• golli@lemm.ee
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    5 months ago

    Thanks for taking the time to write all of this. You do have good points and i would say that i can agree with a lot of what you write, but where it falls a bit apart for me is the last paragraph.

    allocation and production are mainly planned according to the needs of people

    If i get this right this is somewhat of a top down approach and i just can’t really see that working on a large scale. To me you can set broad goals and general rules/constraints, but you can’t plan all the way down. So after a certain level you just kind of need a system that somewhat works on its own. And for that market economics just seem like the efficient solution.

    Right now it seems to me like we are particularly failing in setting the rules/constraints, e.g. damage from CO2 emmisions not being properly priced in.

    exceptional cases, like boring jobs really no one wants to do (cleaning that toilet for example)

    Seems to be that boring jobs aren’t really exceptional cases, but the majority.

    And some jobs might not be boring for some, but not everyone. However you’ll likely still have a certain amount of people that need to fill those jobs (and be qualified to do so), and for those even these better jobs will be annoying. Basically only a certain set of jobs will be interesting for each person, but those interests will almost certainly not match up with what is demanded from the economic side.