left out a ton, look more into it though, it's an interesting brand of dystopia

  • @williambrasky3891
    @williambrasky3891 Pƙed rokem +10

    Just a heads up, ASML makes (one of) the machines used by the fabs like TMSC. ASML’s machines are the most complex of those used to manufacture semiconductors, but they are just one among many advanced machines necessary. And the silicon wafers are just silicon (mostly). There is no mirror substrate. Zeiss might grow the silicon crystals that are sliced into wafers, but they are more of and optics company. They work in conjunction w/ ASML and focus on the optics, mirrors, and process. I’m getting into the weeds a bit, but the main takeaway is companies like TMSC are fabs. Companies like ASML and Zeiss make the machines used by fabs like TMSC, Samsung, and Intel.

    • @WanderingExistence
      @WanderingExistence Pƙed rokem

      Zeiss makes the 1 silicon atom thick mirrors for ASMLs EUV machines. I don't believe they make wafer ingots for chips.

    • @rudysal1429
      @rudysal1429 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

      Yea, when he started comparing economics to hard science and taking about the process of chip fabrication, I was having a real hard time taking anything else seriously

  • @compassroses
    @compassroses Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci

    Fortunately for economic theorists, I-know-best politicians DO experiment with their nations' economic futures. Whatever can go wrong, will go wrong, and clever economists will decipher the lessons learnt.

  • @aldahirrodriguezsotelo3244
    @aldahirrodriguezsotelo3244 Pƙed 4 měsĂ­ci +1

    "Let's question our economic system without looking at different economic systems"
    No wounder we're left with an "idk but we have different versions of the same thing"

  • @LeRoiJojo
    @LeRoiJojo Pƙed rokem +9

    I mean, economists might not be able to predict the future, but isn't a big chunk of the field about managing future risk? How can you even talk about growth without trying to predict the future?

    • @joansparky4439
      @joansparky4439 Pƙed rokem +1

      what grows?

    • @SpiceAndFox
      @SpiceAndFox Pƙed rokem

      Yeah he is extremely wrong on this, if economics didn't predict anything it would be useless. Like weather forecasts there are too many variables involved to do accurate predictions on a bigger scope, but that doesn't mean it isn't the goal to make the predictions as good as possible.
      (Note that I think this channel has pretty good and educational content, he is just wrong on this one)

    • @Mike-fx4nu
      @Mike-fx4nu Pƙed rokem +1

      @@joansparky4439 Human arrogance.

    • @Mike-fx4nu
      @Mike-fx4nu Pƙed rokem

      @@SpiceAndFox Ironically, economics is useless.

    • @joansparky4439
      @joansparky4439 Pƙed rokem +1

      @@Mike-fx4nu no, that's always been infinite.

  • @SumTotalSquare
    @SumTotalSquare Pƙed rokem +99

    I love these more philosophical/open-ended video topics. It's good to recognize when we don't have all the answers.

    • @liasonlee1248
      @liasonlee1248 Pƙed rokem +8

      Not really when what he is doing is to muddy the waters. The solutions are out there and yet he mentioned none of that.
      Watching this video is just going to waste every viewers' time.

    • @giogio51592
      @giogio51592 Pƙed rokem +1

      but we do have the answers, karl marx already wrote the theory decades ago, we just can't put it into practice

    • @liasonlee1248
      @liasonlee1248 Pƙed rokem +6

      @@giogio51592 Well, not that we can't, someone don't allow us do it.

    • @ljuc
      @ljuc Pƙed rokem

      @@liasonlee1248
      because it didn't work.
      inb4 "It's wasn't real communism"

    • @liasonlee1248
      @liasonlee1248 Pƙed rokem

      @@ljuc didn't work, or someone spent trillions of dollars to stop it?

  • @misominmiso
    @misominmiso Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

    love this video, very interesting perspective

  • @thomasjamison2050
    @thomasjamison2050 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +2

    The trouble with economics is that whenever someone manages to establish a widely recognized theory, everyone and his brother in law starts to go about ways to manipulate outside the rules to make a profit. Thereafter they have to come up with a some other theory.

