You mean this conversation?
You mean this conversation?
Khross wrote:
I'm not exactly advocating a gold standard. However, the shift to fiat currency doesn't shift us to a non-commodity money; it simply changes what the commodity in question is. Rothbard and Hayek knew this, as did Ricardo and Malthus and a whole bunch of classical German economists; hence, the Labor Theory of Value exists. Indeed, Das Kapital is exactly about what happens in this situation for the most part.
The problem with the Great Depression is even sensible theories of what caused it don't look at the actual history and read the right things from them. The Gold Standard wasn't a problem; the liquidity crisis was. And what Dashel's examples ignore, for example, is how Eisenhower handled the Decade of Austerity with regard to equal amounts of debt and as bad an initial recession following World War II. Fiat Currency didn't make Eisenhower's policies; the United States was still on a Mixed Precious Metal policy until the late 50s for the most part. And that reluctance to shed the Gold Standard entirely saved our asses.
That said, we're facing other problems now and they go back to the Great Depression and the Federal Reserve's current inception and the FDIC. They go back to Social Security and the Great Society and the New Deal. And, they go back to John Maynard Keynes: you can neither inflate nor spend your way out of debt. You can only postpone the inevitable. And the world is feeling it now.
We're not making any more money than we were 50 years ago; we're just handling more currency. And, in a lot of cases, we're making less money per unit time worked per household. Actually, in the United States, that's near universal. Wage depression and household earnings have dropped as we doubled the work force. We're not producing tangible, durable goods. In fact, our entire economy centers around a service industry that depletes real wealth and consumerism that promotes bad fiscal habits. I've said all of this before; however, and most people here simply laugh and say, "Whatever." Sooner or later, you have to pay the piper.
The current Euro-Zone situation is horrible, because they bought into a whole bunch of economic hoodoo and social-economy thoughts that definitely don't work and don't create sustainability. However, we've put too much debt out there; we've borrowed too much money; and we keep trying to foster ourselves as the leading economic power in the world: we're not. That ship sailed in the mid 90s. And contrary to the claims of the Bush Administration, the recession that Clinton left us with never ended. In fact, it's highly likely we're still dealing with the contractions of the first Bush presidency. But American pundits and economists like to think of things in vacuums or nice compartmentalized eras; and that just doesn't work. We're talking about things from the top down; from the government to the people. And while social constructivism gives us some insight into those relationships, it doesn't change one hard truth about economics: the economy is an aggregation of trillions of micro-transactions a year across disparate regions, local economies, and trade venues. And when we try to normalize it across an area as functionally diverse as the U.S. we're beating our heads against the wall. Trying to do that for the world? That's just **** stupid, but heads of state keep trying.
It's all well and good to normalize currency within a nation, but we can't normalize the value or pricing of goods. We can't regulate the markets like we do, because we honestly do stop trade and innovation. And then, to top that off, we have issues like consumerism that drive the costs of functionally identical items up over time instead of down.
Our entire economic model and behavior is flawed.
But, enough of that ...
You want to know why the Great Depression is mistaught? Society needs it to be. 5 generations later, we don't question as a collective whole that FDR saved the world. We don't question social security or the suppressive effects of payroll taxes on earning and economic power. We don't question income taxes on everyone or the fact that the United States has one of the highest aggregate tax burdens in the world for it's tax payers. And when we do, we get comments like ...
"Well that's on the fringe;" or "The overwhelming consensus of economists is that ..." Except it's not. Our colleges just don't teach the dissenting opinions anymore. How many of you read anything by Murray Rothbard in your Macro Economics Classes? Or Ludwig von Mises? Or Hayek? I'm sure you got a ton about Friedman and Keynes and now Krugman and a whole bunch of other economists. How many of you were required to take Microeconomics or Economic History as non-survey courses (i.e. actual seminar sequences)? And what about political economy as a separate subject? Hell, when was the first time you learned about praxeology?
So, I'll shift the subject to something most of us can relate to.
Look at the Auction House on your server. Consider the value of Frozen Orbs after the implementation of Random, Cross-Server Instancing. What had to happen to make them more valuable than the 5 gold you cold get from a vendor? And, in the interim, what has happened to value of the goods that are valued by the game the same as a Frozen Orb? When you **** with supply and demand, you **** with things in an ever increasing system of complex interactions. And that's what Keynes never really got; that's what our economy doesn't get; that's what economies of scale, as envisioned by Krugman, really don't get ...
