|
|
|
|
|
by lovich
2939 days ago
|
|
The houses wouldn't just be for homeless who do have a high incidence of mental illness, it would be for everyone. As for the food money being destroyed by inflation, it might but giving general funds are a lot more likely to stimulate consumption than a targeted stimulus like college loans. >Any country in history that tried to centrally plan such a large chunk of their economy failed. There's problems and it wont go perfectly but we should still try to improve everyone's lives. I also disagree that anyone who tried to centrally plan such a large chunk of the economy has failed. Look at water and electricity, those are massive industries that are centrally planned. Central planning is not as efficient as a market based economy and is not the way to grow an industry or develop new technologies. It does work better than a market based economy when it comes to uninterrupted coverage which is why it's used in the utility model |
|
And vastly lower on total return. Investing in education will likely increase output overall. Investing in food and alcohol and TV will not.
And consumption will not even be increased if inflation eats the money, which it likely (and historically) will. It will simply rescale the dollar to make no one better off.
>There's problems and it wont go perfectly
Ignoring that it has spectacularly failed and destroyed lives and countries is not simply "problems." Repeating things that have been demonstrated to be terrible ideas is again a terrible idea.
>but we should still try to improve everyone's lives
Then let's use targeted use of scarce resources instead of wishful thinking and ignoring history. Otherwise we repeat ideas that sound good but fail such as rent control. The things you present are not new ideas. They have been tried and failed. Ham-handed allocation of scarce resources is almost always worse than targeted allocation. This is simple economics.
>I also disagree that anyone who tried to centrally plan such a large chunk of the economy has failed.
List a country that has succeeded at planning as large a piece as you're suggesting.
>Look at water and electricity, those are massive industries that are centrally planned.
No, they are not. They are locally planned, compete with each other, trade resources, and have plenty of free-market features to trade futures, trade stocks, and compete. They are absolutely not centrally planned.
Venezuela is an example of what happened when the central government takes over such markets.