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						Moving the discussion  away from the rando thread
 
 
 
	But  this isn't working.  Tax or donation funded institutions have not  solved the problem and the rhino will absolutely go extinct if this  doesn't change.  The same scenario has happened before, and the  conclusion is basically that conservation is a product of creating a  legal market out of the product.  I wish I could agree with you that we  should just be morally better, but we've been trying that and it  demonstrably does not work.
		
			
			
				
					  Originally Posted by rong   Not everything needs to have a price. This is fault  of capitalism. Why can't we just not hunt or kill rhinos? If you're  suggesting that allowing breeding and/or hunting is the most efficient  way in terms of resources required to save the rhino then you are  probably correct. But it's not always about efficiency. 
 
 
 
 
	I think this is a false view of  the role money plays.  (1) Money effectively represents morals better  than the democratic vote.  Votes are far more indirect and abstract.   (2)  "Those with the most money" don't have nearly as much influence as  people think, and because you have money you have influence unlike you  would without money.
		
			
			
				I mean you could  probably make a market for killing humans for sport, or cats and dogs or  w/e, but we as a society get to have a say on what is or isn't  acceptable. That's the point of a democracy. This is a prime example of  allowing money to decide things and money has no sense of right or  wrong. ethics and morality don't come in to play. If money is deciding  things, then those with the most money have the most sway and that is  huge part of the problem.
			
		 
 This fits in the analogy Caplan uses about how a surgeon who thinks he's  better drunk has to change his belief because of consequences yet  people who believe in inconsequential abstractions (like God exists) can  go their entire lives believing the wrong thing.  Democratic votes are  indirect abstractions compared to the far more direct and consequential  product created by money.  "Voting with you dollar" is way better.  You  get to do it everyday in ways that obviously matter, but with democratic  voting, you rarely do it and it's always a mishmash of muddy  abstractions.
 
 As for a market in killing humans for sport, I  think you'd be surprised at how much the money hates that idea.  Look at  our current world.  The closest thing we have to "killing humans for  sport" that is run by a market is the NFL.  Then we have wars, which are  "killing humans for morals" and run by non-capitalist authoritarian  institutions.  I don't think making a sport of killing humans is a  concern, and I believe the real concern is how needlessly humans are  killed for anti-capitalist morals
 
 
 
 
	That's the current belief, and it has failed.   It's colossally more expensive than what people are willing to pay.  It  would be easy and cheap as pumpkin pie to save the rhino by making a  legal market out of the horns, but the species is going extinct.  We absolutely need capitalism to solve this problem because the costs of doing it without capitalism are way too high.  Employing enough rhino-policemen would just be super expensive and all of us would rather let the rhinos die.  Pricing things through morals without letting supply and demand work is the reason why the Soviet  Union failed
		
			
			
				Another approach to the rhino issue could be to employ a ton of  people to protect them. This would give lots of people in that area of  Africa a job, which would increase economic prosperity there and  therefore reduce the need for Africans to slaughter rhinos to earn  money. It would cost more but that doesn't mean it isn't a better  option.
			
		 
 
 
 
 
 
	Caplan covered this well in the  lecture.  If a poor person sells his kidney to feed himself, he is  better off.  He chose to do it.  If it is illegal for him to do, he  starves.  One of these outcomes is better than the other
		
			
			
				Again, this would undoubtedly force some people into having to  sell a kidney. The combination of private healthcare and the opportunity  to sell a kidney would mean a ton of poor people with a sick kid now  have only one kidney. SO those born wealthy don't have to sell a kidney  to save their sick kid where as those born poor do. This is not a good  way to improve living standards. We have all these resources squirreled  away at the top that could solve a ton of issues but rather than  distributing them in a more equitable way you're suggestion is let the  poor sell their kidneys.
			
		 
 About  "money squirreled away at the top", it isn't true.  There is only a tiny  amount of idle cash in the world.  What percentage of Microsoft's  capital do you think is "idle" or should be redistributed?  My guess is  <1%.  Redistribution of any significant chunk of the company's  capital changes everything else down the line.  If the theory of  "squirreled away money" was true, bankruptcy wouldn't be something that  happens all the freaking time.  Every business is already operating on  the margins.  Start redistributing capital and you start seeing Google  doesn't have the capital reserves that allow them to work RnD on cars or  glass or fiber, and we all suffer.  It would be worse than that though, as reduced reserves and investment capital would have negative effects on employment.  Some redistribution can have positive effects on demand, but only when they don't extract much from supply.  Regardless, supply-side reforms are the main way we know how to increase demand.
 
 
 
	This data is meaningless since it doesn't  account for subsidies correctly and treats capital income the same as  wage income.  These studies have been rife with such egregious flaws  that they're telling us the wrong story by a lot.
		
			
			
				1) Let's begin with the economics. A new study    by economists Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman shows that the richest   one percent of US households have almost doubled their share of the   nation's wealth since the 1960s. One percent of the country owns more   than 40 percent of the wealth — and that share is rising. 
2) In contrast, the bottom 90 percent of the country owns less than 30 percent of the nation's wealth. 
 3) If you look closely, the rise of the one percent is actually  the  rise of the 0.1 percent. In the 1960s, this group owned about 10   percent of the nation's wealth. By 2012, they owned more than 20   percent.
			
