Sequence summary: This is a series of 18 articles on the most fundamental concepts of economics: scarcity, opportunity cost, marginalism, and self-interest. These are the atoms, molecules, cells, the core things you need to have a grip on to move on with the science, and, if all goes well, we will move on, but first it is absolutely vital to get a strong grasp of the fundamentals. Though these are basic concepts, they are not easy to understand. If you want evidence of this, open a newspaper....
Thank goodness this wasn't a restaurant where you had to order only one thing and you never found out what all the other things on the menu tasted like. Harry hated that, it was like a torture chamber for anyone with a spark of curiosity: Find out about only one of the mysteries on this list, ha ha ha!
-HPMOR
A simple way to understand scarcity is to imagine you're trying to fit all your sand into a hole, but the hole is too small for all the sand to fit into.
It is, of course, possible to make the hole deeper or wider. It's also possible to compress the sand. However, either task can only be accomplished with the help of a mysterious element called "technology." The thing is, economists don't know what this element looks like or how to find it. Sometimes we look at all the people putting sand into holes and notice that the hole is bigger or the sand is more compressed, and we conclude "technology" must have happened. But it's not something we can predict or count on. So how are you going to get all of your sand into this hole?
You're not. Look, I don't know what's so special about this sand, and I don't know why you have to get it into this hole, but I know not all of it's going in. And that means if you want any of it to go in, you must leave some of it out.
That's scarcity: you must give up something to get anything.
It won't fit. Don't try to force it - it won't fit. And that means you're going to have to make a choice.
"Hold on," you say. "I don't really care which sand goes into the hole and which stays out here."
"Okay, okay, but this is economic sand. It's representative."
"Of what?"
"Take a closer look."
You give the sky (being uncertain of where this voice is coming from) a skeptical look, but you grudgingly crouch and inspect the sand (which stretches for miles around you). To your surprise, each grain is different from the rest. And, when you look really closely, each is a tiny, tiny gem, a reflection of something.
In some you see familiar faces. Others, you know just by looking, taste like chocolate, and smell like flowers, and feel like accomplishment, and smell like chlorine, a memory....
You pick up one. It is a pounding bass that sets your whole body vibrating. You drop it before your heart bursts out your chest.
It was your favorite techno remix of classical music.
Your are rubbing between your fingers the feeling of being curled up on the couch on a rainy night with your best friend watching a movie when a voice coughs.
"It's my values," you say, getting quickly to your feet.
"It's representative, like I said."
You look around. The sand seems to stretch on endlessly in all directions.
"There's a lot of it."
"Aren't you a marvelous creature? And to think it all fits between the sides of your skull."
"Some of it's out of reach."
"That's one of the problems, yes. And if the hole were big enough, all the sand, though it stretches on endlessly, would nevertheless fall into the hole."
"Can we abstract away from that, please? This is all a bit much."
"Certainly."
You open your eyes (though they hadn't been closed) and look around. Now you are in an empty room, the walls grey. There is a ball of sand that you know is made of all the sand from before, yet it is small and light enough to hold in your hands. There is no door. There is the hole, same as it ever was, only now you do not, you do not want to leave even a single grain of sand without.
"Can't I put some of it in, then take it out and put the rest in?"
"This hole, too, is an economic hole. It's representative."
You stare until it clicks. "Choice. There's no going back."
"Yep. The instant you fill the hole, it closes. And now you must make a choice."
Only so much will fit in...which means you have to leave some out. Take your time.
It's tough, but finally you separate the grains of sand you want to keep the most from the less important ones. The remaining sand will fit into the hole.
Notice something - once you've removed enough sand to fit the rest into the hole, there's no reason to remove any more. You only want to remove the minimum necessary to fit the sand into the hole.
So you remove the sand, and you pile the rest into the hole, and the hole closes, and then you suffocate to death in this doorless room....
