Investment in a non-optimizing society
Sep. 21st, 2008 08:11 amFrom memory: I was talking with
womzilla about my notion that a non-optimizing society would work better than what we've got now, and he asked me how it would be possible to raise money.
I think that one's solvable: you'd have to say something like "we have good people and good products, and this new project will produce a solid rate of return" or "we have good people and a good history and this new project is risky but plausibly worth it" instead of saying "here'sa chance to rejoice in the defeat of your enemies the best thing ever".
I have a notion that a non-optimizing economy would have more emphasis on bonds and dividends rather than on stock trading, but that's just a guess.
I think that one's solvable: you'd have to say something like "we have good people and good products, and this new project will produce a solid rate of return" or "we have good people and a good history and this new project is risky but plausibly worth it" instead of saying "here's
I have a notion that a non-optimizing economy would have more emphasis on bonds and dividends rather than on stock trading, but that's just a guess.
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Date: 2008-09-21 12:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-21 01:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-21 01:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-21 02:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-21 07:27 pm (UTC)And I don't think I've ever spoken with or read anything by anyone who actually believed that "all economic activity takes place in rational, perfect markets". Even the most extreme anarcho-capitalists will readily admit (and complain about) that we do not currently live in an anarcho-capitalist society.
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Date: 2008-09-21 07:32 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-21 10:10 pm (UTC)Kevin Carson wrote a post about free-market health care for The Art of the Possible a few weeks back. He talks about how much of the current health care system is supported and constrained by state-backed monopolies that favor big corporations and the AMA.
He also mentions something called "lodge practice": In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, working-class people would organize fraternal societies for mutual aid, and one of the things these societies would do is hire doctors to treat the members. It was sort of bottom-up group insurance plan, but run by the people who were actually using it. A typical visit to a doctor in those days cost a dollar or two -- a day's wages for a low-class worker. That same dollar or two bought a year's worth of coverage through a lodge.
In both Britain and the US, the medical establishment collaborated with the government to end lodge practice.
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Date: 2008-09-21 10:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-22 12:45 am (UTC)By which I mean: I can't assign any meaning to the words "optimizing society" and "non-optimizing society" that implies that people in the latter would have any difficulties raising money.
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Date: 2008-09-22 02:33 am (UTC)It would have been clearer if I'd called it single-factor optimization. For businesses, the single factor tends to be money. For governments, it tends to be power.
My idea about the relationship between single-factor optimization (I hope there's a better phrase for it) and raising money is that we've currently got an idea about maximizing shareholder value as the best promise for raising money.
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Date: 2008-09-22 03:36 am (UTC)Lower-level optimization is a foundation stone of civilization. We more commonly refer to it as division of labor.
While all businesses seek to make money, they don't all follow the same tactics. Take personal computers -- we've got an astonishing variety of models, all optimized for different things. But all the manufacturers (except the One Laptop Per Child Association) are still seeking to make a profit.
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Date: 2008-09-22 12:10 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-09-22 08:34 pm (UTC)Most publicly-owned companies seek to maximize their stock value, but that doesn't mean they all follow identical business tactics. Apple and Microsoft are both publicly traded, and yet they have very different business models.
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Date: 2008-09-23 09:26 am (UTC)I don't think I made it sufficiently clear that, in any case, I was poking around in an area where I had something more like a vague dissatisfaction and a notion rather than fully formed ideas.
Probably off-subject, but this is an interesting angle on Wealth, Fame, Virtue, and Fun as reasons for a business, and the need to keep them in balance.