Mfs seem to have forgotten that Chinese GDP PPP is already higher than the US

  • GenderIsOpSec [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    Two accountants were walking through a park one day, when they came across a pile of dog shit.
    “I will pay you 50$ to eat that.” one said to the other.
    And thusly the continued on, until they came across another pile of dog shit.
    “I will pay you 50$ to eat that.” said the accountant who still had the taste of dog shit in his mouth.
    And on they went.
    “Hey.” said the other and stopped walking. “I feel like we both just ate dog shit and got nothing out of it.”
    The other accountant turned sharply towards his collague.

    “Nonsense! The national GDP rose by 100 dollars!”

    meaningless metric

  • Sodium_nitrideOP
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    Some peak comments

    The difference between democracy and dictatorship is like a ceiling light versus a flashlight. The ceiling light won’t shine evenly everywhere in a crowded room, some places might get less light and some places might be too obstructed to get any light at all, but all in all the room is brighter. Whereas with a flashlight you can point it at any part of the room you want and illuminate it, but the room as a whole isn’t as bright.

    I can feel my political understanding get better already. In taking this analogy seriously, I have come to understand that democracies … uh … huh. What is even the point here?

    In particular, democratic republics are more stable due to having transitions of power happen peacefully, regularly, and frequently, which helps reduce corruption and, ideally, prevents leaders from being too disconnected from the people they govern.

    Bro you live in the United States.

    Yes, but a lot of China’s troubles were going to happen. China stressed short-term GDP gains as opposed to playing the long game following 2008’s crash. This was while Hu Jintao was in charge. So, while a ton of funds got thrown at infrastructure projects, a lot of them were for little more than vanity, if even that. China built an extensive high-speed rail network. But it consistently loses money.

    Divine comedy.

    • TheVelvetGentleman [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      Whereas with a flashlight you can point it at any part of the room you want and illuminate it, but the room as a whole isn’t as bright.

      Many of my flashlights (I own 3, not trying to brag) are brighter than my ceiling lights by a huge margin and quite easily illuminate a whole room. This analogy only really “works” if you’re talking about a maglight from the 90s.

    • AstroStelar [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      China built an extensive high-speed rail network. But it consistently loses money.

      Literally a week ago (China State Railway Group includes high-speed rail as well):

      Source: https://www.scmp.com/economy/china-economy/article/3276871/chinas-railway-operator-brings-gravy-train-posting-profits-and-lowering-debt-ratios

      Also, companies like Amazon and Uber made huge losses for YEARS, so they could increase market share and eventually use their size to incur massive profits later.

      • Sodium_nitrideOP
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        I wouldn’t compare china’s railways to amazon or uber. They don’t need to make a profit in the first place. Dumbass neoliberals, despite proclaiming themselves as the clerics of capitalism don’t even seem to understand that the only bad kind of debt for a government is foreign debt. And china has a massive trade surplus. They don’t need to give a shit that the railways are making a loss.

      • EmoThugInMyPhase [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        I’m so incredibly confused by this argument lol. Do these people think the US is making any profits from roads? Oh right, the automakers and gas companies’ profits are what matters.

    • edge [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      That last one especially is insane. “They only focused on short term profit, but also they built a major infrastructure network in that time, but it’s functional instead of profitable so that’s bad actually.”. Just complete whiplash.

    • SoyViking [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      It is shit here but you should actually love it being shit because it is shit because if our librul democracy where you can choose between the polite imperialist right and the rude imperialist right. And because of that our shitty stuff is better than their good stuff.

    • edge [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      Whereas with a flashlight you can point it at any part of the room you want and illuminate it, but the room as a whole isn’t as bright.

      If you take a decently bright flashlight and put it on the floor pointing up, it pretty much lights the whole room. Even a phone’s flash does a decent job at it.

    • Rom [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      In particular, democratic republics are more stable due to having transitions of power happen peacefully, regularly, and frequently, which helps reduce corruption and, ideally, prevents leaders from being too disconnected from the people they govern.

      And how is that working out in practice?

      • EmoThugInMyPhase [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        It’s so stable that I have to screech at people to vote for a lady or else they’ll be executed in gas chambers by Dumpf and the world ends due to one person voted into power.

    • YOuLibsWoulD [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      The difference between democracy and dictatorship is like a ceiling light versus a flashlight. The ceiling light won’t shine evenly everywhere in a crowded room, some places might get less light and some places might be too obstructed to get any light at all, but all in all the room is brighter. Whereas with a flashlight you can point it at any part of the room you want and illuminate it, but the room as a whole isn’t as bright.

