Steve, Yo's-

This is off the top of my head & with less than adequate time for thought, just before I go AFK for a bit, but:

Yes, there are economists working on valuing "ecosystem services," and that seems to be having some effect, when, for example, a dollar value is placed on wetlands or forests.

A potentially simpler approach is to just forbid externalities entirely, or require internalization of externalized costs (e.g. "clean up your mess or pay someone else to do it, but no walking away from it").  This has the benefit of also being consistent with the libertarian principle of voluntary transactions among consenting adults: externalities are imposition of a transaction cost on third parties without consent.  This principle works across the ideological spectrum.

In general, "nature builds with few & simple rules", and humans are well advised to do likewise.  Regulatory Rube Goldberg contraptions are hardly as useful as straight-up statute laws such as "externalizing of costs is forbidden, and the fine shall be quadruple damages."

Growthism:

The fact that human economies have not reached a steady state before, is not proof that they can continue indefinite growth on a finite planet.  "Past performance is no guarantee of future yields."   

Or to put it differently, if you can find a way to map an infinite plane onto the surface of a Euclidean solid, I'll find a way to get you nominated for a Field Prize (the math equivalent of a Nobel).

Exponential growth always appears as if it can continue forever, right up to the point where it hits the wall.  And every species eats right up to the limit of its food supply, and then has a dieoff.  Yes, that would be oscillation and chaotic behavior: waves of mass death that make WW2 and the Holocaust look like warm-up exercises. 

Now we can either surrender to the proverbial forces of nature on this, or we can use our brains and our free will to create an economic system that doesn't behave like bulimia. 

Albert Einstein and Edward Teller both agree: the exponential function is humanity's most dangerous math.

Investing vs. speculating:

Speculating is short-term betting on financial transactions without producing tangible goods and services.  It's parasitic and predatory, and should be strictly limited by law, and taxed into insignificance.  

Speculators are an example of what I call "dissipative structures type B" (DSBs) that feed off entropy gradients in such a manner as to export an inflated entropy load to their ambient environments.  (Contrast to "dissipative structures type A" (DSAs) that don't foist an excessive entropy load on the ambient.)

Investment is also a "bet" on the future, but it works on longer time scales and it produces tangible goods and services. 

Speculators care about the length of their brokerage's Ethernet patch cords and fiber optic cables in inches, because every inch at c counts in their microsecond-trading universe.

Investors could care less about the speed of electrons in patch cords or photons in fiber, because they're in it for the long haul.

Manipulation is the use of borderline-illegal means to influence markets and outcomes.  Borderline-illegal ought to count as malfeasance. 

More later, I gotta scoot...

-G.


======




On 13-05-06-Mon 10:55 AM, Steve Berl wrote:
Interesting. A few fine points that seem to be bugging me though, and some terms that need to be defined better.

Seems to me that you can factor the "ecological sustainability" into the more traditional models by assigning a value to "ecosystem services" in just the same way you can assign value to real estate or other natural resources. The way a wetland filters storm water runoff or protects a coastline from hurricane damage can be assigned a value in whatever currency you choose.

I have to object to the statement "the ultimate outcome of an economy is necessarily a steady state". This is clearly not true based on both the past history of human society, and an understanding of system theory in general. There are plenty of systems that never reach a steady state. Some systems oscillate and some systems have chaotic behavior. Systems that converge to a steady state are sort of a special case, and I see no evidence that human economic systems are one of those cases.

Coming at it from a systems engineering point of view, I think that "investing" or "speculating" means that someone believes that they have a model which can predict future behavior of the system based on some known inputs, and chooses to use that model to bet on some future outcome. I'm not sure exactly what the difference is between investing and speculating. Perhaps someone can help flesh that out?

"Manipulation" seems to mean that not only do I have a model for the future behavior of the system based on its inputs, but that I also have control over some of the inputs.

steve


On Sun, May 5, 2013 at 9:38 PM, GtwoG PublicOhOne <g2g-public01@att.net> wrote:


Sonja, Rabbit, Ryan, and Yo's-

Re. alternative currencies:  I've given a lot of thought to this subject over the years.