  • @j03man44
    @j03man44 Pƙed rokem +73

    To price negative externalities you need to end limited liability for corporations. Companies just like individuals must own the negative and the positive effects of their actions. To limit downside risk to investors liability insurance would need to be purchased. Insurance companies then would price in the risk of the externalities generated by a company and audit them regularly for negative externalities.

    • @laststand6420
      @laststand6420 Pƙed rokem +11

      Interesting solution, however it might just have the side effect of companies not going into business. People often give more weight to risks in their calculations than they do to equal rewards.

    • @JaviEngineer
      @JaviEngineer Pƙed rokem +3

      How would you incentivize pure hearted Auditors?
      What a clown...

    • @dinglesworld
      @dinglesworld Pƙed rokem +7

      @@JaviEngineer Such a petty insult. I’m sure he’s heard worse from better people.

    • @JaviEngineer
      @JaviEngineer Pƙed rokem +4

      @@dinglesworld I like insulting, it helps emotional people weasel their way out to ignore any pertinent questions validity.
      I mean "regularly" audited companies would mean a lot of people "looking out" for us, probably incorruptible or non-gameable somehow.

    • @j03man44
      @j03man44 Pƙed rokem +10

      @@JaviEngineer the auditors' insurance company would be on the hook to pay for the downside risk if the company created so many negative externalities that the company they insured went bankrupt.

  • @BilltheBrewer
    @BilltheBrewer Pƙed rokem +162

    I would love to see some indy games along the lines of civilization or sim city that explore different economic models. Most games have gold as a base resource, baking capitalism into the game from the start. Maybe simulations will enable us to make progress, and get used to thinking about what options we have post-capitalism.

    • @akay_2
      @akay_2 Pƙed rokem +17

      There's a a bunch of Country Simulator Games like Democracy 4 and Victoria 3 where you can experiment with different economic and political systems already

    • @BilltheBrewer
      @BilltheBrewer Pƙed rokem +7

      @@akay_2 They aren't radical enough.

    • @DepressedHandsomeSpaceCop
      @DepressedHandsomeSpaceCop Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +21

      Gold and silver were used as medium of exchange before the advent of capitalism. And the production model used in the Civ games is really state planning: you, the player, decide what is produced and how to reinvest surplus.

    • @GBA811
      @GBA811 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +1

      Close i can think, is workers and resources, but for socialism

    • @tonuka6257
      @tonuka6257 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +4

      What does Gold have do to with capitalism?

  • @millax-ev6yz
    @millax-ev6yz Pƙed rokem

    I may have missed it, but where was the question in the title actually addressed?

  • @Jasper118
    @Jasper118 Pƙed 7 měsĂ­ci

    Interesting marketing strategy today is advertising the negative like you would the positive. Ads used to be “you need this”. Now we are seeing a lot of “you don’t want this”, labels advertising the companies carbon footprint or farming techniques is a way to make the negatives a demand in itself.

  • @arspsychologia4401
    @arspsychologia4401 Pƙed rokem +5

    Short answer (not a summary of the video): yes, but we have been conditioned into a false dichotomy so we do not consider it; much of the modern culture must change before it can be possible.

  • @hecticenergy1233
    @hecticenergy1233 Pƙed rokem +4

    Fantastic analogies! Concise descriptions then tying in to a point. Love it!

  • @jayreading1944
    @jayreading1944 Pƙed 5 měsĂ­ci

    The answer is in the video and its not surprising the author said economists are terrible at it. Assigning a positive value to what economists see as a negative one is the answer.
    We're trying it with Carbon but powerful vested interests thwart the idea before it people can see it would work.
    Sometimes im amazed at how simplistic economists are, a scientific field never got anywhere without thinking outside the box.

  • @Nagria2112
    @Nagria2112 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    Small correction: a Fab is Not a Lithographie machine. A Fab is a factory working With those machines.

