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BillP
Guest
But you’ve still got a money supply of only 30 shells. So by your own example, you’ve got deflation, e.g. what one unit of production cost one shell, now you’ve got 42 units of production but only 30 shells, so either prices have to come down so that a unit of production costs .71 shells (every shell buys 1.4 units of production). Sounds like a good deal until you think about the guy who borrows 6 shells to make a new hut which because of the economic growth not being matched by money supply growth only generates 4.2 shells income.One of us doesn’t get it, I’ll grant you that. Nobody disputes that a ton of money changes hands as a result of the ‘service economy.’ But you haven’t remotely convinced me that passing the same dollar back and forth at an ever more frantic rate is true economic growth. That’s all that services are. They generally don’t create wealth, they pass existing wealth back and forth. Meanwhile, we’ve moved all the GENERATION of wealth we used to do in the economy to China and thereabouts.
I don’t think you read my post very well either. There is nothing to stop people in my example from taking out loans that are secured against the value of their assets. They went from a total market cap of 30 shells to 42 in one year. I’d take that growth rate, thanks.
This is really, really basic economics. If you don’t know it, you have no business lecturing people on economics.
Even a blind hog finds an acorn once in a while,But I’m familiar with the contempt that sophisticated people like you have for my view. They used to mock me for buying too little of a house too.![]()