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Incongruity of economics and physics

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Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby Duende » Tue 16 Oct 2007, 16:17:40

This is an excerpt from a topic I started recently called Inflation?.

Duende wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')ut the trouble I'm having is overturning her objection that until the EROEI is less than one (<1.0) for all energy source inputs for the economy, that we won't have to shrink. In other words, we'll still be creating energy, but less efficiently than with oil. This of course will translate into higher costs, but not less overall energy to go around.


Doly wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he clearest example I can put to refute this argument is coal. Only high-grade coal is ever exported. Low-grade coal is used to run power plants that are next to the extraction site, because as soon as you start to move that coal around, you go into negative EROEI.

The same would happen with any low EROEI source of energy. It becames untransportable. If the very type of energy you use for transport has lower and lower EROEI, you are compounding the problem.


My original post concerned my frustration with demonstrating to my girlfriend, bless her heart, that her assertion that our dependence upon non-renewable resources will continue unabated, right up until there is a physical limitation in the supply of any energy. Based on the posts, it seems to me that the problem is larger than I thought in that there is general ignorance and frequent confusion between the economic dynamics of energy use and the physical dynamics of energy use.

As far as I understand it, the economic dynamics of energy are conceptualized in terms of dollars, while the physical dynamics of energy are best conceptualized in terms of EROEI.

I believe the biggest misconception most people have is that one equals the other, or that these terms are interchangable - WHICH THEY ARE NOT. In reality, economics are a subset of physical reality. I think this subject needed its own post because this confusion leads to the same problem I allude to in the excerpt above: just because some energy is extracted at negative EROEI, it might appear to be a smart move because it is cheaper to do so.

In this way, I'm starting to agree with my girlfriend that inflation - a product of economics - can mask negative EROEI - the effects of physical reality - effectively, right up until there is physically not enough energy to go around. My fear is that as long as energy is considered in terms of dollars and not EROEI, the Peak Oil problem will be lost on most people.
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby aflurry » Tue 16 Oct 2007, 18:03:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')ut the trouble I'm having is overturning her objection that until the EROEI is less than one (<1.0) for all energy source inputs for the economy, that we won't have to shrink. In other words, we'll still be creating energy, but less efficiently than with oil. This of course will translate into higher costs, but not less overall energy to go around.



maybe i'm not getting it, but this seems like a gross misunderstanding of EROEI. we will shrink long long long before EROEI is < 1.0.

That point in fact is the point when no more energy will be produced at all. It means that to get the usable energy source you have to use more of an existing usable energy source than you get in return. At that point it is absolutely useless to even produce it because you are better off just using the original energy source.

the point at which we will have to "shrink," if i understand your meaning, is the point at which a fall in the rate of production forces a fall in the rate of consumption. it is a point that is only indirectly related to EROEI.

it is related insofar as you can assume that as EROEI decreases toward it's absolute zero (=1.0), the increasingly difficult logistics of mobilizing ever greater amounts of energy to create more energy, will lead to problems in output, bottlenecks, breakdowns, bankruptcies, and other discontinuities that cap the maximum possible rate of production.

when rate of production caps and falls, stores are depleted, and eventually, rate of consumption must cap and fall.

the term for this point is of course "peak oil," and that is why the site is www.peakoil.com, and not www.eroeiisone.com.

for oil produiction the point at which eroei = 1 is a theoretical limit. it will never be reached because long before then we will have been forced out of the enterprise by a general collapse in the enterprise of oil extraction.
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby turmoil » Tue 16 Oct 2007, 19:43:26

Until Peak Oil, producers have been able to produce more oil with declining energy returns by reinvesting some of that energy to grow production. But post-peak, economies will have less energy to use to keep the economy going. Because efficiency gains happen slowly, people will spend more on energy and less on everything else. Going forward, every year that conservation is greater than improved efficiency, the economy shrinks.

All of this happens until no more efficiency gains can be made. This happens way above EROEI = 1 because society requires a reasonable surplus of energy, just like all organisms on the planet.
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby kjmclark » Wed 17 Oct 2007, 00:52:09

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Duende', 'I')n this way, I'm starting to agree with my girlfriend that inflation - a product of economics - can mask negative EROEI - the effects of physical reality - effectively, right up until there is physically not enough energy to go around. My fear is that as long as energy is considered in terms of dollars and not EROEI, the Peak Oil problem will be lost on most people.


I see two problems with this. First, I think you mean reduced EROEI, not negative EROEI. That is, as EROEI drops from 20 to 10 to around 1. There's really no point going after energy with an EROEI of less than one, except in rare cases where there are subsidies or low value energy can be used to extract higher value energy (coal or nuclear heat being used to extract oil, for example). Even in those cases EROEI is positive, but less than one.

