Quantum Economics – Philosophy of the Economy – Social Policies & Infrastructure

January 2nd, 2010 Filed under: Uncategorized — Economic Author

Social and building Infrastructure Expenses in a Market Economy of Marketism are considered as equities and as economic tools for minimizing the effect of overcapitalization, therefore these are not a meter of political disputes but a meter of balancing Demand-to-Supply ratios.

There is not any more powerful tool for keeping certain income level to the middle class and the pour then the Social and Infrastructural Expenses when a rising because of these expenses individual income will trigger higher salaries in the private sector; a market competition only cannot balance Demand-to-Supply ratios because of the rapidly growing productivity and the Globalization of investment.

Among other differences between Marketism and Socialism in this case is the market dependence of Social and Infrastructural Expenses which is more pragmatically inclined then the Social and Infrastructural Expenses in a Socialistic political structure. Among many differences between Marketism and Capitalism in this case is the accounting system of Social and Infrastructural Expenses which in a Market Economics are equitable when in a Capitalistic Economics are expenses only.

The Social and Infrastructural Expenses as said above are more like an economics tool for balancing the Demand-to-Supply ratios but at the same time these expenses should not expand to a point of disturbing a market, so there are formulas out coming from other economic indicators that will approximately locate their quantities, as a Quantum Economics’ scheme of limiting the Grid’s vibrations and fluctuations these formulas are purely practical.

As stated in my other writings the Monetary and Fiscal Quantities are about to expand quite rapidly under a Marketism Economics because of the rising “security” of the economic structures: financial system and exchanges, business and investment structures and entities, so in order an adequate distribution of wealth is so badly needed through such rapid expansion to maintain the balance of Demand-to-Supply ratios: Social and Infrastructural Expenses are major tools for such balancing.

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