Great Imaginative article by Prof Noah Smith (Assistant Professor, Stony Brook University)
I grew up watching “Star Trek: The Next Generation” (easily the best of the Star Trek shows). There’s one big, obvious thing missing from the future society depicted in the program. No one is doing business. There is almost no one buying and selling, except for a few species for whom commerce is a form of traditional religion. Food and luxuries are free, provided by “replicators” — machines capable of creating essentially anything from pure energy. Recreation, provided by virtual reality, is infinite in scope. Scarcity — the central defining concept of economics — seems to have been eliminated.
Is this really the future? Is it possible? Is it something we want? Periodically, economists and economics writers struggle with this question. Back in 2013, Rick Webb and Matt Yglesias theorized that as society gets richer and richer, capitalism and free markets will still exist, but will simply recede into the background. Others have described Star Trek not as a socialist paradise, but as a libertarian one. A writer named Manu Saadia is even writing a book about the topic.
So let’s think about the economics of Star Trek. What we’re really thinking about is how to get to economic utopia. It’s an important question.
The first thing to consider is how to distribute the fruits of plenty. If we can harness renewable energy to ward off a collapse when fossil fuels run out, then it’s a good bet that increased automation, virtual reality and other technological advances will provide us with a world of plenty unimaginable in previous times. Current world annual gross domestic product per capita, in purchasing power parity terms, is only about $13,000 — enough to put food on the table and a roof over one’s head.
What happens when it is $100,000, or $200,000?
It would seem ridiculous to limit this incredible plenty to a few people. When the world gets rich enough, a trivial tax on the rich would be enough to provide everyone on Earth with a basic income that would allow them to lead lives of leisure. Or, as Yglesias suggests, voluntary giveaways by the rich could support the rest, since we might get more altruistic as our lives become more comfortable. Who cares if the robots put us all out of a job, when we can create paradise with just a tiny dash of redistribution?
Of course, this depends crucially on the number of humans being limited. As economist Thomas Malthus pointed out in the 19th century, exponential population growth will eventually bring back scarcity no matter how rich we are. Fortunately, it looks like that won’t be a problem — global fertility rates are converging to replacement level, meaning that world population will level off. It is unlikely that a population bomb will threaten the leisure society.
There is also the problem of the dignity of work — people enjoy feeling needed. But human values change over time, and there seems no obvious reason why people couldn’t get their self-worth from artistic self-expression, or from hobbies.
This is the basic Star Trek future. But actually, I think that the future
has a far more radical transformation in store for us. I predict that technological advances will actually end economics as we know it, and destroy scarcity, by changing the nature of human desire.
In other words, the rise of new technology means that all the economic questions will change. Instead of a world defined by scarcity, we will live in a world defined by self-expression. We will be able to decide the kind of people that we want to be, and the kind of lives we want to live, instead of having the world decide for us. The Star Trek utopia will free us from the fetters of the dismal science.
Imagine That !
11 comments:
Respected Sir
As we all have discussed in our classroom discussions that market must be allowed to operate freely so that there will be no problem of surplus and shortage and both the buyers and the producers will be happy. Further, I also disagree to the fact that technological advancement will bring economics to an end, nor can any technological advancement can create or destroy or change human wants and needs. Human desires are recurring endless and cannot easily change according to the preferences of others. With the passing time the needs might change with the change in science and technological advancement but desires are not completely dependent on only one factor. Future is unpredictable.
Thanks
Prateek Mittal
Sir,
in my point of view,it is now difficult to establish the idea of world as a nation and one united identity of,humans, as a race.Economics will sustain through the technological developments merely because these developments would be compared with and by other human settlements across the world,there could be newer matrix developed for the same.we would be sharing these ideas at a cost,we could have altogether a different levels of demands for our comforts which will help the markets to sustain in future.
RESPECTED sir,
I disagree with the point that technology will bring ECONOMICS to an end because with time human needs will increase and with this increase in needs buying and selling take place which never leads to end of economics.
thank you
NISHI AGRAWAL
I Think Scarcity Has No End.Everything In This World Comes With A Price.There Will Be A Time When ROTI,KAPDA AND MAKAAN Will Not Be The Basic Need Of Humans.We Will Desire Much More Than That.At A Point,We Will Create New Scarcities For Us.It Is Human Nature That Everyone Want,What Other Have!We Can Say That Nothing Happens In This World Without A Reason,So As With Desire.
Aniruddha Agrawal
Sir,
I do not agree to the point that Economics will come to an end because of technology. Economics is the subject that describes how market , or nation's economy works, which is something that no technology can define. It is a subject that provides information to the society that how a nation works. Today is the era of money making and living luxurious life. People are demanding at large and this can never lead to an end of economy.
Thank You
Unnati Deva
Respected Sir
I completely agree with what Aniruddha said in his comment.As the society or the nation becomes more and more richer the basic needs of a common man may shift from food, clothes and house to smart phone and all these type of things, and this will happen because human wants are unlimited and have no end, what is luxury nowadays may become necessities tomorrow.
So, scarcity will remain persistent in society and in order to tackle this we will continue to take help of economics.
Aman Pathak
My only wish is, to extend your ideas towards the areas of law, society and the very pattern of our thinking.
I see lot of conviction and sincerity in the views. The next step is to test and analyze these views.
Aman, Unnati, Anirudhha, Nishi, Simrann & Prateek, Your submissions are great to begin with...Keep posting and sharing :)
Warm Regards,
Arun
Sir,
As per my view as the human value changes, human needs also changes. Time also has a vital role in it. If we compare ourselves with our great grandparents we will be able to realise the drastic shift in the definition of "human needs".Technological advancement has changed our view of seeing the world. As for example making a video call and talking to others sitting in a different city or state or country is just unimaginative in previous times but for us it is reality. We can't deny that ttechnological advancement has added comfort to our lives but for the same time it has also created demands. Demands which can never come to an end. To cope up with the day by day increasing demands, we need an economy.
Sir
In article as suggested by yglesias that voluntary giveaways by the rich could support the rest, it talks about people getting altruistic.This particular scenario can be seen even today as a innovative started by our Hon'ble prime minister narendra modi that is the giving up of lpg subsidy.This is done for the welfare 0f poor people.It is true that nobody has seen future and nobody can predict future,it is also true that there is no limit of human desire.
Change is the law of the universe, it may affect technology and economy.
Prasann Tripathi
Sir,
Economic utopia can't be a possible concept . In the above article it has been mentioned that free food and luxuries will be provided by some machines.so yes there will be no demand for the products but for the machine. The energy that's going to channel this whole process will be in demand. The preferences will change as per time but the demand will even increase instead of getting eliminated from the economy.
Sir,
The very concept of replicators incites exciting thoughts in me. Machines capable of creating essentially anything from pure energy. Wow! If at all we had that machine would we ever use it wisely is the question. Man is an ever greedy being. He will never be satisfied with what he has. If you provide him with a one bhk flat he would want a two bhk flat and if you provide him with a two bhk flat, then his want will increase to a bungalow and so on and so forth. That is where the very concept of "people enjoy feeling needed" comes in. For example, Mr. Mukesh Ambani would not be satisfied with a Maruti 800 car but instead of it he would definitely want a BMW or an AUDI. People will never be satisfied with whatever luxuries they posses. So a life without scarcity will always remain a hypothetical concept!
Thank You.
Kartikey Sahai
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