| >"You said "One item taken = one sale, so you have the same level of information to manage the economy with." so I think you did." If you think I said that, let me clarify then. You said... "Monitoring stock levels is hardly all you need to manage an economy." ... I never claimed it was enough to run an economy, because it takes more than monitoring sales to manage an economy. However, monitoring stock is enough to track sales, that's my point, tracking sales can be handled without money and without losing the benefits of money in tracking sales. By tracking stock you have all the sales information you need. However sales information is not enough on its own to manage an economy. Hope my point is clearer now. >"How do you propose that manufacturer to be payed?" Why would the manufacturer need to be paid when everything is free? I'm proposing a system without money, without a need for trade. There are many options, my personal favourites are variations on the resource-based economy ideas. >"There is a lot of competition (and money!) in open source." Competition yes, but largely uninhibited collaboration also. As for money in open source, open source (or rather the free software movement) existed before the money started rolling in. Furthermore, the main benefit that the money brought was that people could work on open source full-time and enjoy a decent standard of living. If you take away the need to earn money to survive the level of activity around open source is unlikely to be diminished. |
> Why would the manufacturer need to be paid when everything is free?
He would have to be payed somehow, otherwise why would he produce anything? If everything is free, what determines how much of each product someone can have?
In the system that you propose, the economic calculus is not possible. How do you determine if allocation of resources is efficient? How do you determine if a new production model can generate more at a smaller cost? How does one save in order to improve his conditions in the future?
Does the central planner decide all this? Even if it were possible, it would reduce people to cattle.
Wrt open source, there was always money involved, even if it was just university grants. And as you said, it allowed people to enjoy good living standards.