The simple math of the Yard-Sale Model shows that if everybody started out with equal money in a fair economy, the outcome tends toward one person holding all of the money. The cool graphical simulations on this page demonstrate why.

  • chuckleslord@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    Not a fact, an assumption based on an assumption baked into this economic system.

    If I could live on the salary, I would prefer a manual labor job.

    • Taldan@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      If I could live on the salary, I would prefer a manual labor job.

      Wouldn’t your anecdote then be supporting the premise?

      That means you’re doing your current job out of economic necessity. The fact you make more with your current role means free market proponents have deemed it more necessary, so have you not been economically coerced into taking a job you otherwise wouldn’t?

      I don’t think people should be coerced into work they otherwise wouldn’t do, but there is some level of truth to it. If nothing else the wealthy and powerful want us to be mostly effective workers, so they can have more wealth to siphon off

      • chuckleslord@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        No, what?

        The premise is “people wouldn’t choose to do certain work unless they were coerced into”. I retorted “I want that work you think I’d have to be coerced into doing”

        Manual labor is undervalued, making it “one of the jobs that people have to be coerced into doing”. By stating my desire to do it above “high value, mental labor”, I undercut their assertion that there are jobs that require coercion to get performed. There are people who want to clean, cook, do manual labor, do administrative work, accounting, cleaning up shit, building, basically everything a society needs to exist. Coercion need not apply.