Thread with 4 posts

jump to expanded post

though there are some notable differences:

  • if you think your national economy's economic success will run out some day, but others' won't, buying up those other economies makes sense. i guess that's the point of the norwegian oil fund
  • tax-based pensions can be shrunk if necessary. to do the same with private pensions you would have to interfere with private property rights. though they might just shrink themselves if economic contraction is ~uniformly distributed‬
Open thread at this post
Mario , @hdesk@infosec.exchange
(open profile)

@hikari money in itself is a really neat way to “store” productive value to use in the future. Store is in scare quotes, because of course it’s based on someone else being able to provide that value some time in the future, like other forms of investment.

But yes, there’s really no good way out of a situation where consumption is higher than production, some people are not going to have their needs met, whether they rely on tax-based or equity-based pension schemes, and that’s scary.

Maybe equity is a little more “fair”, in that you ideally have a fixed share of the whole economy’s productive value, rather than taking more and more from younger generations

Open remote post (opens in a new window)