T
Turandot
C. H. Douglas
[COLOR="RoyalBlue"]"There is absolutely no virtue in taking ten hours to produce by hand a necessary which a machine will produce in ten seconds.” (Douglas 1920).[/COLOR]
(Dieser Ansatz gefällt mir besser als der Keynesianische, dass man Arbeitsplätze schaffen muss, wo Leute Löcher graben und dann wieder zumachen sollen!)
Gesell kennt ja jeder, deswegen hier mal ein anderer unorthodoxer Ökonom, der in englischsprachigen Ländern bekannter ist. Von Beruf war er eigentlich Ingenieur.
Wiki:
Hier kann man Social Credit lesen:
http://www.mondopolitico.com/library/socialcredit/socialcredit.htm
Aber ich glaube nicht, dass es sein Hauptwerk ist.
Er ist der Erfinder des sog. "A+B Theorems", würde mich interessieren, was ihr darüber denkt.
Hier vielleicht noch eine andere Einführung:
https://jps.library.utoronto.ca/index.php/SpontaneousGenerations/article/view/978/1106
[COLOR="RoyalBlue"]"There is absolutely no virtue in taking ten hours to produce by hand a necessary which a machine will produce in ten seconds.” (Douglas 1920).[/COLOR]
(Dieser Ansatz gefällt mir besser als der Keynesianische, dass man Arbeitsplätze schaffen muss, wo Leute Löcher graben und dann wieder zumachen sollen!)
Gesell kennt ja jeder, deswegen hier mal ein anderer unorthodoxer Ökonom, der in englischsprachigen Ländern bekannter ist. Von Beruf war er eigentlich Ingenieur.
Wiki:
It was while he was reorganising the work of the RAE during World War I that Douglas noticed that the weekly total costs of goods produced was greater than the sums paid out to workers for wages, salaries and dividends. This seemed to contradict the theory put forth by classic Ricardian economics, that all costs are distributed simultaneously as purchasing power.
Troubled by the seeming disconnect between the way money flowed and the objectives of industry ("delivery of goods and services", in his view), Douglas set out to apply engineering methods to the economic system.
Douglas collected data from over a hundred large British businesses and found that in every case, except that of companies heading for bankruptcy, the sums paid out in salaries, wages and dividends were always less than the total costs of goods and services produced each week: the workers were not paid enough to buy back what they had made. He published his observations and conclusions in an article in the English Review where he suggested: "That we are living under a system of accountancy which renders the delivery of the nation's goods and services to itself a technical impossibility." [4] The reason, Douglas concluded, was that the economic system was organized to maximize profits for those with economic power by creating unnecessary scarcity.[5] Between 1916 and 1920, he developed his economic ideas, publishing two books in 1920 (Economic Democracy and Credit-Power and Democracy).
Freeing workers from this system by bringing purchasing power in line with production became the basis of Douglas's reform ideas that became known as Social Credit. There were two main elements to Douglas's reform program: a National Dividend to redistribute wealth to the lower classes, and a price adjustment mechanism to ensure that workers could purchase as much as they could produce. Individual freedom, primary economic freedom, was the central goal of Douglas's reform.
Hier kann man Social Credit lesen:
http://www.mondopolitico.com/library/socialcredit/socialcredit.htm
Aber ich glaube nicht, dass es sein Hauptwerk ist.
Er ist der Erfinder des sog. "A+B Theorems", würde mich interessieren, was ihr darüber denkt.
To put the matter in a form of words which will be useful in our further consideration of the subject, the consumer cannot possibly obtain the advantage of improved process in the form of correspondingly lower prices, nor can he expect stable prices under stationary processes of production, nor can he obtain any control over the programme of production, unless he is provided with a supply of purchasing-power which is not included in the price of the goods produced. If the producer or distributor sells at a loss, this loss forms such a supply of purchasing-power to the consumer; but if the producer and distributor are not to sell at a loss, this supply of purchasing-power must be derived from some other source. There is only one source from which it can be derived, and that is the same source which enables a bank to lend more money than it originally received. That is to say, the general credit.
Nachzulesen: http://www.mondopolitico.com/library/socialcredit/p2c2.htm
Hier vielleicht noch eine andere Einführung:
https://jps.library.utoronto.ca/index.php/SpontaneousGenerations/article/view/978/1106