      Once again failing to understand theory.

    • EmoThugInMyPhase [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      In particular, democratic republics are more stable due to having transitions of power happen peacefully, regularly, and frequently, which helps reduce corruption and, ideally, prevents leaders from being too disconnected from the people they govern.

      This is pretty funny because I’ve seen brainwormed westerners write about how China is incredibly safe and stable, but because it’s ultra authoritarian so everyone is monitored and people are too scared to act out

    • SkingradGuard [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      democratic republics are more stable

      And yet every election cycle you have to trot out how the bad candidate is a “threat to democracy” and today’s election is the “most important of our lifetime”.

      Then there’s also the issue of culture war that the bourgeois media and political class weaponizes, pitting worker against worker. The rhetoric is then directly responsible for violence and polticial instability of you so-called “stable” liberalism.

      Ah yes, very stable.

    • heggs_bayer [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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      The difference between democracy and dictatorship is like a ceiling light versus a flashlight. The ceiling light won’t shine evenly everywhere in a crowded room, some places might get less light and some places might be too obstructed to get any light at all, but all in all the room is brighter. Whereas with a flashlight you can point it at any part of the room you want and illuminate it, but the room as a whole isn’t as bright.

      I can feel my political understanding get better already. In taking this analogy seriously, I have come to understand that democracies … uh … huh. What is even the point here?

      Activating my lib-O-vision, I interpret this as saying that democracy leads to less efficient decision making due to the overhead of including everyone (the bit about some parts getting less light and some none at all) but everyone ultimately benefits (the entire room being brighter). Dictatorship has more efficient decision making because it’s only one person calling the shots (the place the flashlight is pointed gets very illuminated), but only a small part of the room (the dictator’s favored) gets illuminated by the person holding the flashlight (the dictator).

  • Assian_Candor [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    GDP is bullshit anyway, if a storm hits a city causing 200B of damage the repairs get counted to GDP but the destruction does not.

    It’s just a totally phony propaganda number with mutable definitions

    • xiaohongshu [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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      It’s not propaganda though, it’s related to how the strength of a currency is determined.

      The best example here is post-Soviet Russia, a country with almost no financial capital. During the USSR times, the industrial capacity of the Soviet Union was at least ~50-60% that of the US. In other words, the Soviet economy was at least half the size of the US in industrial terms.

      The Soviet ruble was set at ~0.6 RUB/USD in the 1980s.

      Immediately after the dissolution of the USSR, the West forced Russia to adopt GDP (Gross Domestic Product) to calculate the size of its economy. The USSR had used GNP (Gross National Product) for its calculation, which did not include financial assets such as the stock market, land and rent value etc.

      When converted from GNP into GDP, the size of the Russian economy remained nearly the same (difference was only less than 2%, because post-Soviet Russia had no finance capital). However, when compared to the US GDP, the US economy was suddenly many times larger than the Russian economy. The value of the ruble plunged from 0.6 RUB/USD to ~120 RUB/USD by 1993 (200 times drop). This allowed Western capitalists to come in and scoop up post-Soviet Russian industries on the cheap. Mass poverty ensued.

      When Russia defaulted in 1998 in the wake of the Asian Financial Crisis, the value of the ruble was 6000 RUB/USD (10000 times drop compared to the Soviet times), at which point the value had maxed out and the value of the ruble had to be reset. By then, the entire Russian industries had already been plundered.

      This is the power of finance capital. You can say it’s fictitious value, but it has real consequences on the real world. This is how Western financial imperialism wreaks havoc on the Global South, and subject them to economic neo-colonialism even when the West has de-industrialized itself.

      Europe plundered so much of the as yet non-financialized post-Soviet Russian assets that they garnered vast amount of finance capital capable of forming the European Union in 1993 and the euro currency zone in 1999, a currency aspired to directly compete with the US dollar. Always remember that European capital came from plundering Soviet industries, and post-Soviet states are a few of the worst victims of Western imperialism.

      • Assian_Candor [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        I don’t feel like having a huge convo on this atm but thanks sincerely for your post which makes good points. I just don’t want you casting your pearls before swines lol

        One thing I will say is that the fact that finance capital was able to change the way the Russians calculated the size of their economies to include bullshit like stock markets before going on to raid them is exactly what I mean when I say it’s a bullshit made-up propaganda measure. Maybe that’s not it’s sole intended purpose but it is definitely used for that purpose. A dollar spent on a factory in china is counted the same as a dollar made from creating NFT apes.

