|
|
|
|
|
by Workaccount2
458 days ago
|
|
These are just first order effects. I'm talking about second and third order effects that I would argue make the value prop of tighter spreads enormously negative to society on the whole. Liken it to the government deciding to spend 40% of the budget on roads. Suddenly the roads quickly get pot holes filled, the lines are seemingly always freshly painted, cracks are all filled, and even mildly uneven roads gets freshly paved. The first order effects of this would all be positive. The transportation dept. could talk all day about benefits to everyone. Everyone would love the great roads. But spending 40% of the budget on roads is insane, and the second and third order effects would be disastrous to that society. |
|
In a separate single example, it's fairly easy to point out what's the right thing to do - as you do with your Stanford guy example. However, history show us that it usually turns out to be disastrous in the long term. Maybe this Stanford guy will make several millions $, and then go back to desiging how to produce those half price solars at scale.