A currency is not only a transaction medium but a measure of wealth in an economy: real resources that have economic value.  There are basically three types of resources:  natural resources, labor, and capital. 

Natural resources include:  Renewable energy sources (solar, wind, geothermal, tidal, biomass), non-renewable energy sources (fossil fuels, uranium, thorium), minerals (nonliving matter that's taken from the ground), and agricultural products such as food.

Labor includes: casual labor, unskilled and skilled occupations, and licensed occupations.

Capital includes: natural capital (land, monetized resources), industrial capital (e.g. tools, plant & equipment), inventoried goods, and financial capital (equity and debt instruments). 

I'm inclined to treat real estate as a limited natural resource (land) or as natural capital generally.  Today it is often treated primarily as a concretized form of financial capital, which leads to speculative bubbles such as the one that produced the present depression.

A sustainable economy, in the purely economic sense (ecological sustainability is a different axis of measurement), is one that is largely resilient against manipulation and fraud, and boom and bust cycles.  Boom & bust economies are like bulimia: binge & barf, inherently unhealthy and harmful.

Ecological sustainability isn't dealt with by conventional economics, which works on a "flat Earth" model: as if the Earth is an infinite flat plane.  This is the most important fatal flaw of conventional economics, and it leads to the myth of infinite growth.  The most important foundation for a new economic paradigm is the recognition that the Earth is not flat, not an infinite plane, but is a Euclidean solid with a finite surface and therefore with finite resources.  From this, the rest follows. 

From this, two other things follow that are "taboo" in conventional economics: the ultimate outcome of an economy is necessarily a steady state, that can be anywhere on a spectrum from the most egregiously exploitative (e.g. a slave economy with a hereditary aristocracy) to the most equalitarian ("from each according to ability, to each according to need").  The most likely outcome of a steady-state economy is the inexorable demand for economic justice or "distributional equity," with its center of gravity in a sustainable middle class, and viable paths to economic sustenance for all. 

The role of currencies in building economic resilience is: a) to provide negative feedback loops in the economy, that prevent the positive feedbacks that cause booms and busts, b) to minimize the occurrence of fraud and manipulation, and c) to provide isolation or compartmentalization that enables "quarantine" of economic damage: such as preventing a local economic crisis from going global, and preventing a global economic crisis from affecting every locality.


Currencies, with those points in mind:

A viable economy would include three levels of currency: global, national, and local/regional.  The global currency handles transactions between nations.  The national currency handles transactions between localities within each nation-state.  And the local/regional currency handles transactions that occur wholly within the scope of local/regional economies. 

The ideal global currency would be denominated in energy, for example in joules as Rabbit pointed out.  Ultimately, energy is the foundation of all economic transactions: the global common denominator.

National currencies tend to be based on arbitrary measures of value, whether gold or the credit of national governments.  But in general they tend to represent the wealth of nations, plus or minus the effects of speculation.   If I was setting up a national currency from scratch, I would value it in terms of natural and industrial capital: real capital wealth. 

There's been much discussion of the proper foundations for local currencies.  In the Bay Area there is a group that is working on the premise of a local currency denominated in the food production of local agriculture.  But one of the most successful local currencies, "Ithaca Hours," is based on the value of local labor.  To my mind this is correct: because labor is the one resource that is reliably available in every local economy. 

I've studied the Ithaca Hours system in some depth, and I'd suggest anyone who's interested in local currencies do likewise, starting with a keyword search.

The major value of a local currency to any local peoples (such as ourselves) is that it enables us to maintain functioning economies when the global or national economies are in crisis.  By analogy it's like having rubber tires and shock absorbers on a bus, to insulate the riders from bumps and potholes along the road.  All other factors equal, you don't want to ride on a bus where a bad road translates to a bone-crunching ride. 

Even where many or most of our transactions are not local, the ability of a local currency to insulate certain parts of a local economy from national and global economic crises, translates to the difference between having to tighten your belt vs. not being able to eat, or having less work vs. having no work.


Re. the IRS:

The question always comes up: what does the IRS have to say about this?  As it turns out, the IRS takes a practical attitude toward local currencies.  They have two requirements, that are entirely reasonable:

One, that the exchange rate between a local currency and the US Dollar must be public, must be arguably reasonable, and must not subject to insider manipulation. 

