• Cethin@lemmy.zip
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      3 days ago

      Money is made up, but it’s definitely real. Magic is made up and fake. If it actually exists and does something, it’s real. You can bring something from non-existence and make it real. It has no intrinsic value.

    • peoplebeproblems@midwest.social
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      3 days ago

      And I suspect you might even suggest the only real aspect of economics boils down to supply vs demand regardless of what the thing in supply or demand is?

      • Banana@sh.itjust.works
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        3 days ago

        Definitely not. The rules behind supply and demand hinge on some extremely flimsy assumptions, namely:

        • that people always act in their own best interest (they fucking don’t)
        • that people can actually choose not to buy the product

        For things like food, housing, medicine, etc. People don’t get the luxury of voting with their wallets, and this is why the free market cannot allocate resources effectively.

        Just because I went to school for economics does not mean I am a free market capitalist. I’m definitely not.

        • konki@lemmy.one
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          3 days ago
          • that people always act in their own best interest (they fucking don’t)

          Totally agree

          • that people can actually choose not to buy the product

          This is actually pretty well deacrived by what’s called the price elasticity of demand in standard neoclassical models. For things like housing one might say that the demand is very inellastic: A change in price does not affect the quatity demanded.

          • Banana@sh.itjust.works
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            3 days ago

            Yes exactly. This is why I find it funny when they use two different, yet contradictory reasons to justify the sin tax:

            • it prevents people from using it because they’ll choose not to use it (the thing they’re addicted to) if it gets too expensive; and,
            • the demand is very inelastic which means the government will make more revenue

            When really they’re primarily taxing the things poor people are addicted to.

            Idk, I’m generalizing, I’m just kind of pointing out how a lot of the supports capitalism rests on are weird little opaque excuses to convince the masses that exploitation is what’s best for us

            So many economists are stuck in a box of what our society has been, they can’t think past our current rules and regulations to what could be, because they think that the rules and trends they learn in school are the only possibility, or that profit must be king.

        • peoplebeproblems@midwest.social
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          3 days ago

          Ah ok, I see the flaw in my thinking.

          Things that are always in demand don’t drive a price solely based on supply, and since people don’t act in their own best interest the actual demand of something can’t be a useful way to determine the value of a thing.

          So that sort of says to me that with a truly free market economy, it would be just as impossible to model future prices because of the inherent unpredictability of humans.

    • Alexstarfire@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Ehhh, not sure I’d go that far. Money, no matter what backs it, is just what people value it as. Just that when backed by real goods, e.g. gold, that it gives people a better reason to value it because the goods are worth something.

      Mostly saying, money backed by a good have at least the value of the good itself. Which I would say makes money not fake.

      When it’s backed by belief, then it’s fake.

      • superkret@feddit.org
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        2 days ago

        Modern money is backed by the economic power of the state issuing it, so its workers, infrastructure, education, soft and hard power. Those are definitely real things with real value.

      • IntriguedIceberg@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        But then said good only has as much value as we put on it. There’s a tacit acceptance of what a group of people decided that good is worth. Its value is as real as we collectively decide it is; it’s a construct

        • Alexstarfire@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          Yes, but things like gold have actual uses which give them at least some actual value. Fiat currency is backed 100% by belief.

          • konki@lemmy.one
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            3 days ago

            Fiat currencies are actually backed by the tax liabilities denominated in them. If you are liable for one of my business cards, else a guy with a gun shows up at your door, you suddenly have demand for my business cards.

      • Banana@sh.itjust.works
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        3 days ago

        To be fair i was being hyperbolic. Money has the power we give it. And we gave it too much.

        We print money through increasing interest rates, increasing divide between rich and poor requiring the working class to take out loan after loan after loan.

        Some may say interest is the cost of borrowing money, but it is money value that comes out of nothing, it’s made out of thin air and reduces the value of our dollar.

    • zephorah@lemm.ee
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      3 days ago

      I’m proud to have properly digested how inflation works. But I still don’t understand it.