Hoe_Math, (All);
This conversation ‘has legs’.
Economic prose is structured by the logic of accounting. It is therefore a descriptive grammar (logic). A system of measurement. It is, (and Hoe Math is doing a service pointing this out) organized under the presumption of growth of mankind since the 15th century – the age of economies – where things will keep getting better.
So just as prior to the world wars and marxism, we thought in moral terms, and postwar and post-marxism we think in economic terms, economics carries this ‘premise’ with it.
As such we fail FULL ACCOUNTING, of all sorts of assets – usually called INFORMAL capital, like mindfulness, neighborliness, civic pride and virtue, the family, friends, and the civil society. And as such, we fail to measure the cost of “Bowling Alone” (Look it up). In other words we get what we measure.
Hoe Math is elegantly, in his now iconic style, pointing out this absurdity.
Here is how I frame ie:
Economics in practice fails where it refuses to measure what is unwanted: externalities, dependencies, moral hazards, and suppressed reciprocity. These failures originate in:
– The institutionalization of irreciprocity,
– The concealment of time and capital consumption,
– The devaluation of human and social capital,
– And the aggregation of harm beyond visibility, consent, or repair.
And economics without negative principles is merely a system of accounting for profitable deceit.
Economics should consists of:
(a) The “One Lesson”: “accounting for all costs seen and unseen” (internal and external, borne and forgone, material and opportunity).
(b) Objectivity: value neutrality. All value is subjective. But that only means incommensurable. It does not mean that the accumulation of negative value (impositions, burdens, harms) does not exist. Only that the value is subjective.
(b) The tendency toward disequilibrium (advantage) and equilibrium (exhaustion of advantage). Like all other creatures we exhaust opportunities, and more so because we adapt by mind and behavior instead of just by genetics.
NEGATIVE PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS
(Failures of measurement, incentive alignment, and reciprocity)
The Seen and Unseen but Unwanted
We account for the seen (market transactions) and unseen (opportunity costs), but we often exclude the unwanted—especially long-term, indirect, and morally or politically inconvenient costs.
These include social decay, dependency, decline in human capital, institutional fragility, and strategic vulnerability.
They are omitted because they are hard to price, slow to manifest, or because someone profits from their concealment.
Externalities as Institutional Failure
Externalities are not just “market failures”; they are institutional suppressions of reciprocity.
Negative externalities = costs imposed without consent, compensation, or commensurability.
The tolerance of externalities is often by design—serving interests of producers, states, or rentiers.
Most externalities are hidden in diffused harm: moral decay, demographic decline, intergenerational costs.
Institutionalization of Irreciprocity
Institutions, especially states and financial systems, evolve to legalize, normalize, and obscure irreciprocity.
Subsidies without behavioral requirement (e.g., self-discipline, contribution) shift costs to others.
Monetary policy, credit expansion, and regulation often centralize rents while externalizing risks.
Welfare for the elite = asset inflation and regulatory capture.
Welfare for the poor = dependency and consumption of commons.
Suppression of Time Preference Signaling
Artificially low interest rates suppress time preference signals, mispricing risk and distorting capital formation.
Encourages malinvestment, short-termism, consumerism.
Disincentivizes savings, self-regulation, and intergenerational stewardship.
Leads to capital consumption disguised as prosperity.
Devaluation of Human Capital and Social Trust
Market systems do not price non-market goods unless failure becomes catastrophic.
Family formation, fertility, cultural continuity, trust, beauty, and honor are consumed as free goods until collapse.
Because they are not priced, they are not preserved; because they are not preserved, society degrades.
Asymmetries of Information and Accountability
Markets assume rational actors with access to information—but power differentials invert this premise.
Producers manipulate perception (advertising), incentives (finance), and beliefs (media, academia).
Consumers are not autonomous agents but targets of psychological manipulation.
Accountability is asymmetrical: small actors are punished for minor errors, large actors rewarded for systemic harm.
Moral Hazards Hidden by Aggregation
Aggregation hides causal chains. GDP, stock indices, inflation measures—are composite illusions.
National metrics can rise while population health, sovereignty, and fertility collapse.
We measure what’s easy, not what’s meaningful. And the easy is often what the state or market wants to measure.
Moral hazards (privatized gain, socialized loss) are hidden in these aggregates.
Suppression of Natural Law by Incentive Structures
Reciprocity, sovereignty, and self-determination are violated by incentives misaligned with natural constraints.
Systems built on asymmetric information, fiat currency, and bureaucratic insulation cannot converge on truth or fairness.
They reward deceit, delay, and diffusion of responsibility—contravening the natural law of cooperation.
Affections
Curt Doolittle
NLI
Reply addressees: @ItIsHoeMath