There's a reason it's called the Law of Supply and Demand; it's just too bad the economy theory and policy of the Twentieth Century ignores it almost wholesale. And I suspect, actually, I probably know, deep down, that it's the same reason we stopped teaching Economic History and Economic Theory that dates back to the Pharaonic Empires. It's just not politically correct. Unfortunately, the real world isn't World of Warcraft: God didn't come down from on high and say a Frozen Orb is now worth an Eternal Shadow or an Eternal Fire. And government's trying to play God don't have the same impact on reality.
[quote=”Hopwin”]
Khross wrote:
Hopwin:
Why are you leery about praxeology (that is, the study of human action and behavior)? And how on earth would that have anything to do with my distaste for the Gold Standard and Fiat Currency?
You brought the two up in the same argument so I assumed you were tying the two together somehow.
As for praxeology, it is misleading to call it a study of anything since it is not a science, it is an anti-science. They reject empirical data and go with what is "logical", a sort of proto-freakonomics. Saying it is a study of human actions and behaviors is the same as calling my day-dreaming about daisies a study.[/quote]
Khross wrote:
Hopwin wrote:
As for praxeology, it is misleading to call it a study of anything since it is not a science, it is an anti-science. They reject empirical data and go with what is "logical", a sort of proto-freakonomics. Saying it is a study of human actions and behaviors is the same as calling my day-dreaming about daisies a study.
Ummm, no? Where do you get this stuff? Seriously, that's at least as bad as RangerDave's original post.
[quote=”Hopwin”]
In summation, stuff happens because people are motivated by stuff and we don't really know what it is. What happened yesterday or today has no impact on tomorrow. It is a rejection of macroeconomics as a whole and embrace of super-microeconomics.[/quote]
Khross wrote:
Yes, in a nutshell, but that's not a rejection of observational data. Rather, it is precisely the rejection of macroeconomics, and consequently, moves economics back into the realm of science instead of inductive theory manipulation. However, your last post actually contradicts your first post. Philosophical empiricism does not necessarily embrace empirical data; nor, for that matter, did von Mises reject empirical data. What he rejected was macro-level induction and meta-theories based on aggregate results when the micro-motivations were not known.
For example, what cell phone do you own?
Hopwin wrote:
Khross wrote:
Yes, in a nutshell, but that's not a rejection of observational data. Rather, it is precisely the rejection of macroeconomics, and consequently, moves economics back into the realm of science instead of inductive theory manipulation. However, your last post actually contradicts your first post. Philosophical empiricism does not necessarily embrace empirical data; nor, for that matter, did von Mises reject empirical data. What he rejected was macro-level induction and meta-theories based on aggregate results when the micro-motivations were not known.
For example, what cell phone do you own?
a) How is it contradictory?
b) If you throw out macroeconomics then you are saying there are no patterns or predictability within the markets. If everyone is motivated individually and buys a loaf of bread today for $1.50 then you cannot predict that tomorrow people will still pay $1.50 because every individual's motivation can change unpredictably.
c) Blackberry Curve.
Khross wrote:
Hopwin wrote:
a) How is it contradictory?
The rejection of induction is not the rejection of what actually happened. For example ...
Hypothetical Day A: The Dow goes up 1000 points.
Hypothetical Day B: The Dow goes down 1100 points.
Stock Exchanges are actually really good places to prove von Mises's point about praxeology by the way. We know what happened. The Dow moved one direction one day and one direction the other. Why did it happen?
Hopwin wrote:
b) If you throw out macroeconomics then you are saying there are no patterns or predictability within the markets. If everyone is motivated individually and buys a loaf of bread today for $1.50 then you cannot predict that tomorrow people will still pay $1.50 because every individual's motivation can change unpredictably.
[quote=”Khross”]That's absolutely true. Markets exist in quantum states, more or less. You can measure where the market is, but you can't measure where it is going, because you can't predict what it is going to do based on what it has done. And predictability has NOTHING to do with empiricism.
Hopwin wrote:
c) Blackberry Curve.
Why did you buy your Blackberry Curve? How much did you pay for it? Would you buy it again? Can I answer these questions from Blackberry's Quarterly report?[/quote]
Hopwin wrote:
Khross wrote:
The rejection of induction is not the rejection of what actually happened. For example ...
