|
|
|
|
|
by JBReefer
3383 days ago
|
|
It's actually a core and well supported part of capitalism - people hire more when firing is easy, lenders are more willing to lend in industries with repo men, etc. It's kind of morbid, but rich ecosystems like the Amazon mostly exist because dead stuff is rapidly recycled. The economy is no different: slowing down the cycle is incredibly distortionary. |
|
Highlighting the value of reclamation just draws the heat off of the irrationality of the tech bubble. Amazon isn't a rich ecosystem, it's oligarchic.
And, indeed, any systemic failure in a capitalist economy gets explained away by saying that some cadre of vultures will exploit arbitrage until the gap closes. No one really questions the systemic failures per se. The economy happily creates this surplus in full anticipation of it being scrapped and fed to vultures. Banks repossess cars and capitalists think "working as intended" instead of "there's so many delinquent car loans that there's an industry of repo men and maybe that's significant." This criticism extends similarly to the tech bubble.