		 
 In addition,  like I said, inequality tells us nothing.  Think of the cancer cure  analogy.  Things that increase wealth also increase inequality.  The  left-wing is making a big mistake by caring about inequality.  We should  care about poverty.  That's the real problem
 
 
 
	These numbers tell us nothing about  economic incidence of tax, only legal incidence.  The data is basically  cherry-picked to make an agenda.
		
			
			
				4) It's well known that as the rich have gotten richer, the top  income  tax rate has gone down. In 1960, the top marginal tax rate was 91   percent. It's now 39.6 percent. 
5) Similarly, as the wealthy have gotten wealthier, the estate tax —   which taxes inheritances — has been declawed. In 1960, the tax began at   estates of $60,000, and the top rate, which hit estates above   $10,000,000, was 77 percent. Today the estate tax doesn't even begin   until the estate is worth $5,340,000 — and after that, the top tax rate   is just 40 percent.
			
		 
 
 
	What you propose is what we have been doing for a  long time, and it isn't working.  Let's try capitalism instead.  Let's  make it so placing values on everything allows us to vote many times  everyday for at the right price and apply our morals effectively.  This  other democratic republic method only lets you vote once a year and  mushes everything together at once.  Democracy works better than  dictatorships because the accountability institutions have towards the  people is greater, and capitalism works way better than democracy for  the same reasons.
		
			
			
				Capitalism isn't needed to ensure the best people make decisions. That's  the point of democracy in itself. Not that politicians get voted in  because they follow popular opinion but because the populace believe  they will make the best decisions on our behalf. And certainly not  because they got huge financial backing from some wealthy folk and now  have to return the favour with policy.
			
		 
 
 
	Financial elites don't have much say over this.   Capitalism fixes education by letting capital flow where it is most  valued.  I hope we can disavow ourselves from the notion that the rich  have so much control over things under capitalism.  The irony is the  only solution we have for eliminating the influence of the rich is  capitalism
		
			
			
				I can see no reason why capitalism would choose to solve this, a great  education for everyone is not in the best interests of teh financial  elite.
			
		 
 The short of how capitalism fixes education is by  reducing costs and raising costs based on the law of supply and demand,  and people distributing capital in consequential ways.  Most of our  current education system doesn't have much consequence, and that's why  we have super crazy things like students going into major debt to get  degrees that don't do much.
 
 Capitalism has turned hunks of metal into cars.  It fixing education wouldn't be that difficult.
 
 
 
	I'll repeat what I said  earlier because I think it's important.  It isn't that we have tried  capitalism and it worked in some ways but not others, but that every  area we have tried it, capitalism has worked wonderfully, and people are  mistakenly blaming problems caused by statism on capitalism.  What we  need is a move towards capitalism, not away.  Capitalism is the next  evolution of society.
		
			
			
				As I said above, I think capitalism makes sense as part of the evolution  of society but it reaches a point where it no longer benefits society,  or maybe just isn't optimal.
			
		 
 
 
	This  is a fantastic pro-capitalism argument.  The major influence of the  wealthy is a product of legal institutions creating regulatory capture.   Nothing crushes the rich like capitalism, because it thwarts regulatory capture and increases competition from all sides.
		
			
			
				But as the same time it is inevitable in a capitalistic society that  wealth gets accumulated by very few people and those people then have a  huge incentive to use that wealth to ensure they never lose it and that  includes using that wealth and power to effect policy.
			
		 
 Do a causality chain  of private prisons and you'll find that it isn't because of wealth that  they exist, but because of mandatory taxation by legal institutions.   Private entities only have opportunity to profit on capital distortions  like imprisonment because they can lobby unaccountable policy institutions.   Take away those institutions, and imprisonment loses its profitability,  and there are magically no more private prisons.
 
 Private prisons  are not a story of the wealthy, but a story of regulatory capture  created by unaccountable revenue streams (taxes) that provide supply for  otherwise un-valued lobbying.
 
 
 
	Many people are just that desperate.  I think it is morally abhorrent to not let people who value selling a kidney to do so.  In our current system, there is no value in charity or welfare benefits for these people, so the only way their lot in life can improve is if we let them do something about it.  Besides, charity and welfare benefits create all  sorts of other problems due to disincentive to work.  I hugely support a robust welfare  system that incentivizes results.  Also I read a study a while ago that suggests that one of the main reasons Africa hasn't pulled itself out of poverty is because of charities like Salvation Army.  Basically, indigenous clothing businesses were pushed out of the market by Americans giving away clothes because they thought they were helping, and this stymied a burgeoning economic revolution.
		
			
			
				More about kidneys, how many are even needed. I'm pretty sure if we  start at a decent price supply will outweigh demand by a huge amount and  good old demand and supply would probably get it down to about $1,000  per kidney. You'd have to be desperate to be considering that.
			
		 
 BTW,  $1000 in poor areas would revolutionize the world.  A recent study  showed that just a small distribution of capital to dirt-poor Africans  increased their capital growth by many times over.
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