Summaries
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Clicking on the subtitles will take you to the full PowerPoint presentations. The summaries were created using ChatGPT based on the PPTs. The course included more presentations.
The economic problem; how capitalist systems solve it
The document addresses the economic problem from its simplest form, using the Robinson Crusoe example, to its complexity in advanced capitalist societies. It explains that in a modern economy, centralized resource allocation is impossible due to the enormous amount of information and calculations required. In capitalism, resource allocation is resolved locally within each firm, whose objective is to maximize profit, without considering the economy as a whole. Coordination occurs through the price mechanism : if a good is scarce, its price rises, incentivizing its production; if it is abundant, its price falls, reducing its production. Market competition forces firms to maximize profit to survive, which can lead to the exclusion of firms with other objectives. Adam Smith's ideas on the "invisible hand" and Hayek's argument for the impossibility of centralized socialism are discussed, although the viability of decentralized models is acknowledged. The problems of capitalism are also analyzed, such as its inefficiency in maximizing overall profit, economic instability, inequality, and the fact that profit maximization does not equate to satisfying human needs. Mechanisms like the welfare state have emerged to mitigate these problems, but if these were to disappear, pure capitalism could dehumanize the economy, reducing human beings to mere inputs replaceable by machines or artificial intelligence.
Scarcity, prices, profitability and regulation of the economy
The document analyzes how capitalism solves the economic problem through the allocation and coordination of resources, highlighting the importance of competition and profit maximization. It explains that each firm makes production decisions locally, without considering the economy as a whole, using information on available inputs and processes to maximize its profitability. Coordination between firms occurs through the price mechanism: when a good is scarce, its price rises, incentivizing its production, and when it is abundant, its price falls, discouraging it. This automatic adjustment is the foundation of economic regulation in a pure capitalist system, where firms always seek to maximize profit to survive in a competitive environment. Furthermore, the document addresses the concept of diminishing returns and the "law of supply and demand," explaining how prices reflect the profit a good can generate. It also mentions that even in cooperative systems or market anarchy, competitive pressure would lead to profit maximization, hindering the implementation of alternative economic models without some intervention. Finally, traditional supply and demand models, based on classical economic theory, are presented to illustrate market equilibrium and its impact on production and consumption.
Economic Calculation, Value and Accounting
This document examines economic calculation as a fundamental tool for the optimal allocation of resources in different economic systems. It introduces constrained maximization, a mathematical problem that seeks to optimize an objective under certain limitations. The use of Lagrange multipliers, which measure how a change in resources affects the objective to be maximized, is explained. Economic calculation in capitalism and socialism is compared, noting that in the former, the goal is profit maximization, while in a hypothetical socialist system, the satisfaction of needs would be prioritized. The concept of value is developed, explaining that in capitalism, value is measured by the benefits a good generates, while in socialism, it could include other criteria, such as its social or ecological utility. Economic accounting is also analyzed, which in capitalism measures the profitability of processes, while in socialism, it would evaluate their contribution to overall well-being. The application of mathematical models from capitalist systems to socialist systems is criticized, as they do not consider objectives other than profit maximization. Finally, a reflection is raised on why the global economy follows a productivist model focused on maximizing profit and not on human well-being.
The paper analyzes the role of prices in capitalist economies, presenting them as signaling mechanisms that guide production and resource allocation toward profit maximization. It identifies three types of prices in capitalist systems: exchange rates (externally determined market prices), weights (internal prices set by firms to maximize profits), and Lagrange values or multipliers (implicit prices derived from optimization calculations). Although different in nature, these prices tend to be proportional in capitalist systems, unlike in other economic forms where they may diverge or even be nonexistent. The paper compares these dynamics with alternative societies such as planned socialisms or scenarios like Robinson Crusoe's Island, showing that prices can also operate under different logics depending on the allocation objective (e.g., maximizing needs rather than profits). Furthermore, it introduces the idea of economic mechanisms as real-world algorithms, comparable to mathematical algorithms that solve constrained optimization problems using strategies such as "divide and conquer." In this sense, capitalism functions as a large, decentralized algorithm that coordinates multiple allocation units (firms) through the market. Finally, the possibility of market socialism is considered —that is, a socialist economy that maintains market mechanisms but with accounting and values distinct from those of capitalism. It is concluded that the essence of capitalism is the logic of profit maximization as a consequence of market competition, of the way in which the allocation and coordination of resources are organized, and not the existence of a capitalist class.
