billswift comments on Unteachable Excellence - Less Wrong
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By the way -- (only very tangentially related to the topic of this post, I'll admit, but hopefully just enough to pass muster) -- does anybody happen to know a good introduction to the theory behind this statement? Are there any introductory textbooks (microecon? macroecon?) that make the case, for example? Think of me as a very naive reader, who would be tempted to ask "clearly it is people doing actual work who create wealth, how does everybody reinvesting get people to do more / more useful work" and would like to hear the actual answer that convinced you in the first place.
Thanks! :-)
Reinvestment is necessary to provide the tools for doing anything more than basic subsistence. Without the factories and tools provided by reinvested capital the "people doing actual work" wouldn't be more productive than a hunter/gatherer/stone-chipper or, at best, a Medieval serf.
Two good, readable books on economics are David Friedman's "Hidden Order: The Economics of Everyday Life" (a popularization of his Price Theory text) and Thomas Sowell's "Basic Economics". Sowell's text is amazingly clear and uses no math at all. Economics is one field where textbooks aren't superior - they bury the important principles under masses of usually useless detail.