Post
Topic
Board Economics
Re: Any help about how the world is run economically?
by
tee-rex
on 18/09/2018, 18:56:30 UTC
Most human economic activities are influenced by the need for money. But why can anyone not become rich?. What are the reasons why others work hard yet they are still poor? Why can't we print enough money for everyone? Questions like this do appear but there are reasons the answers are opposite.

Did you know that it is virtually impossible for everyone to be wealthy? To understand why, just think for a moment about what it really means to have a lot of money. Resources are not endless. In fact, they become more limited with each passing day. The world population keeps increasing, while Earth’s resources have stayed the same.  A lot more people are clamoring for fewer and fewer resources. As a result, only a few may gain the advantage of having excessive access. Also, if you think about it, if everyone had the same level of income or wealth, then no one would be rich. We all continue to grow richer, but relatively there will always be differences between individuals unless everything was just divided evenly.
This really depends on what you consider wealthy. One of the definitions of being wealthy means having abundance. One of the definitely of abundance is "more than enough". Of course, not everybody can have their own mansion with a hundred acres of land, but I believe that everybody could be wealthy, meaning have more than enough. I am sure that the world has more than enough resources than we need.

This is a tricky question which is also multilayered further complicating it. The complexity of the question lies with the fact that humans are susceptible to proliferation while the amount of available resources is always limited. So no matter how abundant something is, it will eventually become scarce as the population grows. On the other hand, more people makes possible more pronounced division of labor which increases productivity. That, in turn, makes people richer until they start to reproduce again at an increased rate.