Vīta Brevis, Wit Artefāctōrum Ætērna Podcast
I’ve sort of touched upon this topic before, or at least skirted around it while discussing price [https://ashstuart.substack.com/p//ecfin003-the-story-of-money-the-enigma-of-price] and scarcity [https://ashstuart.substack.com/p//ecfin011-the-story-of-money-understanding-scarcity]. But today let’s look at supply and demand in their own right. Back in the first of those two episodes, we posed a question. At the townsquare market when Brenda and Irene each inquired on the price of a sack of grain, Steve and Bryan quoted different prices for the same quantity, 8 and 10 copper coins. But why the difference? Furthermore, the question can be broadened to beyond just the same item or quantity. Without fully answering the question back in that story, we considered a few factors at play, and as we intuitively know, supply and demand are a couple of them. The Ups and Downs While we don’t need a literal textbook definition of these two words, let’s poke them around a bit. Firstly, much of this question arises because of the aforementioned reality of scarcity - things are limited in supply. And then, different people want different amounts of different things. So obviously if more people want something than there is supply of it, the effort needed to satisfy that need gets greater - and that, is signaled by the figure we call price. And of course, in a functional market, if there is less demand for something, the price will correspondingly go down. It generally works in the other direction too. If a seller jacks up the price of some item of utility, it may dissuade people from buying it. And conversely: we are all familiar with those empty shelves in the supermarket for those heavily discounted items - usually perishable goods, like your favorite yogurt brand? The Balancing Game So in a sense this is about equilibrium, every good in the economy is in this game with every other and with people seeking the goods, and in aggregate add up to then confer upon each good a certain price - hence my insistence in that episode that price is essentially a filtered-down signal of the underlying economy. Thus in other words, it’s a reflection of human behavior in aggregate as well. How well the prices reflect the economy depends on how functional (some use the word ‘free’) the market is - how freely such signals can move without the distortion of forces such as subsidies and price controls - topics for another day. And there is a feedback mechanism built in to such a system, each purchase changes the supply, and the prices and purchases act as a feedback loop which further changes the picture, ad infinitum, again, all subject to how freely these dynamics are allowed to play out. Let’s take a simple example - without even money necessarily in the picture. Imagine in your town there is a park that’s getting popular with the townsfolk as a picnic spot. As more and more people decide to go to that park for their picnic, the experience for each group will start to degrade - it’s noisier, more crowded, less fun over all - that’s the price they’re paying, the feedback loop also consisting of the ‘gossip’ or general talk about how crowded the place is getting. And then someone finds another park not really used for picnics, some folk start to go there instead, it’s pristine, initially, and then... you know where this is going. A Delicate Dance As participants in the economy, we are used to the effects of supply and demand. We know, for example, that in the unlikely event of war in the Middle East, prices go up because everything needs energy to function. We know that housing prices are highest where there’s more demand. Even human capital is entwined with the supply-demand dynamic - wages depend on the availability of certain jobs, our skills etc. Ultimately, however, the point I’m making there is supply and demand are in fact everywhere in all aspects of our lives. Consider this fun story: the dance form of the tango developed at a time when there was huge immigration of male population into Argentina (from Italy) which meant very little supply of female contact for most of these young men, the only outlet being a faint chance to find a dance at the overcrowded-with-men weekend ball. So yes, men, it is said, practiced this intimate dance with other men all through the week just so they each could dance the tango well enough to impress and attract the attention of one of the women to dance with them! (So in fact it takes three to tango, right?) But yes, we can’t escape supply and demand - they are more than a graph with 2 lines crossing. But perhaps we can train ourselves to be aware of the dynamic, to spot the trends - that pristine, rarely picnicked-at park, make the best of it, dance the tango well enough! To take one last but more pertinent example, research has found that in recent decades, with the prevalence of social media and its myriad distractions, people’s attention span is starting to shrink quite severely, what with living in a trigger-happy, push-of-a-button, instantly-tweet-my-grievances world! In an era of augmented intelligence where we can offload many cognitive tasks to machines, there is one skill that will still remain key: the ability to pay attention without distraction, the ability to focus deeply, the ability to do deep work. Those who can retain or strengthen this one thing will be in high demand in an era of low supply of it, and these few will have a high price tag on themselves! 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 Further Reading & Reference * A Passion for Tango, David Turner * Tango - Album by Julio Iglesias * Carlos Gardel 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]
124 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Vīta Brevis, Wit Artefāctōrum Ætērna Podcast!