EVA accounting would deduct the opportunity cost of the capital required to get hold of the raw materials and labour, which involves competing them away from being applied to make something else. GAAP wouldn't. Note that the opportunity cost of using capital and factors of production for other things is an average (of computers and singing santas etc.)Not the whole story - if raw materials and labour are used to make more stereos then they are not used making other things (or less raw materials remain to make future things). Making more stereos may mean there are fewer phones, fewer computers or fewer light up, sing-alonga, santas.
So the enjoyment that other people get from having their stereo is traded for your reduced enjoyment as you can't afford to buy a light up, sing-alonga santa because the price increases due to reduced supply.
You seem to be basing your "more stereos would be a good thing" position on the grounds that this can be achieved with no cost. I don't think that is correct.
EVA accounting would deduct the opportunity cost of the capital required to get hold of the raw materials and labour, which involves competing them away from being applied to make something else. GAAP wouldn't. Note that the opportunity cost of using capital and factors of production for other things is an average (of computers and singing santas etc.)
There would be more useful (valuable) things though.The claim was not that the accounting would be better but that there would be more things in the world. That is not true.
There would be more useful (valuable) things though.
Because the market value of the stereo exceeds the value of the inputs that were expended to make it. You can speculate that those inputs could have been used to make something else even more valuable, but that never happened. In their pre-existing form, the resources and labour were less valuable than the stereo.Why? Making more stereos means making less of other (valuable) things or having less (valuable) resources to make future things from.
Because the market value of the stereo exceeds the value of the inputs that were expended to make it. You can speculate that those inputs could have been used to make something else even more valuable, but that never happened. In their pre-existing form, the resources and labour were less valuable than the stereo.
If that were true then people would already be making the extra stereos mentioned.
In any event it is irrelevant to the argument - the claim was that making more stereos meant there were more things in the world. That is simply not true.
Take a course on Macroeconomics, available at your local technical school. Don't just trust the professor/lecturer or the textbook, though. You will find many references for further reading.I have been trying my best to research the Monetary system and fiat Money as of late. I am doing so because i see alot of discussion around the political scene about how much better a Monetary system is, and how a Gold standard is terrible and could never work.
I was wondering if anyone here would be able to link me to some really informative articles or videos that could clearly explain the benefits of this system and its advantages over a gold standared, or any other standard for that.
From what i have been able to read the system really isnt sound and the money holds value based on faith alone. I know this cannot be the case and wish to learn more on how this system works.
You are talking about one aspect of money--its value as a medium of exchange. Unless you are swapping foreign currency, you ordinarily want to change cash into another type of asset. Or employ it in reducing a liability of some type. Not much other "value" to it than that but fiat currency has proved to be much better in this role than its predecessors were.besides coin collectors or people who want to burn it in their furnace, nobody subjectively values money. People want it because other people want it, nobody in the chain actually values it.