Vīta Brevis, Wit Artefāctōrum Ætērna Podcast
They say things like love and hate are two sides of the same coin. Back in Episode 011 [https://ashstuart.substack.com/p//ecfin011-the-story-of-money-understanding-scarcity] we looked at scarcity, let’s now flip the coin! Furthermore, under that topic we explored how scarcity is indeed the mother of the invention of the very discipline of economics, so is this about, given a future state of abundance, in fact escaping economics? We broadly know what abundance is, it’s what our political leaders have been promising us from time immemorial, a promise whose fulfilment, one might say, remains perpetually an election cycle away! Anyways, now that we have established what it isn’t, let’s take a proper look at what it might be. Abundance can be a bit formally defined as the presence of unlimited, or practically unlimited, quantity of a given resource. Abundance of any resource can occur naturally, like water next to a large river, or is man-made. As we’ve explored previously for example in discussing value creation [https://ashstuart.substack.com/p//ecfin004-the-story-of-money-on-the-worth-of-value-and-gain], human wants being much greater than what’s naturally available (Nature: here’s some water, berries, a few trees. Man: cool cool, but how about a thousand types of cheese, a hundred varieties of fermented hop and grape with fancy names and notes, a pocket device to send unlimited cat pictures), we humans have to step up to produce them - raw materials to finished goods. And is thus born a discipline such as economics to help direct the act of production in the best possible way -- not just in maximizing production but also ensuring an ecologically sound way of doing so -- leading to a whole bunch of concepts we’ve already covered in this series (capital/resource, the market, price, risk, debt, specialization, standardization etc) Rolling Dice or Flipping the Coin? Thus the logical progression has been to explore how to utilize fields such as economics to improve technology such that we can arrive at a state of abundance in many areas, a few obvious high-priority ones being food, clothing and other essentials. But then, if we say economics is concerned with scarcity, there can arise the reasonable question: is seeking abundance via this discipline not a contradiction, will it not be counterproductive, is it a paradox? I would offer that there need be no problem on those grounds - but I’ll caveat that different political philosophers have taken strongly different positions on this. But here’s one line of thinking: scarcity and abundance being two sides of the same coin, it’s by understanding and managing scarcity well that we may even seek to mitigate or eliminate it. (Doctors study diseases not to spread them but cure them?) In other words, isn’t it the case that if economic concepts and their practical applications are managed properly, there is room for ushering in greater abundance, as we have seen in a great many items since the dawn of the industrial age (just compare the modern middle class and their consumptive insistence with the medieval peasantry and their precarious subsistence.) And the onus of getting that right is on us humans rather than anything else? From Paucity to Plenty Let’s go back to the middle ages, imagine you happened to do some time-travel, back to the year 1000. Imagine you told a peasant tilling the field that one day in the future you will be able to send a message to the other end of the earth for practically zero cost. Forget one message, you could even send a thousand, and in fact folk would be tired of how many messages they’re getting from across the world every single day! We may safely guess that they would have you burnt at the stake for witchcraft! But let’s pause to think about this witchcraft! Back in the year 1000 only kings, and a few noblemen, could afford to send out a message beyond the confines of their town or local region. It required a man on a horse, food and supplies, the risk of going through bandit territory, days or weeks, and then, often no certainty he even made it. (And of course widespread was the practice that if the other king or nobleman didn’t like the message, they’d shoot the messenger, but I digress..) Fast-forward to the industrial revolution: the telegraph, revolutionary but you still had to count every word, then the telephone, eventually email and SMS, text messaging on the iPhone while still in bed with eyes half closed at 6am! Assuming the monthly subscription costs baked in as a given, what is really the cost of sending a single message today, do we even think or blink about it, about how long it’s getting, how many words are being used! So yes, we’ve come a long way. With regard to the information industry, we have indeed achieved abundance. (And are confronting new challenges such as information overload, but that’s another story!) With the ever-accelerating advances in machine intelligence, robotics, space and related areas, there is a chance that within our lifetime, if managed properly, we could get to abundance in many more areas, including, as I discuss elsewhere in depth, material commodities such as food and clothing. In the meantime, the best we can do is develop a greater awareness of the underlying concepts that economics offers us to start with? Article written by Ash Stuart Images, video, voice narration and some footnotes generated by AI Nothing in this presentation constitutes as advice - financial, investment or other This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit ashstuart.substack.com [https://ashstuart.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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