        It’s a fake measure with real consequences in other words. I also don’t think western economists know their asses from their elbows, and spending 15 minutes in an econ 101 class illustrates why. Following that shit to it’s conclusion basically leads you to ancapistan.

        • xiaohongshu [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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          I agree with you it’s complete bullshit metric, but since the world has decided to adopt it as a measurement, it’s real as far as real world consequences are concerned.

          It’s like debt (promise) - if a society has decided that a promise made has to be kept, then it’s real and needs to be fulfilled, even if it’s just someone’s words that are not tangible.

    • poor people getting a nutritious meal and shelter does nothing for GDP and therefore bad.

      building a kill house to train heavily armed and militarized police murder squads against your own citizens is good for GDP and therefore good.

      neoliberal economic theory: it’s just that easy.

    • Sodium_nitrideOP
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      I presume that whoever owns the infrastructure will be able to report the losses and so reduce the GDP calculations. Damage to homes will probably also play a part in the calculations as their values are tracked by banks and the government. For smaller personal assets, I don’t think the value would be tracked. Also, the 200B damages counting towards GDP could have been spent elsewhere, so the storm wouldn’t really increase GDP. It would also reduce personal incomes of city dwellers.

      As much as we like to shit on bourgeois economists, I think even they at least know better than to pull a broken window fallacy with GDP calculations, since that is something you are taught even in econ 101.

      The real thing that (nominal) GDP measures is purchasing power of countries relative to other countries on the international markets at current prices (assuming frictionless trade). I do think it is a useful number to denote a few things, like, 1. is the country in a recession, 2. where does this country stand wrt imperialism, 3. how developed the country is.

      • FuckyWucky [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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        infrastructure is considered a ‘stock’ you measure it at any point in time.

        GDP is a ‘flow’, total value of final goods and services measured over a year. so if a country has a bridge worth $100b, that won’t be included in GDP since it already exists, it won’t be shown when its destroyed/depreciates either. it is only measured for the year its built, no other year.

        so if a storm hits, people lose jobs, homes, reduce consumption, GDP falls. to counter some of the effects, the Government injects money through jobs programs, stimulus checks, ppp loans etc which prevents some of the fall.

        • Sodium_nitrideOP
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          GDP is a ‘flow’, total value of final goods and services measured over a year. so if a country has a bridge worth $100b, that won’t be included in GDP since it already exists, it won’t be shown when its destroyed/depreciates either. it is only measured for the year its built, no other year.

          Yeah, I don’t know why I said that the destruction of the bridge would be counted. For GDP metrics, the product/service is assumed to have been consumed entirely in the year it was sold.

  • barrbaric [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    The modern concept of GDP was first developed by Simon Kuznets for a 1934 U.S. Congress report, where he warned against its use as a measure of welfare

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    Hilarious because I’m reading “The Long Twentieth Century” which basically argues that there is a cycle of which power leads the capitalist world before being replaced by another capitalist power. Each power (Genoa, Netherlands, Great Britain, USA) began with an expansion of commercial and commodity production, which then reaches the limit of profits, before turning all excess capital towards financial expansion. Each financial expansion makes the capitalist class incredibly rich and prolongs their dominance, but sews the seeds for their end. It’s during this financial expansion that the next capitalist power starts their commercial expansion and becomes “the world’s factory.”

    The author shows that America’s financial turn was during the late 70s and especially 80s. He doesn’t draw this conclusion, but it’s clear to me that China is the current capitalist power that’s taken over the commercial role in shipping and manufacturing. Even though I think China is an AES, they still have a capitalist economy.

    We always joke that the commies in China do capitalism better than capitalists, but it’s demonstrably true. America has dominance right now due to financial networks, but that arrangement won’t last much longer with the material dominance of the Chinese economy.

    • Sodium_nitrideOP
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      I am also reading the long 20th century. Haven’t gotten that deep in it yet, but yeah, China does seem poised to become the new and final hegemon, given the historical trend of each capitalist hegemon being larger than the previous one.

      I do kind of expect the book’s analysis to be of limited quality, since they seem to be working off a bizarre and unmaterialistic definition of capitalism based on political power and commerce (a pre-marxist understanding). Maybe as I read along it will be cleared up.

      • GoodGuyWithACat [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        Could you expand on what you mean by “unmaterialistic definition of capitalism”? I think the entire thesis is built around understanding the MCM cycle, and it says capitalism only becomes systemic to the entire mode of production under the British industrial expansion.