Second, this assumes that there is an infinite supply of greater fools to go along with your infinite supply of money to chase a dwindling supply of goods. In reality, a civilization (or nation, region, state, family - what have you) has a limited supply of goods that they can exchange for energy. The money is just a medium of exchange, and eventually becomes worthless long before you get to EROEI=1.

Put another way, at some point your inflation starts to make other energy sources, like solar, wind, photosynthesis - even though they are poorly concentrated energy sources and are also inflating - look like a good deal. They may not be sufficiently concentrated to run your civilization in the way you've become accustomed, but they're the best bet you have available. The question is then whether the goods you have to exchange, regardless of the money cost, are adequate to buy those forms of energy.
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby MrBill » Wed 17 Oct 2007, 04:38:05

Duende wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')n this way, I'm starting to agree with my girlfriend that inflation - a product of economics - can mask negative EROEI - the effects of physical reality - effectively, right up until there is physically not enough energy to go around. My fear is that as long as energy is considered in terms of dollars and not EROEI, the Peak Oil problem will be lost on most people.


Inflation is not a product of economics. It is a product of excess money supply creation. Economics is about rationing scarce supply with unlimited demand through price. The same principle applies equally to physics as to economics. In physics you cannot get something for nothing. In economics you cannot either. Sometimes it only appears so. Like finding a cheap, abundant source of energy, seemingly without limits, or failing to grasp that the government does not produce wealth. They redistribute it. Ignorance is ignorance. I do not think it matters whether we are talking about physics or economics. If you think physics is an absolute science and economics is not then you have never tried to marry the concept of quantum physics to that of particle physics.

I have news for everyone. Mankind has a negative EROEI! We consume energy like every other living organism. Because we consume energy we are able to do work. It does not matter whether you represent energy in terms of EROEI or in dollars and cents. If you take your calory intake and work and use it to buy CDs you simply transfer that energy in the form of wealth to the artist and record producer who can in turn use that energy to buy fossil fuels. You give them that wealth. Alternatively you could have bought that energy yourself. Dollars and cents just happen to be a handy way of keeping records.

Doly is correct. Local supplies of energy may have to be used near their source because it is not economical to transport them over distances. Either because the EROEI becomes negative or because in dollar and cents terms there is another source of energy that is cheaper or that the value of the output does not cover the cost of its inputs.

But by the way I can either beat my eggs by hand or I can go to work to earn enough money to buy an appliance to beat my eggs with an electric blender. I suppose the choice is mine. I am not sure that the EROEI to go to work to buy a blender is positive compared to simply staying at home and beating my eggs by hand that would likely require less net energy. As fun a concept as EROEI is I would not get too carried away. We tend to waste a lot of energy just by getting up in the morning. And surplus labor will usually find a use just like surplus energy. Even if it is ultimately wasted.

UPDATE:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '"')If the carbon-economics were better, if they were more efficient to produce, then the business economics would be better," said George Latham, manager of 1 billion pounds ($2.04 billion) of sustainable and responsible investment (SRI) funds at Henderson Global Investors.

Source: Biofuel industry fights the critics
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby Duende » Wed 17 Oct 2007, 10:15:16

MrBill wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')t does not matter whether you represent energy in terms of EROEI or in dollars and cents.


False. Economic measures are always subsets of physical reality. Neoclassical economists blindly assume there will be replacements for any natural resource, namely oil. For them, it boils down to supply and demand; if you need more energy, then poof!, there it is. But physical reality tells us something else: it says that there is a fixed amount of resources on a finite planet.

MrBill: by saying that energy can be represented in terms of ERORI or in dollars and cents - that it doesn't matter - are you saying that toys from China took less energy to make and ship just because they cost less in the store than my neighbor whiddling toys in his backyard for 10 times the price?

Either way, my point is that economics can mask true physical energy expenditures.
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby turmoil » Wed 17 Oct 2007, 10:42:28

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'I') have news for everyone. Mankind has a negative EROEI! We consume energy like every other living organism.

And thats why in order to function we need a surplus energy supply. If there's less energy than we need, we have to become more efficient or we die (extreme conservation).

Hunter-gathers, agrarian, and industrial economies all have surplus energy inputs.

The earth would not support life without the incredible amount of energy we get from the sun..

