Daniel J. Smith

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Daniel J. Smith

Daniel J. Smith

@Smithdanj

Professor of Economics | Political Economy - Public Choice - History of Economic Thought - Austrian Economics

Murfreesboro, TN เข้าร่วม Ağustos 2014
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Madman
Madman@SOMAMadman·
Strangely, the next marginal billion dollars isn't the incentive you think it is for someone with, say, 30 billion dollars to keep innovating and providing. By any sensible measure, they're as incentivized as they're gonna get. They can't possibly decide whether to keep working or retire on the basis of additional billions. They and their descendents will have all the money they could ever possibly need.
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Carl
Carl@HistoryBoomer·
The US has 989 billionaires with a net worth of at least 5.7 trillion dollars hording our resources. If we distributed that $$$ equitably, regular Americans could leave their jobs and explore lives of creativity and self-growth, with food, clothing, and shelter provided for free.
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Phil Magness
Phil Magness@PhilWMagness·
So.... Why is Vance there giving a stump speech as a foreigner to influence the election outcome?
Rapid Response 47@RapidResponse47

.@VP in Budapest: "We want you to make a decision about your future with no outside forces pressuring you... The bureaucrats in Brussels, those people should not be listened to. Listen to your hearts, listen to your souls, and listen to the sovereignty of the Hungarian people."

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Justin Amash
Justin Amash@justinamash·
I’m pretty sure that wiping out “a whole civilization” will involve issuing unlawful orders. Remove this man from office before he actually attempts to carry out what he’s threatening. We don’t know what he’ll do, but given the unhinged rhetoric, we shouldn’t wait to find out.
Justin Amash tweet media
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Daniel J. Smith
Daniel J. Smith@Smithdanj·
By the way, if you look at the top companies in the world, they are companies that serve ordinary people. In many cases, their mission is serving and providing jobs for the poorest parts of society. Collectively, the votes of ordinary people in the market, outweigh any market concentration of wealth. Compare that to democracy, where those with wealth had quick and constant access to those in political power.
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Jostein Hauge
Jostein Hauge@haugejostein·
The idea that capitalism = freedom is a myth. Capitalism restricts freedom in countless ways. Under highly capitalist systems, basic needs are commodified. Freedom becomes paywalled. Rich people have freedom, poor people don't.
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Daniel J. Smith
Daniel J. Smith@Smithdanj·
Nobody is disputing the ethics of democratic decision-making. The issue is the scope to which that democracy is extended. When it is extended to market decision-making, it creates conflicts and perverse incentives. If we socialized hamburger manufacturing, it would take a decision made privately, where every individual votes for the hamburger they want without generating conflict with anyone else, and where manufacturers have the incentive to innovate with their product to improve it and keep costs down, to a situation where we collectively would have to decide what type of hamburger should be made. Suddenly, it would become a huge social conflict because people have different preferences (in addition, we would eliminate the incentive for innovation and cost-cutting, reducing future gains and burdening citizens). Under capitalism, you vote for the hamburger you want, and you win. I vote for the hamburger I want, and I win. Under socialism, only one side wins, and the losing minority lives under the tyranny of the majority.
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Daniel J. Smith
Daniel J. Smith@Smithdanj·
Vastly overexaggerated the power of advertising. Not only do we have powerful examples of well-financed marketing failing (new coke, Crystal Pepsi, Stadia, Amazon Fire phone, etc.) but the share of GDP that goes to advertising is a measly 2 percent. If advertising had the power Galbraith assumed, it would be much higher. Also, doesn't appreciate the economic role of advertising: fee.org/articles/adver… Also, the argument ignores the role of the U.S. government, and Keynesianism, in driving consumption. Trentmann's Empire of Things provides a good explanation of how government policies (home ownership subsidies, free roads, parking, and rural mail delivery, and subsidized electricity) encouraged people to buy much bigger houses and fill it with appliances and things. Do democracies neglect public infrastructure? Absolutely. There is a short-termism inherent to democracies, where politicians are focused on winning the next election.
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Daniel J. Smith
Daniel J. Smith@Smithdanj·
Mises (1922) addresses this point. How does one acquire a million ballots under capitalism? By directing scarce resources to the production of goods and services that people voluntarily pay for. It is the result of previous elections. The only way they can maintain these "ballots" by continuing to direct resources to the preferences of consumers. Any new innovation quickly breeds competition, making the luxuries of today, the necessities of tomorrow, which is why innovators receive only a tiny fraction of the gains they generate for society (nber.org/digest/oct04/w…). Now, imagine what it would do to productivity we redistributed resources equally. People would immediately vote for goods and services and we would have the same distribution again. But, if you continue to redistribute, the people with a comparative advantage in putting resources to their highest value use as dictated by consumers, would quit producing.
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Phil Magness
Phil Magness@PhilWMagness·
Where's all that Really Real Realist Restraint that certain persons assured us about?
Phil Magness tweet media
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Bryan Caplan
Bryan Caplan@bryan_caplan·
History has more than enough inventors, businessmen, scientists, intellectuals, and philanthropists with zero blood on their hands to name every building, school, park, and theater in the world. There's no need to name *anything* after politicians of any stripe - as if they don't already receive far more honor than they deserve while they're alive.
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Daniel J. Smith
Daniel J. Smith@Smithdanj·
@OrenCass Tariffs have this “strange power” because they hand politicians, plagued by severe epistemic limitations and misaligned incentives, artificial control over markets. We have centuries of theoretical and empirical evidence that cautions against sacrificing the benefits of trade on the alter of the tyranny of control.
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Oren Cass
Oren Cass@oren_cass·
What strange power do tariffs possess, that they cause people to make such arguments? I mean, yes, Congress should codify the tariffs. But taking congressional inaction as probative of a policy's wisdom has to be a nominee for the year's Worst Reasoning in a Political Analysis.
James Surowiecki@JamesSurowiecki

@oren_cass If the case is so strong, it should be easy to get Congress to write the tariffs into law.

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