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Mary Poindexter McLaughlin's avatar

Michael, I'm afraid I have very little to offer this conversation, as economics and I parted ways in college when I came down with Mononucleosis and was thrilled to take an Incomplete in Econ 101. I've never actually considered the fundamental (and now, I see) logical difference between goods and services, so it's going to take me a while to wrap my head around the topic you've laid out here so brilliantly.

The only thing I have to offer is this: your quote, "There is a difference between manufacturing FOR needs, and manufacturing needs" makes me wonder whether all of this will essentially resolve itself if, as James Kunstler suggests, we are headed for a serious de-technologizing day of reckoning. Perhaps the only things that will be manufactured will be absolute necessities, by virtue of a cataclysmic economic meltdown. Not that that's what I'm gunning for, mind you... :-)

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Enrique's avatar

This is a very interesting article. There are some smart ideas that I agree with. Firstly, the economics profession has failed in its predictions constantly. They are better historians than scientists. A new approach is necessary. Secondly, it is very challenging to differentiate services and goods and how to deal with them. Nowadays I think is clear that services are being transformed into commodities. Banking business used to be a human to human relationship but now its focus is selling products, and the consumers are treated as commodities. Thirdly, it is very relevant the differentiation between our needs and desires induced by the producers. Great key points to develop going forward.

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