So what's up with that hole, anyway? Notice how the fact that you couldn't fit all the sand into the hole forced you to make a choice. You could have removed this grain or that grain or made all the grains a little smaller. Or you could have thrown the sand down in despair and wept. But if you did that, you wouldn't have gotten any of the sand into the hole, so you did the smart thing, made a choice, and forwent some sand.
And what happens then? Why, the hole closes, and you can't go back and choose something different.
That's scarcity. You can't get everything, which means you have to give up something, which means you have to make a choice, and you can never go back, not entirely.
Next: defining scarcity....
I like you. Can we be facebook friends?
You really don't like HC?
Do you even know how you'd allocate your monthly fees if given the chance?
At the top of my list would be The Man From Earth. Have you seen it? It's wonderful. It turns me on intellectually. It really sucks that so few fictional content does so. I wonder why there's such a shortage of fictional content that excites my mind? Oh wait, I know why! It's because Netflix doesn't know what really does it for me.
Sure, I gave it 5 stars... but... am I supposed to give only one thing on Netflix 5 stars? Because... I've given other things 5 stars as well.
Perhaps Netflix should add more stars? Like, I would be able to give [The Man From] Earth 100 stars? Then I'd give all my other 5 star content say... 90 stars?
Is there an abundance of fictional content on Netflix that excites your mind? If so, please share your list! Maybe you've found some Easter Eggs that I've overlooked!
Are you really sure that I liked it? Just because you're allocating your time to me right now... does this necessarily indicate that you want to be facebook friends? Yes? poke poke
Right now we're consuming each other's content. Therefore... what? This implies that we both agree that each other's content is worth X amount of money? This implies we'll always want to consume each other's content? You + me = BFF?
That's the end of your story? Lauren Graham and Alexis Bledel just vanished into thin air? What a terrible ending! If your story was a Netflix movie then I wouldn't even allocate a penny to it. I'd boycott the heck out of it.
My story ended with Alexis Bledel playing the female lead in 50 Shades of Gray. I mean, acting in some movie that excites me even more than Earth does. Same thing with Lauren Graham.
Do you get my points?
Point 1. You don't know what I value... and neither does Netflix. Which means that neither do the content creators. I'm the only one who knows how many GGs I'd sacrifice for more Earths. For some reason you don't think that content creators need to have access to this information. Either you think the star rating system communicates more than it actually does... or you think Netflix is omniscient... or... you don't truly understand how or why consumer choice has extremely beneficial consequences.
Point 2. The thought of you playing chicken with all the other Netflix users is very humorous. Are you going to call me up and we'll have a Princess Bridian battle of wits?
satt: Have you ever heard of Plato, Aristotle, Socrates?
xero: Yes?
satt: Morons!
xero: Truly you have a dizzying intellect. You win! Your prisoners' dilemma is so good! I'll allocate my monthly Netflix fees to any content that you want!
Are you going to have every single Netflix user on your speed dial? Errr... when are you going to have the time to watch any of the content that you're tricking everybody into funding?
Point 3. If Netflix gave me the option to be a free-rider... then, if there weren't any strings attached, I'd choose this option. Most people would. The logical conclusion is that the content that we truly value would be undersupplied. So Netflix doesn't give us the option to free-ride. We have to pay a monthly fee. This solves the free-rider problem but it doesn't solve the problem of deriving people's priorities. This preference ranking problem can be easily solved simply by giving us the option to directly allocate our monthly fees. Why would consumer choice solve the priority problem? Because of opportunity cost.
Point 4. I uploaded this just for you... The Assumption Of Omniscience And Benevolence. Because... if you want to consume what I'm writing here... then you should want to consume what I write anywhere.
Afraid not, I don't use Facebook.
Oh, I was using HC only as an example. I've never seen it! Ditto The Man from Earth.
That might help, though people rate online videos in a very polarized way. YouTube used to have a 5-star rating system but switched to thumbs up vs. thumbs down because almost all the ratings were 1 or 5.
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