Hypothetical Day A: The Dow goes up 1000 points.
Hypothetical Day B: The Dow goes down 1100 points.
Stock Exchanges are actually really good places to prove von Mises's point about praxeology by the way. We know what happened. The Dow moved one direction one day and one direction the other. Why did it happen?
Hopwin wrote:
b) If you throw out macroeconomics then you are saying there are no patterns or predictability within the markets. If everyone is motivated individually and buys a loaf of bread today for $1.50 then you cannot predict that tomorrow people will still pay $1.50 because every individual's motivation can change unpredictably.
That's absolutely true. Markets exist in quantum states, more or less. You can measure where the market is, but you can't measure where it is going, because you can't predict what it is going to do based on what it has done. And predictability has NOTHING to do with empiricism.
Hopwin wrote:
c) Blackberry Curve.
Why did you buy your Blackberry Curve? How much did you pay for it? Would you buy it again? Can I answer these questions from Blackberry's Quarterly report?
[quote=”Hopwin”]a) Nothing from what you presented. You must take into the externalities, Day B: GE discovered a fatal flaw that causes all of their jet turbines to spin-off jets in mid-flight. Therefore you can say that when GE discovers scenarios such as above the DOW will fall.
b) You can predict that when A) happens then it results in a price change upward or downward. Classic example from Foxtrot: If you buy gold and the next day a gigantic pirate treasure hoard of gold is found then the price goes down.
c) My old phone broke. It was $99. Probably not. Point of clarification, why
I bought it or what is driving sales of the Blackberry Curve overall?[/quote]
Khross wrote:
Hopwin wrote:
a) Nothing from what you presented. You must take into the externalities, Day B: GE discovered a fatal flaw that causes all of their jet turbines to spin-off jets in mid-flight. Therefore you can say that when GE discovers scenarios such as above the DOW will fall.
Externalities are not quite so simple. You can guess the DOW will fall. However, what GE secures a patent on quarternary optical computing in the same 24 hour window? How much do you know about GE's subsidiaries? What is their news like? What happens if a purchasing agent for GE's Corporate Reinsurance Division accidentally misorders something by 3 orders of magnitude? Do you know all of these externalities?
Hopwin wrote:
b) You can predict that when A) happens then it results in a price change upward or downward.
No you can't predict it all. You can guess in more or less educated forms, but you will never reach any level of predictability.
Hopwin wrote:
Classic example from Foxtrot: If you buy gold and the next day a gigantic pirate treasure hoard of gold is found then the price goes down.
That's actually a horrible example for the law of supply and demand. It assumes that knowledge of the supply shift is universal. It also assumes that the shift in supply actually affects consumer accessible markets. The reality is far more complex, because governments and their policies and any number of external market influences exist outside the scope of normalized individual behavior.
Hopwin wrote:
c) My old phone broke. It was $99. Probably not. Point of clarification, why I bought it or what is driving sales of the Blackberry Curve overall?
Why you bought it ...[/quote]
Hopwin wrote:
Khross wrote:
Externalities are not quite so simple. You can guess the DOW will fall. However, what GE secures a patent on quarternary optical computing in the same 24 hour window? How much do you know about GE's subsidiaries? What is their news like? What happens if a purchasing agent for GE's Corporate Reinsurance Division accidentally misorders something by 3 orders of magnitude? Do you know all of these externalities?
Of course you don't but praxeology throws it hands up and says, "**** everything boils down to individual decisions so you can't know anything about what impacts the markets. All events are completely indepedent of each other."
Khross wrote:
b)No you can't predict it all. You can guess in more or less educated forms, but you will never reach any level of predictability.
Not according to praxeology anyways.
Khross wrote:
That's actually a horrible example for the law of supply and demand. It assumes that knowledge of the supply shift is universal. It also assumes that the shift in supply actually affects consumer accessible markets. The reality is far more complex, because governments and their policies and any number of external market influences exist outside the scope of normalized individual behavior.
Agreed it is a horrible example, all economic hypotheticals short of full blown studies are. What is the point you are trying to make?
Khross wrote:
Why you bought it ...
No. Should we?
Khross wrote:
Hopwin:
You obviously aren't interested in anything other than your preconceived notion of what praxeology happens to be.
So where did I miss the explanation of praxeology?