Duende, I didn't think you'd like my answer, but it's pretty simple. Regardless of inflation, people will spend more on energy and less on everything else if conservation is greater than improved efficiency. Organisms evolve when we figure out how to use less energy more efficiently. Society will be under the same pressure, regardless of how much money is in circulation.
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby aahala » Wed 17 Oct 2007, 11:29:58

I'm trying to imagine what a negative EROEI would be like?

Please give me a real or theoretical example.

EROEI is a fraction with a numerator and denominator, so
to be negative, the numerator would also have to be
negative. I'm having a great deal of difficulty understanding
this concept.
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby turmoil » Wed 17 Oct 2007, 12:00:33

Negative is a misnomer because as you said, it's a ratio not a difference. The result would be less than 1 (0 > EROEI < 1). But in essence a negative EROEI is one where the ER is less than the EI, a net loss. The difference calculation is just another way to see what amount of energy you are losing.

A good example is us (as Mr. Bill said): we take an energy input of food and convert it to electrical energy in our brains and chemical energy for our organs. Since energy is neither created or destroyed, the usable energy yielded from the conversion is less than the energy supplied, the rest is lost as heat. Let's say our bodies have a 75% efficiency:

ER - EI = Net

7.5 Calories - 10 Calories = -2.5

Or an energy ratio of:

7.5/10 = .75

Which is another way of saying we need a surplus energy supply ratio of 10 / 7.5 = 1.33. If it takes more energy to hunt/grow the food than you get out of it, it's not worth it.
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 18 Oct 2007, 03:16:51

Duende wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'F')alse. Economic measures are always subsets of physical reality. Neoclassical economists blindly assume there will be replacements for any natural resource, namely oil. For them, it boils down to supply and demand; if you need more energy, then poof!, there it is. But physical reality tells us something else: it says that there is a fixed amount of resources on a finite planet.


First of all EVERYTHING is a subset of physical reality. It is not called insight when you state the obvious. EVERYTHING ever created and then consumed by mankind is a subset of the physical universe. Like somehow we live in a vacuum removed from reality? ; - )

Secondly, although I have studied economics at the graduate level, not even I know what a so-called neo-classical economist is? Perhaps you can enlighten me?

What we blindly assume that there will be replacements for any natural resource? Are you serious? This has to be the most oft repeated LIE on peak oil dot com. It is nothing more than a poorly constructed strawman argument.

Economics IS the study of scarcity. Thanks to the people on peak oil dot com I now know about concepts like EROEI that help my understanding of economics, but they are not mutually exclusive. We borrow compelling arguments wherever we find them to help explain what we are seeing. Blind indeed!

I have spent 20+ years applying my economics training to the real world. You still seem to be hung up on theoretical arguments as if the various academic disciplines are separate from one another. My first degrees are in agriculture and science. Get over it.

Wow, do we really live on a finite planet? Define fixed resources when some are renewable and technology constantly changes how we can re-arrange them to achieve higher levels of productivity? That can mean growth, but it can also mean doing the same amount with less.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ') MrBill: by saying that energy can be represented in terms of ERORI or in dollars and cents - that it doesn't matter - are you saying that toys from China took less energy to make and ship just because they cost less in the store than my neighbor whiddling toys in his backyard for 10 times the price?

Either way, my point is that economics can mask true physical energy expenditures.


As I said in my previous post I can either beat my eggs by hand or I can go to work to earn enough to buy an electric blender. The EROEI is not the same, but both achieve the same result.

In your toys from China argument 'price' is masking the physical reality. Not economics. If people want to forfeit more of their income to buy handmade toys for 10 times the price then they will. if not, they will buy toys full of lead poisons from China. It is a choice.

Why would I take an expensive foreign holiday that uses jet kerosene, and has a negative EROEI, when I could just stay at home and sleep to conserve energy?

It's no wonder your girlfriend is confused! ; - )
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby Duende » Thu 18 Oct 2007, 10:39:22

Alright, MrBill, let's bring the temperature down a bit.

MrBill wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'F')irst of all EVERYTHING is a subset of physical reality.


Ok, so we can agree on something. :)

MrBill wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')econdly, although I have studied economics at the graduate level, not even I know what a so-called neo-classical economist is? Perhaps you can enlighten me?


Surely; you can find an explanation here.
Or, just type it into any search engine and see what pops up. Mainly, I specified neoclassical economics so as not to muddy the waters between it and other approaches to economics, such as Green Economics, which are clearly different.

MrBill wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'D')efine fixed resources when some are renewable and technology constantly changes how we can re-arrange them to achieve higher levels of productivity?


Fixed resources are non-renewable resources, and our dependence on them is critical. Based on our current infrastructure, renewable resources will not be able to make up the difference.