        • Sodium_nitrideOP
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          I really haven’t read much of the book, which I should finish ASAP, so I am not really criticizing it, just expressing preliminary concerns.

          it says capitalism only becomes systemic to the entire mode of production under the British industrial expansion.

          This is kind of my problem here. Capitalism or capitalists are not something that meaningfully exist before the industrial revolution [1]. However, the book talks a lot about capitalist logics of state building, capitalist agencies, capitalist power and so on that existed well before the industrial revolution. This is because capital is conceived of as money with the power of expansion, either through MCM’ or MM’.

          We also are introduced to Braudel’s conception of an anti-market of predators which is “the real home of capitalism”. This layer presides over a market layer of “horizontal communications” and “automatic coordination usually links supply, demand and prices”. This model seems to contradict the logic of the book, as money has the power of expansion via the market (second layer), and the third layer only emerges after the industrial revolution.

          In either case, I feel like the concept of capitalism is being used unclearly. Furthermore, despite quoting Marx quite a bit, the author never even mentions labor value (or exchange value). The amount of focus on wage-labor, agriculture and demographics is also low, which I also find strange given the centrality of these things to any materialist analysis of world-capitalism.

          All in all, it seems to me as if this book is about the inter-state politics of capitalism (a fine topic of study, I’m not saying it isn’t), but it seems one sided. Maybe reading further in the book will clear things up for me.

          [1] Up until that point, almost all of the surplus of any society is the amount of food leftover after all of the peasants/agricultural slaves are fed. This can be used to maintain a buffer, and feed a military/non-food producing portion of the population, but the accumulation of labor value in large quantities over many years can only occur when most of the population is not producing a good which perishes quickly.

          • GoodGuyWithACat [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            Capitalism or capitalists are not something that meaningfully exist before the industrial revolution

            I disagree here. The nascent of capitalism was grown within the old order of feudalism in small scale. Burghers/bourgeoisie operated within cities that were distinct in economy and governance from the rest of feudal world. Guilds and city councils were bourgeoisie organizations which codified the accumulation of capital. They weren’t producing on a factory scale, but they weren’t independent artisans either. Guild masters had dozens of employees under them who produced artisan goods in exchange for wage labor. While the majority of the population were agricultural workers, within select cities the urban population would turn surplus into capital. If it’s a matter of definition you could call this proto-capitalism because it wasn’t systemic to the entire economy, but a capitalist logic certainly dominated those select cities which allowed them to accumulate so much wealth. But I think if you have a hard cut off on capitalism beginning only with the industrial revolution, you’re losing a lot of relevant conversation.

            All in all, it seems to me as if this book is about the inter-state politics of capitalism

            And I don’t really disagree with this. The author doesn’t go into too much detail about how things are produced.

            • Sodium_nitrideOP
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              I know that the bourgeoisie existed before the industrial revolution and had their own organizations. I would certainly call these proto-capitalistic. But I would not call the prevailing social order itself capitalism, much in the same way I wouldn’t call the current social order socialism, even though proto-socialist elements exist today. Since the elements themselves also only exist as parts of a whole, I wouldn’t call proto-capitalist elements as capitalistic, because the elements of a fully capitalist society are different from the elements that will later evolve into capitalism. For example, in regards to guilds, most guilds before capitalism proper did not rely on wage labor (as wage labor was heavily looked down upon before capitalism as being unfit for men). Wage labor could only explode with primitive accumulation, and only with the formation of reserve armies of labor does it take on the monstrous form that it has under capitalism.

              If I come across as arguing over semantics, it’s just that I find the way that the book uses the word “capitalism” confusing. I have pre-concieved notions of what the word means, and am not sure which ones I should drop or keep when reading a passage from the book.

              a capitalist logic certainly dominated those select cities which allowed them to accumulate so much wealth

              Yes, I do think this is a relevant dynamic.

  • GrouchyGrouse [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    Reddit style comment on news like this:

    I’m using “Rich Guy” metrics to interpret the economy from my position of “Not A Rich Guy” in a country with 40+ years of growing socioeconomic stratification that doesn’t actually make anything except guns smuglord

  • TreadOnMe [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    Yeah, Im sure that basing trends off of a couple years of economic data as opposed to a literal decade of trends has never backfired.

    As well, yeah, they have stopped building so many houses, but as others have said, GDP is a bullshit number anyways.

  • peeonyou [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    China’s GDP PPP is something like $24 trillion and the US is like $18 trillion… something along those lines I heard recently

  • GnastyGnuts [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    I wish I had saved and archived the thread where they though GDP was the sum of all money on earth. Makes the neoliberal fixation with GDP even funnier.