Brillyant comments on On Walmart, And Who Bears Responsibility For the Poor - LessWrong

13 Post author: ChrisHallquist 27 November 2013 05:08AM

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Comment author: Eugine_Nier 26 November 2013 03:20:23AM -2 points [-]

But I'm admittedly more interested in anti-oppressionizing the world (a la your strawman progressive) and providing the basis for relatively economic equality

What do you mean by this? Would you support policies that make everyone worse of if the resulting distribution is more equal?

Comment author: Brillyant 26 November 2013 03:29:10PM 0 points [-]

It would depend on what you mean by "worse off". I wouldn't define it as less wealth, per se. Though even if I did define it in strictly economic terms, I'm not sure any policy or redistribution could "make everyone worse off", since a large portion of the world has zero wealth.

Comment author: Desrtopa 27 November 2013 04:37:22PM 5 points [-]

Though even if I did define it in strictly economic terms, I'm not sure any policy or redistribution could "make everyone worse off", since a large portion of the world has zero wealth.

In economic terms, with wealth defined more or less as "stuff people want," I find it hard to see how that could be the case, since it should follow that there's nothing that you could take away from them which would leave them worse off. Do you think that's accurate?

Comment author: Lumifer 26 November 2013 03:50:51PM 2 points [-]

I'm not sure any policy or redistribution could "make everyone worse off"

Look beyond the short term.

Comment author: Brillyant 26 November 2013 03:59:44PM 1 point [-]

Okay. Please help me understand a scenario where everyone was worse off in the long term because of the redistribution of wealth.

Comment author: Lumifer 26 November 2013 04:30:12PM *  3 points [-]

Take a simple scenario of two cities -- one is high-tech and one is a big stone-age village in the hills of New Guinea. The high-tech city is much richer.

You take half of the city's technological bounty and bring it over to New Guinea -- you redistributed wealth.

Fairly quickly the technology becomes completely useless in New Guinea, but the villagers liked it for the short period that it worked -- so they abandon working in the fields and build something resembling air strips with mock airplanes sitting on them...

Comment author: Brillyant 26 November 2013 04:57:04PM 1 point [-]

I must be misunderstanding. I can imagine many hypothetical scenarios where redistribution of wealth would have a net negative effect, in terms of technological advancement, economic growth, etc.

In the globe we currently inhabit, there exists some huge chunk of people who live in utter poverty and, therefore, have no wealth. In strictly economic terms, they cannot being doing any worse than they are right now. Therefore, any redistribution of wealth will either (a) not affect them or (b) benefit them. This seems to me to be true in the short term, as well as the long term.

Comment author: Lumifer 26 November 2013 06:32:35PM *  7 points [-]

there exists some huge chunk of people who live in utter poverty and, therefore, have no wealth.

That is not true. A small value does not equal zero. The number of people who literally have nothing is vanishingly small. Almost everyone who lives in utter poverty has some wealth, just little.

In strictly economic terms, they cannot being doing any worse than they are right now.

This is not true either. Consider a country like Haiti where a large chunk of population is very very poor. A few years ago they had a large earthquake. Beyond the loss of life, you are arguing that the poor did not become worse off in the aftermath of the earthquake. I don't think this is so.

Since you are talking about a large number of people, presumably you have in mind somebody like Chinese and Indian peasants. Do you really believe they "cannot being doing any worse than they are right now"?

Comment author: Brillyant 26 November 2013 09:06:17PM 0 points [-]

From my Wikipedia research, there were 923 million undernourished people in the world in 2008... where undernourishment is (roughly) a cumulative or average situation where the average person is not consuming enough nutrients to remain in good health while performing light physical activity.

Of course, I can dream up a "worse" situation. (Like they are malnourished and in a deep hole.) But I think that is beside the point. You have ~12-15% of the global population that is progressively dying via malnutrition. Any way which you define "wealth" in which these people 923 million people have non-zero wealth values is fine. I guess I'd technically agree. But practically, these people seem to have maxed out the possibilities of "worst", short of being in a deep hole. Or being in a natural disaster.

My view of wealth has something to do with abundance beyond the minimum requirements for living. If I have a ham sandwich, it's just hard for me to count that as wealth. And I guess a hungry guy with one ham sandwich could be doing worse in your view, correct?

Comment author: Lumifer 26 November 2013 09:44:30PM 4 points [-]

But practically, these people seem to have maxed out the possibilities of "worst"

Try Central Africa -- multiple civil wars, child soldiers, mass rapes as standard operating procedure, limbs hacked off as punishment for minor things, an occasional bona fide genocide...

Comment author: Brillyant 27 November 2013 02:50:55PM -1 points [-]

I'm quite confident now we aren't understanding one another. I'm aware of how bad things are in many parts of Africa.

My view is that redistribution of wealth and other oppression-proofing liberal policies are a good choice because of emergency situations like poverty in Africa, among other places. From a strictly economic standpoint, I think they've maxed out "bad". Clearly there are other bad things you can add to economic "worst" to make it "worse". Often times, these things are tangled up, if not caused directly by, poverty.

Tap out.

Comment author: JoshuaZ 26 November 2013 04:59:18PM 1 point [-]

Lumifer's point is that if you do an extreme enough redistribution, what will happen is that the whole technological system will just collapse.

Comment author: Lumifer 26 November 2013 06:35:12PM 2 points [-]

Well, my point was more limited -- in the example the rich high-tech city lost wealth (which they will replenish eventually) and the poor village didn't gain anything.

You can get into a deeper analysis which would involve e.g. motivations and incentives (what happens to people who get used to living on free handouts?), necessary concentration of capital (a semiconductor fab costs a few billions of dollars, who will build it?), etc. but it's a large topic.

Comment author: Dias 28 November 2013 12:26:09AM 3 points [-]

I'm not sure any policy or redistribution could "make everyone worse off", since a large portion of the world has zero wealth.

Easy. Kill everyone. Perfect equality has been achieved, so the egalitarians are happy, and everyone is worse off.

Or if you think some people's lives are currently worse than death, instead go for the (slightly more logistically challenging) option of torturing everyone equally.