Capitalistic Musings
Capitalistic Musings
(c) 2002 Copyright Lidija Rangelovska.
Book Excerpt
ources and the
bad job we too often make of allocating them efficiently and optimally
- lead to mismatches between supply and demand. We are forever forced
to choose between opportunities, between alternative uses of resources,
painfully mindful of their costs.
This is how the perennial textbook "Economics" (seventeenth edition), authored by Nobel prizewinner Paul Samuelson and William Nordhaus, defines the dismal science:
"Economics is the study of how societies use scarce resources to produce valuable commodities and distribute them among different people".
The classical concept of scarcity - unlimited wants vs. limited resources - is lacking. Anticipating much-feared scarcity encourages hoarding which engenders the very evil it was meant to fend off. Ideas and knowledge - inputs as important as land and water - are not subject to scarcity, as work done by Nobel laureate Robert Solow and, more importantly, by Paul Romer, an economist from the University of California at Berkeley, cle
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