  • @shuikuan
    @shuikuan Pƙed rokem +55

    Nice video 👍
    But I would def have liked to see some evidence for the claim “better economic theories lead to higher standards of living”.
    In other words, how are we sure we get the cause and effect the right way around?
    I could totally see technological advancements leading to transformed economies and then economists studying and explaining this post hoc.
    This would certainly be much more in line with how science mostly works.
    As a physicist myself I’m probably biased and and am open to learn, so I’m looking for a genuine response ❀

    • @badluck5647
      @badluck5647 Pƙed rokem +3

      Just look at Turkey to see how ignorance of the economic principles of interest rates and inflation can have a negative impact on people's lives.

    • @shuikuan
      @shuikuan Pƙed rokem +5

      This is true but does not address the question of whether A) economists first discover better systems which then get adopted or B) better technologies enable / unlock better economic systems which then get explained post hoc by economists

    • @musicandoutdoors
      @musicandoutdoors Pƙed rokem +3

      @@shuikuan USSR vs United States. Both plenty of natural resources and knowledge, but one system was more efficient than the other. Since they existed at the same time, we can say the technology was the same and held constant

    • @Mike-fx4nu
      @Mike-fx4nu Pƙed rokem

      It's like saying better physics theories lead to better star formation. Nonsense.
      People are animals and they consume like animals until they destroy their ecosystem enough to cause their own collective apocalypse. Humans have the special ability to destroy ecosystems faster due to technology. Economics is a haughty, arrogant sector of a haughty, arrogant series of "disciplines" which aim to do nothing more than put navel-gazers into seats of power.
      Economics is an attempt by wankers to avoid the basic facts that natural resources are finite and not every person is going to get fed tomorrow.

    • @NONO-hz4vo
      @NONO-hz4vo Pƙed rokem +9

      @@musicandoutdoors Was the US policy directed by economists and their theories or was the policy developed by politicians and afterwards economists explained the effects it had?
      I think his question is what is the driving force? Do economist and their theories actually create or influence economies?

  • @cantido56
    @cantido56 Pƙed rokem +24

    That "just finished my morning coffee and Economics Explained called me mate" feeling

  • @eliesaad7234
    @eliesaad7234 Pƙed rokem +10

    Nicely explained and an excellent way of comparing economics to the hard sciences.

  • @Paul-hn8en
    @Paul-hn8en Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    This is really sweet and optimistic, thanks for the video

  • @vrclckd-zz3pv
    @vrclckd-zz3pv Pƙed rokem +6

    I propose a new economic model where you all give me your goods and services. In exchange for your goods and services you get nothing, which is beneficial to you because you don't have to worry about someone breaking in to your house to steal your stuff. Because you have no stuff nor a house. This will greatly decrease your stress. Additionally it removes money from the economy which cuts out market inefficiencies such as banks. This is of course very hard for me as I have to worry about you all stealing my stuff but that's a burden I am willing to carry for the good of society.

  • @rsv-code7004
    @rsv-code7004 Pƙed rokem +12

    I bet there is a way to model and test new economic systems using trained neural networks. Perhaps we don't have enough computing power currently to make the models realistic on a large scale though.

    • @sten260
      @sten260 Pƙed rokem

      no it's not possible, economy is way too complex and it's a lot to do with human behavor that you can't really "model"

  • @lucypaffard7431
    @lucypaffard7431 Pƙed 28 dny

    thanks so much for youre video :D you say you cant test economics in a lab, but can you run computer simulations? are people doing this already? And I'd love to see a video on what you think of the 'Another Now' Yanis Varoufakis has drawn up!

  • @awesomecosmopolite1521
    @awesomecosmopolite1521 Pƙed rokem +1

    Economics is something that people have to face. If the whole world had only, say 1000 people, the world/Earth should be able to sustain them without them having an economy or economies and without them knowing economics. But good to have this huge number of people on this Earth and so we have to figure out some good economics to make this sisterly/brotherly planet a good scene.

  • @kablefransen6849
    @kablefransen6849 Pƙed rokem +19

    Thank you.
    Two points:
    1. I'd love to hear your thoughts on the donut model
    2. Please do video covering the recent developments in AI

  • @Shultz4334
    @Shultz4334 Pƙed rokem +1059

    Great content in your channel, I’m 53 and my wife and I reached $1M net worth in 2017, five years later it’s $2.4M. Our yearly salary is a little over $100K. We drive older cars, cook at home, eat leftovers, and have 2 in college. We saved for college and our boys help by working. They will graduate debt free. Without a capitalist economy we wouldn't have achieved any of this.

