• ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.ml
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    1 month ago

    did it get through to you?

    Oh yes, you’ve further confirmed that you have no clue.

    if you have two apples, you can afford to lose one of those apples less than if you had three apples. try again.

    Having more apples doesn’t make your existing apples less valuable. In terms of production, this translates into demand. As long as your demand is growing ALL your factories are just as valuable.

    did it get through to you?

    literally linked you a source referencing china explaining their own economy

    If you can’t even understand what the article says then there’s no point having further discussion.

    and again, the interpretation you linked to isn’t mutually exclusive with “market economy”

    It’s not an economy where the market makes decisions where labor and resources are allocated. The government decides that and the market acts as an allocator within that context. If you can’t understand how that’s different from a market economy then you have no business having this discussion because you don’t understand what you’re talking about.

    • switchboard_pete@fedia.io
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      1 month ago

      Having more apples doesn’t make your existing apples less valuable.

      having a surplus of apples means you value an individual apple less, yes

      that’s how the concept of “having things” works

      As long as your demand is growing ALL your factories are just as valuable.

      so if 20% of your factories are now somewhere else, whereas before it was 0%, then the share of value taken up by domestic factories has decreased, as has the share of demand they’re managing to satisfy by domestic factories

      if china completely stops building new factories at home, and in 30 years 90% of their factories are abroad, and 10% are at home, would you say their industrial base had been “hollowed out”, even though the absolute number of factories at home is the same?

      If you can’t even understand what the article says then there’s no point having further discussion.

      i pointed out that there was no point discussing this further when you said that china was wrong about their own economy, but for some reason you insisted on it

      It’s not an economy where the market makes decisions where labor and resources are allocated. The government decides that and the market acts as an allocator within that context.

      this is like saying “the government doesn’t decide that; steve from the finance department decides that”, or “the market doesn’t decide that; a distributed network of private investors decides that”

      if the government bases their decisions off the market, then the market is the one making those decisions, just like steve is making his decisions based on what he’s been told to do from the government, and just like investors are making their decisions based on what they think the market is telling them to do

      you can quibble about how the same market effects will produce different results, but the result is still a market economy

       

      i’m genuinely so excited for your next fruit analogy that accidentally explains why you’re wrong

      • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.ml
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        1 month ago

        having a surplus of apples means you value an individual apple less, yes

        Nope, that’s not how any of this works. If you have constant demand for the good, you value all the factories producing the good equally. The fact that you can’t get this through your head is frankly incredible.

        Anyways, it’s pretty clear that having a rational discussion with you is not possible since all you do is just regurgitate the same nonsense over and over. I’ll let you have the last word that you evidently crave. Have a good one bud.

        • switchboard_pete@fedia.io
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          1 month ago

          my guy i already had the last word of consequence like 5 posts back when you stopped actually responding to things i was saying in a coherent way and started arguing with china

          since then it’s all been for the love of the game

          If you have constant demand for the good

          quite literally, you’re now arguing with your own hypothetical

          “As long as your demand is growing” -> not constant demand

          but it doesn’t matter because i foresaw your difficulty with this one, and addressed both the case of constant demand and growing demand

          all you do is just regurgitate the same nonsense over and over

          maybe check your post history i think the call might be coming from inside the house on this one

          you are comically bad at backing up a worldview you evidently hold so strongly, and it’s utterly fascinating to me