Higher levels of productivity? What about susceptibility to Jevon's Paradox, MrBill? Again, renewable resources will help, but aren't a panacea.

MrBill wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')s I said in my previous post I can either beat my eggs by hand or I can go to work to earn enough to buy an electric blender. The EROEI is not the same, but both achieve the same result.


That electric blender runs on electricity. Electricity (at least where I'm from) is produced using finite, non-renewable, natural resources. Yes, they achieve the same result, but it is how the result is acheived which is important.

I'm not trying to challenge your 20+ years applying economics to the real world. Perhaps you'd like to read the difference between neoclassical and green economics that I have linked above and tell me where I've gone wrong so that we can have a meaningful dialouge?
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 18 Oct 2007, 10:52:31

Yes, I will read the links. Thanks.

But for what it's worth I still see Jevon's Paradox as nothing more that supply and demand theory for engineers and non-economists. They say the same thing.

I will try to keep the temp down. Cheers.

UPDATE: so I read the links on green economics and neo-classical economics

So here is my opinion. I see economics as value-neutral. It seems to me that labeling something as green tries to place a altruistic label on what is actually should be an unbiased study of the consequences of our collective behavior.

"We are the good guys because we put the planet above profits" sort of thinking.

I tried to read the book 'Small is Beautiful' because others have mentioned it to me and I found it while I was at home a while back. But I just couldn't. Not only was it poorly written, but it kept making these strawman arguments like 'Economics As If People Mattered'. Who said they didn't?

I see absolutely no contradiction between sustainable development and neo-classic economics if you will? Why should there be? Doing more with less (efficiency gains). Reducing the negative impacts of production (the tragedy of the commons). Rising standards of living (productivity gains). Cost-benefit analysis (informed policy). Etc.

There is nothing in the economic literature that I have read that promotes limitless growth or takes the view that we have to trash the environment. Quite the opposite. Magazines like The Economist quite often feature steps that governments, companies and individuals are taking to reduce their footprint while chastizing those unwilling to change their polluting ways.

I think where some make a very serious mistake is when they pretend economics does not matter. As if we can ignore all the costs associated with production and consumption including the effects on the environment and the sustainability of using finite resources. So although I do not want to create a strawman argument of my own I would suggest that the left is much guiltier of that than anyone familiar with economics because at the end of the day you can have any type of society you want only so long as you can pay for it.

p.s. I am having trouble formulating coherent arguments today, so I might have to think about them overnight. Thanks.
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby Duende » Thu 18 Oct 2007, 17:19:21

MrBillwrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'N')ot only was it poorly written, but it kept making these strawman arguments like 'Economics As If People Mattered'. Who said they didn't?


This is a good point I haven't perhaps considered enough.

And I totally agree that the "green" moniker is overused to the point of meaningless.
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby efarmer » Tue 27 Nov 2007, 13:02:09

It seems to me that economists get do a whole lot more kinky stuff before physics catch up to them than physicists get to do before economics cut them off at the pass. I can't remember the last time I saw "excessive froth" or a "reverse yields conundrum" in f=ma.
(I guess that's why they invented quantum physics,huh?)
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby whereagles » Tue 27 Nov 2007, 15:53:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'F')irst of all EVERYTHING is a subset of physical reality. It is not called insight when you state the obvious. EVERYTHING ever created and then consumed by mankind is a subset of the physical universe.


That is correct, but it applies in a much broader context than our world.

In our world, energy resources are essentially infinite because there are huge renewable energy fluxes (sun, wind, tides, etc) which far exceed our energy usage. Human technology is simply at too primitive a stage to tap those fluxes for the amounts we need. Since humans are naturally lazy, we are currently relying on non-renewable sources to cover for the needs, but that is bound to change as those sources deplete.

The laws of physics only say this: "at some stage, renewable energy will be all there is available and your maximum per day allowance is xxx exajoules". Up until we reach a daily renewable energy useage of xxx exajoules, one can say that economics > physics. It is only if you want to get xxx+1 exajoules that physics > economics.

I'm a physicist, by the way :)
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby LoneSnark » Wed 28 Nov 2007, 01:07:03

It is always nice to hear from the Physics community. :-D

But I need to ask my standard question: How is research into Fusion coming along?
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby MrBill » Wed 28 Nov 2007, 05:09:10

Hi Duende! I had forgot about this thread!

efarmer wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]It seems to me that economists get do a whole lot more kinky stuff before physics catch up to them than physicists get to do before economics cut them off at the pass. I can't remember the last time I saw "excessive froth" or a "reverse yields conundrum" in f=ma.


