Theme: Productivity

  • And that is why growth is limited by commodity money (and gold standards) and wh

    And that is why growth is limited by commodity money (and gold standards) and why they failed repeatedly in history, and even more so once the industrial revolution kicked in.


    Source date (UTC): 2023-10-17 16:19:46 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1714315275691073905

    Reply addressees: @William68332190 @neoCamelist

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1714314771091079188

  • Yes and those currencies will absorb the shortage without having contributed to

    Yes and those currencies will absorb the shortage without having contributed to production – as rent seeking. Why should anyone, in particular the public, pay you interest instead of the treasury at lower interest?

    You have alternative to currency. you have commodities and…


    Source date (UTC): 2023-10-17 16:18:32 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1714314965799117016

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1714313088202371162

  • CORPORATIONS AND RETURNS –“Most corporations have a negative return on investme

    CORPORATIONS AND RETURNS
    –“Most corporations have a negative return on investment when adjusting for inflation.”– @henge_j

    Well, these things are true – in part. In fact, the hard part of any business is the multipliers you produce on inflation. Your corner gas station <1%, your grocery store 1%, half of the small businesses fail (but half of them don’t and if you want to become wealthy building a small business and selling it is the most reliable way to do so. The vast majority of deca-millionaires achieve wealth by this method of small business growth), most businesses meet or beat the rate of inflation when it’s ‘normal ‘ in the 3% range.

    But that doesn’t mean that the fundamental conflict between inflation and the shortage of money, and the capacity for state debt, isn’t the fundamental problem faced by all people in history. It only means that with just over a century of experience we haven’t fully separated the treasury from the government as we have the courts, and constrained governments from effectively buying votes or donors with the power of debt.

    Now, how do we do this without currency? We do it currently with oil markets.

    There is no escape from the game of maintaining monetary velocity to maintain purchasing power (value), while at the same time maximizing possible investments in speculative search for returns on investment, especially when returns on investment continue to increase in time horizon. This means that both military competitive investment at the top, infrastructure investment, education investment, and the spectrum of industrial to consumer investments at the bottom, are necessary at all times. And it also means, quite to the dismay of the financial, isurance, pension private sector, that they provide consumers no value that wouldn’t better be provided at national scale cutting out the middleman, and providing the treasury with income.

    Here are the round numbers at scale for the USA.

    EBITDA DEFINED
    EBITDA stands for Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization. It is a financial metric that measures a company’s profitability by calculating its earnings before accounting for non-cash expenses such as depreciation and amortization, taxes, and interest payments. This is the true measure of the profitability of a business from operations. The difference between EBITA and Net Profit is the cost of money and taxation.

    EBITDA Margin Ranges by Sector, High to Low
    Software & Services:
    High: 40-50%
    Average: 30-40%
    Low: 20-30%

    Pharmaceuticals & Healthcare:
    High: 35-45%
    Average: 25-35%
    Low: 15-25%

    Telecommunications:
    High: 35-45%
    Average: 25-35%
    Low: 15-25%

    Real Estate:
    High: 30-40%
    Average: 20-30%
    Low: 10-20%

    Consumer Goods:
    High: 25-35%
    Average: 20-30%
    Low: 10-20%

    Energy & Utilities:
    High: 20-30%
    Average: 15-25%
    Low: 5-15%

    Financial Services:
    High: 20-30%
    Average: 10-20%
    Low: 5-10%

    Manufacturing & Industrial:
    High: 20-30%
    Average: 10-20%
    Low: 5-10%

    Transport & Logistics:
    High: 15-25%
    Average: 10-15%
    Low: 5-10%

    Retail & Wholesale:
    High: 10-20%
    Average: 5-10%
    Low: 0-5%

    EXPLANATION BY SECTOR
    Public Companies
    Indices as Indicators: The long-term performance of stock market indices like the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ often outpace inflation. For instance, the average annual return for the S&P 500 has been around 10% before inflation since its inception.
    Dividend Yields: Some mature companies might not show a high rate of growth but offer dividends that, when considered as part of total ROI, can also outpace inflation.
    Blue Chips: Established companies with stable earnings, often called “blue chips,” usually have a long track record of beating inflation.
    Market Timing: Returns can also depend heavily on market timing. Buying during a downturn and selling during an upturn can beat inflation by a significant margin.

