DougCardell.com

An Eclectic Economist Explains Evidentiary Economics

Economics based on evidence rather than ideology and ignorance.

Random thought:

Recent Articles    If you want to see another quote, click here.   

Dr. Doug Cardell - Economist

Welcome

Welcome! If you’re confused about economics, we feel your pain. Reading the news regarding the economy can seem like watching a tennis match between two perfectly matched opponents. The ball goes back and forth and back and forth and nothing ever gets resolved. This happens because the skilled players on both sides are basing their economic arguments and policy proposals on ideology and ignorance rather than following the evidence. This website will point out what the evidence indicates and set the record straight.

Brief Bio:

Dr. Doug Cardell is an economist and economic policy expert. He is a USAF veteran and has served as an aide to a Member of Congress, been a corporate CEO, been an award winning educator, a consultant to the Arizona Department of Education in several capacities, and a Professor of Mathematics. His areas of expertise include economics, economic policy, mathematical modeling and system dynamics modeling. He holds advanced degrees and certificates from the University of Arizona, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Phoenix as well as a PhD in Economic Policy from Liberty University. His expertise in economics both from a theoretical and practical standpoint, coupled with his expertise in mathematics and modeling, combined with high success as an educator make him uniquely qualified to explain economics and evaluate economic systems and ideas.

His articles, which you can access on the right side menu, tackle basic economic truth that is often ignored as well as current hot button issues. Every day we will feature one of these articles below. They all have a comments section and Dr. Cardell would love to read your thoughts about the articles.

Who's a Capitalist?

by Dr. Doug Cardell

Well, Let's start with what capital is. Capital is an accumulation, a store of accumulated assets minus accumulated liabilities. People tend to think of it monetarily, but that's an unnecessarily limiting view. Assets add to your well-being, and liabilities reduce your well-being. In any area, monetary or otherwise, if you take your assets and subtract your liabilities, the result is your capital. Someone in good physical condition has greater physical assets than liabilities. They have a store of physical capital. That capital allows them to more readily fight off disease and disability. A capitalist is someone who invests capital they have in hopes of increasing their assets in the future. In fact, capitalism is a commitment to hope. If someone in good physical condition depletes that condition, their physical capital, today by exercising in hopes of improving their physical condition, they are a capitalist. They are using assets they have today in hopes of receiving increased assets in the future as a result. Others may see the impact of this increased capital and be envious. They would also like to have those assets, but they don't know the capitalist's investment in building their capital. They also don't know the risks the capitalist took. Someone devoting time and effort to exercise might find it wasted if some tragedy prevented the benefits from coming to pass. Thus, the anti-capitalist sentiment, "eat, drink, and be merry for tomorrow you die." The anti-capitalist is unwilling to risk rewards today for greater rewards in the future. Education can be another example of capitalism. One idea of education is investing time and other resources today, believing it will increase future ability. The second idea is to invest resources to learn more about something that interests you, whether or not it increases your future capability. Both are valid points of view but are often confused, with unfortunate consequences. The first is the capitalist view, using capital today in hopes of increasing capital later. The second is using resources today for enjoyment. The difficulty arises when one chooses the second, expecting the rewards of the first. Pursuing a college degree in art history may be very rewarding today, but it may not be an asset in the future. Learning a skill is usually a capitalist undertaking. It is investing resources today for a reward in the future. Learning to play a musical instrument well requires effort and dedication that most do not consider enjoyable. Still, it may lead to career opportunities or simply a future of enjoying the ability. Other skills are more clearly aimed in one direction or the other. Welding is more likely to lead to career opportunities than resulting in a fun hobby. Still, knitting is less likely to lead to career opportunities and more likely to result in an enjoyable pastime in the future. Both are examples of capitalism because they are an investment today for a future reward. When most people think of a capitalist, they think of money but often have an incorrect picture. They imagine someone with a great deal of inherited wealth that doesn't work and just manipulates money. That's a myth. Anyone who saves or invests money in a manner that creates income is a capitalist. Capitalists include anyone who buys savings bonds, puts money in a savings account, invests in a retirement plan, or buys stocks. All these actions involve investing money to create a larger amount for future use instead of spending it today. Furthermore, many more people are indirect capitalists. When someone buys insurance, they give money to the insurer who invests it in capital enterprises and uses some of the profits to pay claims. Anti-capitalists have spent the last 150 years using all the propaganda techniques available to convince people that capitalism is evil. They do this because capitalism means economic freedom, which is essential to civil liberty, and anti-capitalists fear freedom because it vanquishes their desire for power and control. They understand that big undertakings require large amounts of capital. If private citizens cannot provide that capital, it must come from the government. If the government invests, then the government has control of it. In free-market capitalism, thousands or millions of shareholders share the power. The anti-capitalists don't want that because they believe they can more easily manipulate the government than millions of citizens. "Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow you die" works out well only if you actually die tomorrow. The anti-capitalist takes the short-term view, believing it is better to spend resources for today's pleasure and worry about tomorrow, tomorrow. The capitalist takes the long-term view, believing that a better future is worth investing resources in. The capitalist uses resources to create more resources, while the anti-capitalist uses up resources today and hopes more will appear later. To be a capitalist is to adopt a way of life that invests in the future, not only with money but health, education, training, relationships, reputation, and most other areas of life. Invest in the future, have hope, live long, and prosper; be a capitalist.

If you found this article stimulating, please share it with other folks who might enjoy it. And please share your thoughts below. Dr. Cardell would love to hear from you.

Questions, Comments, Criticisms, or Witty Remarks:

* Required information
1000
Is it true or false that green is a number?
Drag & drop images (max 3)
Powered by Commentics

Responses

No responses yet. Be the first!