| Stocks appear to have inherent value if you don't look at the entire planetary economy as a system. In reality dividends don't distinguish between productive innovation and wealth extraction. Innovative dividends are derived from the use value of new goods and services which increase freedom of action for the majority of the population. Wealth extraction is derived from zero-sum movements of capital, typically benefiting rentiers at the expense of productive employees, decreasing majority freedom of action. But even the first can create externalities - which are real physical cost which are not accounted for. A house that burns down because of climate catastrophe is a real physical loss. A increase in the value of a house created by aggressive speculation is an imaginary gain that only exists because the people in the game believe in it. Trad economics exists to hide these differences, and make a hallucinatory financial reality which seems more real than the physical world. Crypto is an obvious symptom of this hallucinatory mindset. Not only are the tokens imaginary, but the environmental costs are catastrophic. But the rest of the economy really isn't built on firmer ground. |
>A house that burns down because of climate catastrophe is a real physical loss. A increase in the value of a house created by aggressive speculation is an imaginary gain that only exists because the people in the game believe in it.
And a house that is built creates real value by taking land, adding materials and labour, and creating something worth more than the sum of its parts.
I don't need to forgive all of the economic system's sins to explain why stocks have value.