Crispy
The following psytrance is baṉned: All
There's a rather neat quote from Iain Banks:
My question is this: Is he mad? Can humans ever pull that sort of planning off? And at a better efficiency/usefulness than modern capitalism?
It's easy to plan primary industries: Demand is relatively constant; there's some oil, there's some arable land, there's some iron ore. Go get. Heavy industry is fairly easy to plan: Plant takes time to build, and you'll only ever need so many refineries etc. - probably based on the available raw materials.
But the higher up the chain of production you go, the more fluid things can become. What proportion of oil do we make into plastics? How much paper will be used this year? What number of shoe sizes will be needed this year? Do people prefer yellow or red socks? Should some groups of people recieve preferential allotment of resources?
In Banks' article, he's talking about a post-scarcity society, with effectively unlimited means of production. But in the here and now, could a planned economy be made to work? and more importantly, how?
Full text here - towards the end of the second section. This is a great article btw, even if you haven't read the books.Let me state here a personal conviction that appears, right now, to be profoundly unfashionable; which is that a planned economy can be more productive - and more morally desirable - than one left to market forces. The market is a good example of evolution in action; the try-everything-and-see-what-works approach.....
....Intelligence, which is capable of looking farther ahead than the next aggressive mutation, can set up long-term aims and work towards them; the same amount of raw invention that bursts in all directions from the market can be - to some degree - channelled and directed, so that while the market merely shines (and the feudal gutters), the planned lases, reaching out coherently and efficiently towards agreed-on goals.
My question is this: Is he mad? Can humans ever pull that sort of planning off? And at a better efficiency/usefulness than modern capitalism?
It's easy to plan primary industries: Demand is relatively constant; there's some oil, there's some arable land, there's some iron ore. Go get. Heavy industry is fairly easy to plan: Plant takes time to build, and you'll only ever need so many refineries etc. - probably based on the available raw materials.
But the higher up the chain of production you go, the more fluid things can become. What proportion of oil do we make into plastics? How much paper will be used this year? What number of shoe sizes will be needed this year? Do people prefer yellow or red socks? Should some groups of people recieve preferential allotment of resources?
In Banks' article, he's talking about a post-scarcity society, with effectively unlimited means of production. But in the here and now, could a planned economy be made to work? and more importantly, how?