    • @Curbalnk
      @Curbalnk Pƙed rokem +6

      Right there with you. I'm retiring early, no debt. Kids are taken care of. Building my dream home on 11 acres, looking over the river valley. there are loads of ways to make a killing right now, but such high-volume near impeccable tradess can only be carried out by real-time experts.

    • @colleen.odegaard
      @colleen.odegaard Pƙed rokem

      @@Curbalnk That right, I started investing sometime in 2018 and by late 2021, I pulled out a profit of over $750,000 with no prior investing knowledge or skill, I was basically just following the guidelines set by my financial advisor, so you don't necessarily need to be a perfect investor or do the hard works, just have a professional who guides & mentors you.

    • @TeresaBrickle
      @TeresaBrickle Pƙed rokem

      @@colleen.odegaard Please can you leave the info of your investment advisor here? I’m in dire need for one.

    • @colleen.odegaard
      @colleen.odegaard Pƙed rokem +3

      @@TeresaBrickle My advisor is "Heather Ann Christensen" You can easily look her up, she has years of financial market experience.

    • @TeresaBrickle
      @TeresaBrickle Pƙed rokem

      Thank you for this referral! i just looked her up and sent a message hoping she gets back to me.

  • @timfronimos459
    @timfronimos459 Pƙed 6 měsĂ­ci

    Could you make a video on the little know work of Heinrich Pesch, Nationalekonomie

  • @scipioafricanus2
    @scipioafricanus2 Pƙed 9 měsĂ­ci

    OK, first major error: CO2 is not a pollutant in any way whatsoever. It is the exact opposite: the molecule that underpins all life on earth. It is an atmospheric fertilizer for plants and cannot cause warming greater than 4 degrees centigrade due to the saturation effect.

  • @emstonestreet
    @emstonestreet Pƙed rokem +157

    As the most recent crisis demonstrates, one of the fundamental flaws in the current system is the NEED to protect the value of fiat currency by making billions of people suffer merely to protect said currency. There's an absurd acceptance of the fact that the "sweet spot" is when people are suffering enough (to keep wages low, to keep prices low, etc), but not too much. It feels a bit like listening to a torturer explain how the man on the rack must be tortured enough, but not too much, lest he die, which would create bad ripple effects in the economy.

    • @nunyabusiness3786
      @nunyabusiness3786 Pƙed rokem +11

      Couldn't have said it better myself

    • @BuilditUK
      @BuilditUK Pƙed rokem +9

      I think your use of the word "suffer" is deliberately misleading. And what do you mean by low wages? In Europe the minimum wage is about the 10e mark on average. I wouldn't call that suffering. If you are talking about third world countries well their wages are low because their currencies are worthless due to poor governance and business models. Looking after your currency is a good way to ensure your people don't suffer terrible unemployment

    • @laurent3415
      @laurent3415 Pƙed rokem +28

      @@BuilditUK Just to use the United States as an example: our economy would never allow 100% employment of all able-to-work citizens. Unemployment is required in order to keep wages low enough to maintain ever-increasing profits with finite resources. Someone always has to "suffer" which means some of the people who are willing and able to work have to temporarily lose their access to capital at some point in order for the elite to profit.

    • @AdamVassGal
      @AdamVassGal Pƙed rokem +6

      Fiat currency is great for the wealthiest citizens of a country. It allows them to take newly printed currency and spend it before all of the country’s currency is devalued by the printing that took place.

    • @regarded9702
      @regarded9702 Pƙed rokem

      well said

  • @ricardokowalski1579
    @ricardokowalski1579 Pƙed rokem +4

    4:17 "things of value"
    This is key. Value is a deeply personal, subjective and private matter. Zero scope for government intervention.

    • @joansparky4439
      @joansparky4439 Pƙed rokem +5

      On a free market all those individual values trend towards the real cost of production.
      Naturally unfree markets are much more profitable for the select few suppliers who are allowed to provide products and thus the value can never reach cost.
      It's also why free markets trend towards ZERO profit for all parties involved.. only unfree markets can provide eternal profits.