    Small Businesses
    Survival Rates: A significant number of small businesses fail within the first few years, offering negative ROI.
    Capital Efficiency: Some small businesses require less capital up-front and can generate ROI more quickly, making it easier to outpace inflation.
    Niche Markets: Small businesses serving niche markets often have a better chance of generating high ROI, provided the niche is profitable.

    Sector-Specific
    Tech & Innovation: Industries rooted in technology and innovation have generally shown strong growth and ROI, particularly in the 21st century.
    Traditional Industries: Sectors like manufacturing or utilities often offer moderate ROI but are usually stable.
    Cyclical Industries: Sectors like real estate or commodities can provide returns that either vastly outperform or underperform inflation, depending on economic cycles.

    Global Perspective
    Emerging Markets: Countries with rapidly growing economies can offer investment opportunities with ROIs that easily outpace inflation. However, these come with high risk.
    Currency Risks: Inflation must be considered not just for the country of the investment but also against any currency risk that might negate high ROI.

    Time Frame
    Short-Term: Due to market volatility, short-term ROI may not consistently beat inflation.
    Long-Term: Historically, long-term investments have a better chance of beating inflation, as markets tend to grow over time.

    Economic Conditions
    Boom Periods: In a robust economy, more companies will likely offer an ROI that outpaces inflation.
    Recessions: During economic downturns, fewer companies will likely beat inflation, and some might even offer negative ROI.

    Reply addressees: @henge_j


    Source date (UTC): 2023-10-17 16:01:11 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1714310598870134786

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1714295243141480909

  • THE PROBLEM: INFLATION VS SHORTAGE OF MONEY It’s not clear that inflation that d

    THE PROBLEM: INFLATION VS SHORTAGE OF MONEY

    It’s not clear that inflation that does not impact the production cycle (usually in months) is meaningful. It’s certainly clear that the central problem of pre-modern economies is the shortage of money. Even today, governments that cannot make use of fiat money as a debt instrument against future returns is at a severe disadvantage against those that can.

    So as in most things ‘libertarianism’ is middle class marxism – meaning a monoply one-class view of the world – instead of historical european Trifunctionalism of elites and Tripartism of the Classes where each class had obligations to one another, as do ranks in the military to which they were all de-facto members because of the need for militia given the territory, trade routes, ad difficulty in concentrating capital in territorial europe as well as the pontic steppe.

    Reply addressees: @albin_dave @neoCamelist


    Source date (UTC): 2023-10-17 15:31:16 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1714303068613820416

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1714296006576341266

  • I’m not mistaken at all. You’re mistaken that they can produce sufficient revenu

    I’m not mistaken at all. You’re mistaken that they can produce sufficient revenue. It may not be clear that this was the context of the argument – that if we need to produce sufficient revenue, that it must be on what political order produces: cooperation and trade.


    Source date (UTC): 2023-10-16 19:53:07 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1714006577680666744

    Reply addressees: @RedbeardEdward @anderstegn @erikbrus25

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1714005434455953729

  • RT @curtdoolittle: @anderstegn @erikbrus25 Hmmm…. VAT is the worst tax of all.

    RT @curtdoolittle: @anderstegn @erikbrus25 Hmmm….
    VAT is the worst tax of all. It interferes with every step in the acquisition, product…


    Source date (UTC): 2023-10-16 19:39:20 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1714003107074453837

  • Hmmm…. VAT is the worst tax of all. It interferes with every step in the acqui

    Hmmm….
    VAT is the worst tax of all. It interferes with every step in the acquisition, production, distribution, and sale change. It’s horrific.

    Income tax is the LEAST harmful tax because it’s all post-hoc. ie: it’s demonstrated. It’s not a theory, it’s not a presumption, it’s not a rent, but a commission on success.

    Theoreticaly we would love to operate ONLY by income taxation, and that would be possible if the entire country was paid through a service like ADP – so that your income, your taxation, and your CREDIT and your REDISTRIBUTIONS were not open to manipulation, fees, delays, or anyone. If we did that, just that, we could have 0% interest on consumer spending for anything durable. And we could avoid the entire IRS system other than rewards for reporting scammers that ‘steal’ from the rest of us.

    Sales tax isn’t necessarily a bad thing as long as it’s not on food, and it’s included in the price of the good.

    Property tax is also a problem when instead it should just be a balance sheet report for the locality, and your portion of the fees and debt payments. If we were that transparent, people would be much more comfortable.

    The same is true for the monetary incompetency and lack of transparency of state and federal institutions.