Socialism and Economic Calculation
The document addresses the historical and complex debate on the possibility of a rational allocation of resources in a socialist economy, focusing on the so-called “ problem of economic calculation .” It traces the full arc of the debate from its roots in Ricardian socialism, through Marx and Engels ’ critique of labor values as the basis of a post-capitalist economy, to Ludwig von Mises, who in 1920 argued that without private ownership of the means of production and without a market, it is impossible to rationally allocate resources because there would be no prices reflecting the marginal utility of capital goods. This critique was expanded upon by Hayek, who introduced the problem of the dispersion of knowledge and the impossibility of a central authority effectively coordinating the necessary information. However, various authors responded to this objection: Oskar Lange proposed a socialism with parametric prices determined by trial and error, where a planning board would simulate the market; Kantorovich and Dantzig developed theories of optimal allocation using mathematical programming, with values defined as Lagrange multipliers; and it was argued that economic value can exist even without a market, as shown by the Robinson Crusoe economy or population growth simulations. Throughout this document, it becomes clear that the real problem with socialism is not logical but practical : the difficulty of obtaining all the relevant information, solving the necessary systems of equations, and putting the planned allocations into practice. Furthermore, the view that capitalism represents a superior rationality is dismantled, showing that its accounting and allocation methods maximize profit, but not necessarily the fulfillment of human needs. Thus, it is argued that both capitalist and socialist systems can have values and accounting systems, but that in socialism they should be oriented toward a different objective: social well-being, not profit. The text concludes that it is possible to construct economic mechanisms alternative to the market, provided they use different forms of accounting and value, and that a viable socialism, especially in complex contexts, must necessarily decentralize part of the allocation, coordinating its production units through modified economic mechanisms—such as a regulated market—that depart from capitalist logic. Ultimately, the document maintains that socialism is not only logically possible, but can aspire to its own human-oriented economic rationality, as long as it moves away from the fetishism of total planning or the mechanical reproduction of the capitalist market.
Problems of Capitalism. Introduction
The document offers a critical yet nuanced view of the capitalist system, acknowledging that, despite its remarkable capacity to allocate resources in complex economies through a mechanism that functions as a “real algorithm,” it presents a series of structural problems that directly affect human well-being. Although capitalism adheres to a certain rationality and has proven to be more functional than many alternatives, its logic focuses exclusively on profit maximization, subordinating attention to human needs. Capitalism tends to reduce human beings to mere inputs of production, valued like other inputs, and interchangeable with machines or artificial intelligence, leading to a dehumanizing logic. Among its main structural flaws are also: a lack of consideration for global objectives (such as climate change), inefficiency (such as imbalances or unemployment), instability (cyclical crises), the tendency toward increasing inequality, and the concentration of economic power in monopolies or oligopolies . It also promotes a culture of individualistic competition that can generate alienation. The document distinguishes between market failures (such as imperfect competition or externalities) and the deeper problems of capitalism, emphasizing that even under ideal conditions of perfect competition, the system still fails to prioritize the satisfaction of human needs. Therefore, although capitalism functions technically, its rationality is not necessarily compatible with a humanist vision of social development, and some of its problems, if left unaddressed, threaten its very future sustainability.
Lack of attention to global objectives
The document analyzes how the internal logic of capitalism, based on the division of resources among units (firms) that compete to maximize their own profits, prevents the achievement of collective or global objectives; not only addressing human needs but even maximizing overall profit. This dynamic generates a disconnect between maximizing individual profits ( Nash equilibrium ) and maximizing overall profit ( global optimum ), causing rational actions at the firm level to have destructive systemic effects. These tensions are illustrated using concepts from game theory, such as the prisoner's dilemma, where the rational option for each agent (such as polluting to reduce costs) leads to a suboptimal outcome for everyone (a polluted environment). Furthermore, the idea that market equilibrium or Pareto optimum are ethically desirable states is criticized, as they can exclude those who cannot participate in the market (such as people without property or the ability to work). The text also addresses concepts such as externalities, overinvestment, and the conflict between local economic growth and global sustainability, emphasizing that these problems are not simply due to a lack of regulation or property rights, but rather to a structural logic that fragments decision-making and prioritizes partial objectives over the interests of the whole. Thus, the text concludes that the very design of the capitalist system prevents local decisions from leading to the common good, and that resolving these conflicts requires a profound change in how economic activity is structured and coordinated.