    • @ricardokowalski1579
      @ricardokowalski1579 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@joansparky4439 who creates "unfree markets"? Who gives or takes permits to allow or prohibit?

    • @WanderingExistence
      @WanderingExistence Pƙed rokem +1

      @@ricardokowalski1579 capitalist love unfree markets... That's one of the contradictions of capitalism. A system that's supposed to be innovative and dynamic will grind to a halt in the pursuit of profit because profit from the status quo can be a conflicting interest to innovation. Therefore capitalists will often bribe politicians in order to keep the status quo.
      Side note: Your free market does a terrible job of incorporating negative value

    • @ricardokowalski1579
      @ricardokowalski1579 Pƙed rokem

      @@WanderingExistence who creates "unfree markets"?

    • @WanderingExistence
      @WanderingExistence Pƙed rokem

      @@ricardokowalski1579 lol, capitalists, silly.

  • @LaZyGoKu2
    @LaZyGoKu2 Pƙed rokem

    If you take good qualities from both ideals can help it’s all about not understating money

  • @tales9476
    @tales9476 Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

    A note on the sponsor segment... the most surpising takeaway is that there is someone using a mac in antartica. Like, science and engineering primarily use windows and Linux.

  • @CensoredVA
    @CensoredVA Pƙed rokem +15

    I like the concept of logistic growth, I've heard it talked about a bit lately. It doesn't even seem incompatible with capitalism, it's a reshuffling of priorities based on finite resources. It almost seems inevitable.

    • @georgia2727
      @georgia2727 Pƙed rokem +2

      The universe has 10000000 stars and you think it is finite. There is nothing more infinite than the galaxy

    • @metapfhor
      @metapfhor Pƙed rokem +1

      @@georgia2727 that's nice, we havent even managed to exploit resources on the moon though...

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 Pƙed rokem

      @@georgia2727 irrelevant to the logistics industry or the economy as a whole. With the time it takes to travel those distances anything past the asteroid belt is largely irrelevant to us even once things like extra terrestrial mining becomes viable.

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 Pƙed rokem

      Living near Seattle it's amazing to see what companies like Amazon have done. The difference between what logistics were like for shipping companies 30 years ago vs 20 years ago was night and day, then it changed a ton from 20 years ago to 10 years ago, and again in the last 10 years. Now we've got packages/deliveries that are monitored hour to hour, drivers have live dash cams and 24/7 tracking, everything feeds back to HQ, and we've got robots and machines moving things around in some large facilities. They're already starting to automate warehouses more and more so soon they'll resemble a giant vending machine with machines moving packages around automatically and we're already seeing some automated trucks moving stuff around facilities and ports.

    • @SuperCrow02
      @SuperCrow02 Pƙed rokem

      Resources are limitless. Maybe go outside during night time and look up every now and then.

  • @wallacemeans7751
    @wallacemeans7751 Pƙed rokem +7

    Great content. Always leaves me wanting to know more about economics.

  • @druharper
    @druharper Pƙed měsĂ­cem +1

    “The first lesson of economics is scarcity: There is never enough of anything to satisfy all those who want it. The first lesson of politics is to disregard the first lesson of economics.”
    Keynes’ economics gives politicians an excuse to try to ‘direct’ the economy. They predictably fail every time.
    "The curious task of economics is to demonstrate to men how little they really know about what they imagine they can design."
    ~ Hayek

  • @reshpeck
    @reshpeck Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci +1

    13:05 "National economies aren't going to change the way they operate just to test a theory"
    Venezuela: "Hold my beer"

  • @judelarkin2883
    @judelarkin2883 Pƙed rokem +16

    The story of how chips are made is fascinating and a real marvel. I think a lot of our technology is over stated, simpler principles than they would have us believe but making chips is really something.

