Applying a Karl Marx Lens to Time-Prices Dear Daily Prophecy Reader, From time to time in my prophecies, I turn to the questions from my readers. Over the months since I began explaining the significance of time-prices, several readers have noted an apparent similarity to Karl Marx's "Labor Theory of Value." With my time-prices and laurelled trips to China, am I becoming a closet Marxist? Or am I merely a "useful idiot" for the CCP? Some people think so. I think that by publishing four of my famously pro-capitalist books within a year, climaxed by Wealth and Poverty, and giving Life After Google an award as "the best social science book of the year," the Chinese are becoming tools of this capitalist. We'll see. Time-Prices Reign Supreme Time-prices are a theory of true prices and values. The true price of anything is the number of hours you have to work to gain the money to buy it. When you run out of money you are really running out of the time to earn it. Time is the ultimate scarcity in economics, affecting every decision and transaction. I say money is time. Money is the way the scarcity of time is rendered fungible as a medium of exchange and store of value across an economy. However, as I have explained in recent prophecies the converse epigram, "time is money" is false. Money has to be created by human ingenuity. Measured in hours and minutes of work, time-prices are universal and translatable between economies and eras. They obviate subjective calculations and adjustments such as consumer price indices, Gross Domestic Product (GDP) deflators, and purchasing power parity comparisons between currencies. All prices everywhere can be expressed in hours and minutes of work. Time-prices were significant in the Nobel Laureate work of William Nordhaus of Yale who called them "true prices" and are used resourcefully by the superb science and economic theorist Matt Ridley of Britain in his book, The Rational Optimist and other works. Watch for his new book on innovation, to be published in May. To calculate the time-price, the nominal money price is divided by the nominal hourly income. Over the world economy, according the scrupulous calculations by time-price pioneers Gale Pooley and Marian Tupy, nominal global GDP per person per hour has risen from $1.16 in 1980 to $5.18 in 2018. Time-prices are particularly effective in measuring the rate of technological advance. In one number of hours and minutes, the time price captures both the increase in wages and decline in costs conferred by innovation. Using the fungible measuring stick of time, we discover that many economic "facts" confidently cited by economists are deceptive functions of these efforts to calculate true values by adjusting nominal prices for inflation (changes in the value or purchasing power of money.) |
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