domingo, 7 de abril de 2013

Unbalanced economies



The capitalists and the poor are equally unbalanced economies: some produce more than they consume and generate other less.

It may be very difficult to maintain a balanced economy producing what exactly needed.

We go to a very basic case to try to understand.

In another article (1) I mentioned that a farmer sells the crop that does not need, therefore literally sell what you do not.

In another article (2) told that the farmer will not give away the merchandise because it selfishly, while taking advantage of the buyer need charging which could give free.

However, this selfishness is what moderates the relationships between people in the same situations as opposed to one sells the other buys.

In short, thanks to the much-maligned and misunderstood selfishness, the farmer got what was left over will be traded for tickets that while no use in themselves, at least they can be exchanged for goods really useful when the producer needed.

Thanks to the money, and unnecessary excess production that can become useful and necessary goods.

The producer meets your needs in two ways: with what occurs (feeding on vegetables, dairy products, slaughter animals) and with the money it gets from selling its surplus.

A capitalist is someone who accumulates money. Why did you earn? For the same reason that farming harvest more than you need, ie accumulates because it spends less money than what he makes by selling spare.

The capitalists and the poor are equally unbalanced economies, although opposite results because capitalists generate more wealth than the poor consume and generate less wealth than they consume.

   
Note: Original in Spanish (without translation by Google): Las economías desequilibradas.
 
(Este es el Artículo Nº 1.842)

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario