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Sarora's avatar

"The optimistic view is that our collective ingenuity will create so many things for people to do that are so attractive to the rich that they will pay through the nose for them and so recreate a middle-class society."

This going to sound snarky. Do the rich, collectively, have that much foresight or wisdom? What if some of them fall into promoting meme stocks? Or, live on the sea, returning and departing strategically from land to "optimize" the tax bill? Or, have offshore accounts to minimize taxes? One would think that they'd have enough wisdom to realize that they are beneficiaries of so many positive externalities, even dumb luck. But they often might not. And may be unwilling to pay through their noses to recreate a middle class. The middle class is a recent modern thing. I suspect that when people become uber wealthy, they compare themselves to pre-modern royalty, the very people that had little or no use for a middle class.

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Sarora's avatar

"Moreover as Suresh Naidu pointed to me, there is a third huge mistake for this time: Marx thought increased investment and capital accumulation diminished the value of labor to employers, and thus diminished the bargaining power of workers -- when actually it increased it."

Yep, he (Karl) should've said instead that the marginal product of capital would approach zero. Or, by extension, the real interest rate would be zero. Probably nobody that studied modern economics would've believed it -- until it happened this last decade. Wasn't it Keynes who got the issue right instead -- the death of the rentier -- or am I confusing the matters? That is, when long-term capital accumulation/savings meets inadequate demand for various underlying reasons that may not have anything to do with the labor theory if value. We still see prominent countries that are probably going through this.

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