    • @rafaelcomfsemph
      @rafaelcomfsemph Pƙed rokem +2

      our technologic model is just chips, the rest is just stuff to interconect chips, studying eletronics is interesting because the text books for analogic eletronics (pre-chips) are gigantic, with a lot of physical theory, experiments, history, describing natural effects, tunneling an natural effect through a material producing another desired natural effect
      and digital eletronics (post-chips) are smaller, and simpler, talking about just logical operations and arithimatic models

  • @homewall744
    @homewall744 Pƙed rokem +11

    If government actually cared, it would tax all extraction and negative externalities instead of taxing sales and incomes. This would get us less of what we don't want and more of what we do want.

    • @christianlewis7055
      @christianlewis7055 Pƙed rokem

      Wouldn't that just cause the price of everything that's made from those raw materials to be more expensive?

    • @clarencechurch4006
      @clarencechurch4006 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@christianlewis7055 it also means they wouldn't be taxed for using what's already in the system (ex recycling) though im unsure if farming would count as extraction in this case (course it would also probably lower the amount of money being given to the government which would also be undesirable)

    • @reheyesd8666
      @reheyesd8666 Pƙed rokem +1

      They tax incomes because of the debt they have to pay central banks and taxes the people is the easiest way Vs a big corp with lawyers

    • @ChasmChaos
      @ChasmChaos Pƙed rokem +3

      @@christianlewis7055 Yes, that's the incentive for change isn't it? If driving a mile was 10x the cost it is, people would quickly switch to public transit and also stop building houses 50km from the city centre.
      The current government policies are just a way for people to subsidize their life by moving the actual costs to poorer nations, primarily through climate change and keeping the currency propped up.

  • @markrittman2437
    @markrittman2437 Pƙed 14 dny

    One of the fundamental problems in Economics is the failure to distinguish between needs and desires. This often results in a society where many individuals do not have their basic needs met.

  • @evanb.8791
    @evanb.8791 Pƙed rokem +1

    at 10:01 use a pacafic map

  • @andrewpitts7703
    @andrewpitts7703 Pƙed rokem +3

    @Economics Explained I would love to hear your thoughts about Robin Hahnel’s Participatory Economy!

  • @DeusExRequiem
    @DeusExRequiem Pƙed rokem +26

    I think any economic system that's considered complete would need to survive something catastrophic, such as a mining company bringing back a thousand times our global economy in refined asteroid metals from space. A complete economic system would be boosted by such a delivery and result in more productive and computational power as a result, a modern global economy would face job-ending crashes and a loss of productivity across the globe for a time.

    • @jasonhaven7170
      @jasonhaven7170 Pƙed rokem

      If that happens, we all go communist. There'd be no scarcity

    • @es330td
      @es330td Pƙed rokem

      I always find these propositions interesting. The price of platinum group metals is a function of supply and demand. I knew a 100 year old antiques dealer who could remember when aluminum and platinum opera glasses had the same cost as the process for processing aluminum cheaply had not been created yet. Once it had, aluminum plummeted. Platinum would face the same pricing pressure: if the supply were to double overnight, the price would crash. No amount of anything exists of greater value than the global economy because the per unit value would reflect the supply available.

    • @jamesm4970
      @jamesm4970 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@es330td you only need to look at oil to see the problem with your assumption. The fact that a resource can be supplied does not mean those with control over it will supply it. The per unit value is artificially controllable, and is regularly controlled; it's only drastic changes in demand that can actually 'correct' commodities.

    • @jasonhaven7170
      @jasonhaven7170 Pƙed rokem +2

      @@dudebros6122 Communism doesn't go against individualism and communist parties in Western countries are becoming more popular. Conservative parties are dying out

    • @jasonhaven7170
      @jasonhaven7170 Pƙed rokem

      @@dudebros6122 It does not directly conflict with individualism. You're not very intelligent, are you?

  • @vytorbrb3568
    @vytorbrb3568 Pƙed 3 měsĂ­ci

    7:55 the rockey bat was mentioned by Milei at the WEF, what about making a vid of The Economics of Libertarianism?

  • @saimandebbarma
    @saimandebbarma Pƙed 11 měsĂ­ci

    Yup, there is or say we need an upgrade or bring some change in a system that's it coz as we all know that capitalism can also lead to wealth inequality, environmental degradation, and other negative outcomes with that being said now you know what kind of change we should bring so all can lead a healthy prosperous life in future ! Thankyou 🙏