Ares Land wrote: ↑Wed Oct 04, 2023 10:33 am
a) the increasing concentration of wealth. Such a situation can be tolerable when the economy is rapidly growing. Who cares if some people get huge amounts of pie, when everyone gets a decent and increasing share of it anyway? The problem is, we can't have much growth anymore. (Note that this only applies to the developed world!) Standards of living and technology are at a stage where there's little point for more improvement. Besides, there's a lot of reason to believe growth needs to be curtailed for ecological reasons anyway.
So the pie is going to stay at about the same size, maybe growing a little bit. At this stage of the economy, this means any large concentration of wealth is wealth that could be more usefully employed elsewhere.
I don't think this is the case. It's true that growth rates are smaller than in
les Trentes glorieuses, but they're not zero. Tech companies are massive because computers have— after a slow start— revolutionized business. Your mobile phone does more than the creators of
Star Trek were willing to put into sf set 200 years in the future. Renewable energy has been transformed into something that can actually compete with oil; and we need more innovation, not less, to address climate change. And as ever, there are probably scores of advances we don't think about much. mRNA vaccines, for instance: much easier and faster than traditional vaccines.
I'd also note Dizzy Dean's point that predictions are hard, especially about the future. At this point we all, I think, expect 2075 to suck. And maybe it will! But picture a European observer looking at the world of, say, 1848. He was surrounded by a frankly pretty miserable world, run by miserable people, and could readily predict that the Europe of 1900 would be acocalyptically bad. As it turned out he was wrong; it was better in almost every way, and it wasn't even because people or leaders had done particularly dramatic or smart things.
But I strongly agree that concentrations of wealth are extremely bad— more so when the plutocrats have decided to stop sharing productivity gains, which creates a powderkeg of fragility and resentment.
b) the second problem is the disconnect between wealth, monetary valuation and the actual, real-world value of things. Microsoft makes okay software these days, but it's strange to think their contribution is valuated at more than 2 trillion. More generally, the weight of the entire tech sector is huge, incredibly so considering most of what we'd expect from tech was already in place in 2007. (And honestly, we'd probably be just as happy and productive with 2000 technology)
Here I have to object that there is no such thing as "actual real-world value." I know what you mean, but it's the phlogiston or ether of economics. All there is, is what people will pay for a thing. If humans all die off, nothing will have value any more.
I think what you're getting at is real, though: investment capital has gotten completely wacky. Investors have too much money and too little smarts, so they keep seeking risky high-yield investments— i.e., they are addicted to financial bubbles, and increasingly they're about nothing, not even land. Crypto never made sense, neither did NFTs, and the various attempts at creating new tech platforms have been mostly ludicrous and destructive (Zuck's legless Meta, Neopets, AirBnB, whatever the hell Elmo Musk wants). Unfortunately the usual way to teach investors to be more prudent is a massive depression.