▲ | nairboon a day ago | |||||||
> I don't think capital naturally accrues capital. It depends on the monetary system. Those monetary systems that mostly accompanied capitalism have a feature that leads to this capital accumulation effect: interest/debt. Financial capital is kept in banks, which deposit it at their central bank. There it naturally accrues more capital due to interest. (Except in exceptional circumstances like the Swiss negative interest period) | ||||||||
▲ | missedthecue a day ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
But still, lots of lenders go bust. Lots of loans end up non-performing. Interest isn't a free money loophole, it's profit in exchange for risk. Presently, the safety of bank deposits are in most countries guaranteed by the government, but before this they weren't risk free either. That's why bank runs happened. People panicked to get their capital out before it was gone. | ||||||||
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▲ | Jensson 16 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
> It depends on the monetary system No it doesn't, regardless of which monetary system you can invest resources to make more resources. Communists also does this, tribes also does this, everyone does this, having more lets you invest to get even more. |