    Truth is that wealthy people do not particularly mind paying a bit more income tax if they felt it was better managed than they manage the money themselves – or if they could have some say in how their contributions were allocated. Even more so if their contributions were public so that the public could thank them – because really, tye pay for almost everything. If we saw that, the state would do a much better job of providing services. And the people would be much more tolerant of the challenges faced by the state.

    Imagine if everyone capable had to do X years of public service prior to retirement, in some capacity or other (greco roman model) instead of career bureaucrats who justify their behavior.

    Reply addressees: @anderstegn @erikbrus25


    Source date (UTC): 2023-10-16 16:49:24 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1713960343649558528

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1604227949766508544

  • “Q: why is an average of 115 ideal or preferable?”– Because that normal distrib

    –“Q: why is an average of 115 ideal or preferable?”–
    Because that normal distribution via an SD of 15 produces about the population distribution necessary for modern economies – with only 10% below 95 meaning they can do the low skilled manual labor, the majority that can do skilled labor from mechanical to mathematicsl, and 15% above 130, with quite a few people over 140 into the 160 range. At that distribution your median (most of your people) can get a college degree in a non-gut course, you have a huge supply of the smart fraction that can learn and apply (120s), explain organize and manage (130s), improve and invent and revolutionize (140s) and still a surplus of those who have some chance at very difficult problems requirng knowledge of mutliple domains (150s+).

    Reply addressees: @madmikeross @FarajRashi93307 @TheAutistocrat


    Source date (UTC): 2023-10-15 23:24:01 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1713697263522852864

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1713690603064807561

  • Israel is a regional superpower, strategically, militarily, economically, scient

    Israel is a regional superpower, strategically, militarily, economically, scientifically, technologically, educationally – and is so with a tiny population.

    Compare:
    Arab Countries
    Iran: 81,8M
    Turkey: 79,4M
    Iraq: 37,0M
    Saudi Arabia: 27,7M
    Yemen: 26,7M

    Arab Cities
    Cairo, Egypt: 16,3M
    Istanbul, Turkey: 13,9M
    Tehran, Iran: 13,3M
    Baghdad, Iraq: 9,M
    Riyadh, Saudi Arabia: 6,3M

    ISRAELI JEWISH POPULATION
    As I posted earlier: There are only about 7.1M jews in israel and only half of them were born there.

    COMPOSITION
    Among Israeli Jews over the age of 20, about 45% identified as secular or not religious, while 33% said they practiced “traditional” religious worship. Ultra-Orthodox Jews, known as Haredim in Hebrew, made up 10%.
    Why? Ultra Orthodox are dead weight on the state, traditional, and secular people.

    US JEWISH POPULATION
    5.8M adults (2.4% of all U.S. adults) as Jewish.
    … 4.2M identify as Jewish by religion (1.7%)
    … 1.5M of no religion (0.6%)
    2.8M (1.1% of U.S. adults) have a Jewish background. These adults all had at least one Jewish parent or a Jewish upbringing.
    9.6M total fully or partly ethnic Jewish people.
    A further 1.4 million adults (0.6%) have a Jewish affinity.
    11M Total.
    Some research has included all sorts of relationships extending the total network to ~25M. So that’s quite a bit more than the 5.8M we assume with the 2% esetimate.
    (Comparison: the african amerian population is about 47M)

    WORLD JEWISH POPULATION
    —“As of 2023, the world’s “core” Jewish population (those identifying as Jews above all else) was estimated at 16.1 million.
    80% of the jewish population is either in America (51%) and Israel (30%) and the rest are low single digits, mostly in europe.
    This number rises to 18 million with the addition of the “connected” Jewish population, including those who say they are partly Jewish or that have Jewish backgrounds from at least one Jewish parent.
    And rises again to 21 million with the addition of the “enlarged” Jewish population, including those who say they have Jewish backgrounds but no Jewish parents and all non-Jewish household members who live with Jews. Counting all those who are eligible for Israeli citizenship under Israel’s Law of Return, in addition to Israeli Jews, raised the total to 23.8 million”—


    Source date (UTC): 2023-10-15 03:40:21 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1713399385738932224

  • “Ascentium ranked No. 205 on the 2006 Inc. 500 list of the nation’s fastest-grow

    —“Ascentium ranked No. 205 on the 2006 Inc. 500 list of the nation’s fastest-growing private companies.”–

    I made the Inc 500 twice. It’s not that hard when you’re a startup. But it sure is a good target to shoot for, and it certainly helped business.


    Source date (UTC): 2023-10-15 03:36:20 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1713398374626414847