PureX
Veteran Member
Yes. There's no point to trading with each other if we aren't both benefiting in some way from the trade.Thanks, PureX. You’ve raised some good points and I agree with you in part. I appreciate the thought-provoking discussion.
I want to respond to your post here and address the very interesting points you have raised.
But before doing that, I just want to confirm, you do acknowledge that it is possible to make money without “taking” it from someone else - so to speak - correct? And that it is possible for a trade to be beneficial to both parties. Is that right?
Two points. One is that the increase in value over all is not usually more than a few percent, on average. And if that is being sucked up by excessive profit-taking on one side of the trade field (or by a small percentage of the population) then the value increase you're referring to is negligible, or even non-existent. Because profit (added value) that becomes predatory wealth is NOT an overall value increase. It's actually the opposite.If you look at your post before last, the one I was responding to, you seemed to say no, that isn’t possible. But based on the first sentence of this post, it seems you are acknowledging this now. Is that fair?
As an example: Steve trades 10 widgets to Bob for 10 dollars. The widgets are only worth 5 dollars, but Bob has to have them to keep his business going, and Steve knows it, so he exploits Bob's situation for maximum gain to himself. Was there any 'value added' to the economy by this (unfair) "trade"? Steve has increased his wealth by 5 dollars (at Bob's expense) but so far no value was added to the economy. And Steve can use that "extra" 5 dollars to capture more dollars for himself by loaning or investing it for a profit. So now that 5 dollars has become 'predatory wealth'. It may be used to increase overall economic value by enabling production. But it's also capturing value in the process. So is it increasing more value than it's capturing? Hopefully yes, but again, the margins tend not to be very big. And not to be guaranteed. So this idea that we so often hear from the capitalists of added value offsetting the horrible imbalances created by a greed-based commercial system is false. And we know this by watching the collective wealth (in terms of value) of the general population decreasing as the predatory wealth of the capitalists increases exponentially.
Thank you for your interest.This doesn’t address the unseemly used car situation you just raised. I would like to discuss that because your concern is valid. I just want to make sure we are on the same page about the first topic, more or less, before we move on to the next one. This is an interesting discussion and I just don’t want it to spin out of control!