Two, that income earned in local currency must be declared for purposes of income tax, translated to US Dollars at the current exchange rate, and the taxes paid in US Dollars. 

If we do those things, we're good to go. 


Re. Bitcoin:

I'm highly skeptical of Bitcoin, precisely because it has demonstrated a tendency toward bubbles and busts, speculation, and manipulation by questionable actors.  These characteristics do not make for a stable holder of wealth or a stable medium of transactions. 

The primary usefulness of Bitcoins is that they facilitate anonymity of online transactions.  This is all well and good, but can also be accomplished by creating online financial institutions that anonymize transactions made in US Dollars or other currencies.  By analogy think of Gift Cards, that are issued by Visa and Mastercard, but that aren't tied down to your legal name. 


Anonymization without speculation & manipulation:

In the type of institution I have in mind, account holders would have accounts in their legal names as they do at any bank or credit union.  Transactions would occur in two steps: one occurring in your personal or business account, and one occurring in the institution's account.

For example you buy something online.  A payment goes from your account to the institution's common account, and another payment goes from the institution's common account to the person or company you're paying.  The latter payment is anonymized: it is made between the institution and the person being paid, and assigned a transaction number that you and they can use to track it. 

For example you sell something online.  The buyer makes a payment to the institution's common account and obtains a transaction number and gives you that number.  You use that transaction number to move the payment from the institution's common account to your personal account.

The question has been raised as to whether this could be used for, or seen as, a form of money laundering.  I believe the answer is No, because the institution itself would maintain records of every transaction, and these records would (only) be accessible for lawful uses such as investigating crimes or as evidence in civil lawsuits.  The important difference is that the transaction records would be private aside from those two exceptions (criminal and civil cases), and not be accessible to Big Data, so your purchases of (for example) consenting adult porn, or your reading habits in general, wouldn't become part of your dossier. 

As far as Porn-O-Mat or Amazon, Ebay or iTunes, or any of those, are concerned, they are doing business with another business entity (the Cyberia Credit Union or whatever we call it).  They have no need or desire for a "person name" for every transaction, any more than Staples.com does when they sell office supplies to a company that's an incorporated entity.  They are not going to turn down transactions just because they don't have the legal person-name of the soft squishy human body that sits in the hypothetical office cubicle for which the office supplies (or porn, best-sellers, flea-market goods, songs, etc.) have been bought. 

In other words, we can get the most important benefit of Bitcoin, without sticking our hands in the shark- and piranha-infested waters of speculation and sabotage that have become Bitcoin's habitat. 

So: is anyone here interested in creating a labor-based currency, and/or an online credit union for anonymous transactions?

-G.


===== 



On 13-05-05-Sun 12:09 PM, Sonja Trauss wrote:
+1


On Sun, May 5, 2013 at 11:53 AM, Rabbit <rabbitface@gmail.com> wrote:
Someone was proposing a currency denominated in joules which would represent the ability to generate that much energy in the future.

https://medium.com/armchair-economics/183c2ad47b50

The exchange rate between Bitcoiny CPU cycles and joules would be pretty straightforward to figure out.

But: would this be more prone to speculation and bubbles since it's based on our estimation of what will happen in the future?  And what happens when everyone tries to cash in their joules at the same time?




On Sun, May 5, 2013 at 10:44 AM, Ryan Bethencourt <ryan.bethencourt@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi All,

I've been reading/following the whole evolution of bitcoins as currency and I'm still a bitcoin skeptic (I prefer potential rather than spent processing power :) ).

So I was curious, has anyone in the past tried to create a virtual currency based on a resource value, like future usage of CPU time (i.e. $1 would equal an equivalent amount of electricity and hardware wear and tear for x number of CPU cycles, which could be exchanged either for the cycles, at a super computer bank or for other currencies)?

To me it seems that bit coin is like a spent CPU resource rather than a future resource and by flipping the equation to future rather than past value a currency based on this type of commodity would be useful... any thoughts?

R


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--
-steve