That is too true! ; - )

We also have a saying in banking and finance that says, markets can deviate from their true fundamentals longer than investors can remain solvent. Sometimes there is a teensy, weensy time lag before reality catches up to us. But not usually more than a decade or so? ; - )

The geological fact of peak oil is that it is an economic problem precisely because of declining EROEI. It is not divorced from that physical reality at all.

The economic problem stems from depending on a scarce, limited resource not only for our growth in economy with the jobs and higher standards of living that this creates for us, but also because we have not developed the alternatives to fossil fuels to transition away from our current economic and physical infrastructure that depends on those finite resources.

If it was not an economic problem would I lose sleep at night worried about some black goo trapped under a few kilometers of seawater offshore some backward Hell hole of a country?

Resource scarcity is an economic problem as well as a physical phenomenon, so trying to divorce the one from the other or to treat them as isolated issues is simply missing the point.
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby whereagles » Wed 28 Nov 2007, 06:47:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('LoneSnark', 'B')ut I need to ask my standard question: How is research into Fusion coming along?

Unfortunately, I missed a vacancy opening for the ITER project :wink:, so I can't tell you much more than what's in the news and on this site.
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby MrBill » Wed 28 Nov 2007, 06:52:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('whereagles', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('LoneSnark', 'B')ut I need to ask my standard question: How is research into Fusion coming along?

Unfortunately, I missed a vacancy opening for the ITER project :wink:, so I can't tell you much more than what's in the news and on this site.


The research into various fusion cuisine is going great. I have made real progress with my Mexican lasagna. Alas there has been zero progress in fusion jazz. It all still sounds like random noise! ; - )
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Re: Incongruity of economics and physics

Unread postby Duende » Wed 28 Nov 2007, 17:38:42

Hi MrBill, ok I'm back from vacay. I've read quite a few of some of the older threads on the economics questions regarding peak oil. So, I'm going to try to focus on the disconnect that I'm now facing, as well as I can articulate it. :)

At this point, I'm fairly well convinced that economics and physics are equivalent in terms of explaining how and why things happen the way they do. For instance, the law of gravity explains why the bottle hits the ground when I drop it (physics), and why the price of corn goes up after a drought (supply and demand). So, I've kind of moved past the "subset of reality" concept.

Having said that, I think there are aspects of economics that are commonsense like supply and demand, pricing, etc. And there are others that are absolutely mystifying, like the stock market, buying/trading debt, or "miracle" mortage lending. Maybe it's that these practices are so highly abstracted from everyday life (for me, anyway) that it just looks like a house of cards? To put it most bluntly: I understand bartering: "I'll trade you 4 onions for 7 heads of lettuce" or whatever - supply and demand. This is an irrefutable process in reality, I'll grant you that. But when you tell me the stock market went up 71.45 points today or whatever, it means almost nothing to me; it seems that what is being measured is so abstracted from actually reality that something is missing. I just don't see how "simple" economic processes have evolved into bloated giant accounting systems of figures that largely have no meaning (like the US's national debt) to everyday people.

The second point revolves around the growth of our economy.

MrBill wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') see economics as value-neutral.
I see absolutely no contradiction between sustainable development and neo-classic economics if you will? Why should there be?

I still take exception to this; I'm just not there yet. The root of the problem was brought home on MSNBC or some such last Friday when the talking heads were talking about how good it was that a lot of people showed up at the mall to buy a ton of stuff for Christmas, and that sales were up 3% from last year or whatever. (Note for non-Americans: the day after Thanksgiving is the "biggest shopping day of the year" and kicks off the Christmas buying season).

Then they went on to discuss how great of a season it'll be for investors if the pace keeps up. They said if it's good enough, it will lift our economy out of the "correction" it is currently enduring. Hmmmm....

Clearly our economy is predicated on growth - up up up evermore. Otherwise, the talking monkeyheads on CSNBC wouldn't watch every move of the market like their lives depended on it, and traders wouldn't have jumped out the windows during the Great Depression. So clearly, there's some "benefit" (hidden to me) for the close each night on the nightly news to report that the stock market closed "up." This is the aspect of economics which I'm just not apprehending. What the hell do economic principles like supply and demand have to do with economic growth?

MrBill wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')esource scarcity is an economic problem as well as a physical phenomenon, so trying to divorce the one from the other or to treat them as isolated issues is simply missing the point.

Agreed. But is "economics" monolithic, or can certain aspects of economics be divorced from others?
"Where is the man who has so much as to be out of danger?" -Thomas Huxley
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