Product Description
Strange crisis. Apparently there is too most of everything: too many factories, too many homes, too many consumer articles. The mercantile supply in a nation is too vast for demand; there is not to little, yet too most capacity. What to do with all a useful objects that are being produced? Employees are dismissed and so have no some-more income since too most was produced. Useful objects are stockpiled and functioning prolongation sites are sealed since of low direct and a same time widespread poverty.
How can overproduction turn a problem during all? If too most has been constructed we could simply let it distortion or dispose of it. It would usually be irritating if too most work had been finished instead of dedicating oneself to a well-earned giveaway time earlier. Within a horizon set by marketplace economy, this is nonsense, of course. Only those can eat in marketplace economy that can compensate for it and if not adequate people can pay, there is no reason for production. Thus, mass distress and existent cache can simply go palm in hand. In a name of being »realistic«, a refusal to consider in larger, some-more radical ways apparently boxed a infancy of a race into such slight options.
What arrange of bizarre resources is it that - even yet a element conditions of prolongation have not altered in a slightest, nonetheless food, accommodation and all other consumer articles possible are still accessible – are unexpected ever reduction accessible to a vast partial of a population? In a marketplace economy, what is a yardstick, what is a purpose of regulating a means of production? Why does income order a world?
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #660219 in eBooks
- Published on: 2011-11-23
- Released on: 2011-11-23
- Format: Kindle eBook
- Number of items: 1

Financial Crisis Lessons Learned:Make Capitalism History (Kindle Edition)
By Hermann Lueer
Buy new: $4.00
195 used and new from $3.76
First tagged "capitalism" by C. Lüer
Customer tags: financial crisis, occupy, capitalism, economic crisis
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