Inequality, between people and between countries
The document analyzes inequality as one of the most significant structural problems of capitalism, emphasizing both internal inequality within countries and inequality between nations. It argues that this inequality is not an accident or an anomaly of the system, but rather an inherent consequence of its operating logic: capitalism, even under conditions close to perfect competition and starting from an initial state of equality, tends to generate and amplify economic differences. One of the most widely used tools for measuring this inequality is the Gini coefficient, an index that ranges from 0 (perfect equality) to 1 (total inequality), based on the Lorenz Curve, which compares the cumulative distribution of income to a perfectly equal distribution. A high Gini coefficient indicates a strong concentration of wealth in the hands of a few, while a low Gini coefficient reflects a more equitable distribution. According to this index, regions such as Europe and Japan exhibit relatively low levels of inequality, while Latin America, Africa, and the United States show higher values. In empirical terms, the data is striking: the richest 10% of the planet holds 75% of global wealth, while the poorest half possesses barely 2%. Globally, this gap is reflected in Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita, which reveals enormous differences between rich and poor countries. For example, even adjusting for purchasing power parity (PPP), Luxembourg can be more than 170 times richer than Burundi. The report concludes that these inequalities not only persist but tend to widen if effective redistributive policies are not implemented. Thus, the Gini coefficient is not only a quantitative tool but also a wake-up call about the need to reform the economic system so that the benefits of development are not concentrated but distributed more equitably among people and nations.
The document offers a structural critique of capitalism, focusing on its tendency toward dehumanization as a consequence of its profit-maximization logic. This critique is developed through the distinction between two theoretical models: PM1 and PM2. PM1, associated with General Equilibrium Theory and studied by economists such as Arrow and Debreu, describes a system in which economic agents maximize their individual utility and prices efficiently coordinate their decisions, orienting the economy toward human well-being. In this approach, producers are subordinate to the desires of consumers, and the system seeks Pareto efficiency . In contrast, PM2, linked to the reproduction school and analyzed by models such as those of Leontief, Von Neumann, and Sraffa, represents an environment where all agents maximize only profit, leading to a logic of capital reproduction without reference to human well-being. This view describes a system that reproduces itself without the need for consumers as an end in itself, prioritizing profitability above all other objectives. The text argues that, in a competitive environment, PM1 tends to evolve into PM2, as those who maximize profit displace those who pursue other goals. Thus, real-world capitalism is moving closer to the PM2 model, where human beings are reduced to just another input in the production process. This shift implies a profound dehumanization, as the economy ceases to respond to needs and focuses instead on production for production's sake. The document also addresses the psychological impact of this logic, noting how constant competition fosters selfishness and erodes solidarity, as Albert Einstein warned. The figure of the "productivist Robinson Crusoe" illustrates this absurd dynamic: even in isolation, the individual is governed by a logic of profit maximization rather than attending to their real needs. Although institutions like the welfare state have partially humanized the system, their potential disappearance would once again reveal the dehumanized face of capitalism. In short, the problem is not only that capitalism fails to achieve its goals, but that its very goals—profit maximization—lack human meaning.
Dehumanization. Mechanization and Artificial Intelligence
The document offers a journey through the transformations that human labor has undergone throughout history due to the progressive introduction of automated technologies, from the first mechanical looms to current artificial intelligence. It begins by alluding to Aristotle and the Luddite movement, with its rejection of machines that replaced manual labor. Thinkers such as Sismondi, who warned of the negative social effects of mechanization, and David Ricardo, who revised his position on the impact of machines on workers, are cited. Karl Marx 's critiques of capital and the dehumanization of labor under industrial capitalism are also incorporated. The document delves into economic theories that attempted to model the impact of mechanization, such as the Tugan - Baranowsky reproduction models. or the pricing equations of Leontief and Sraffa envision a fully automated economy where human beings are dispensable. In this context, they argue that capitalist systems could continue operating without human workers or consumers, since prices do not reflect human needs but rather the system's structural relationships. This radical hypothesis illustrates a possible culmination of the dehumanization process: the complete decoupling of the economy from humanity . The paper analyzes the development of computing and artificial intelligence, highlighting the pioneering contributions of Alan Turing, with his universal machine and his question about the capacity of machines to think, as well as John von Neumann 's theoretical advances on self-replicating automata, which anticipated key concepts in artificial intelligence and artificial life . Finally, the paper explores contemporary artificial intelligence, from Deep Blue's achievements against Kasparov to advanced models like ChatGPT, emphasizing its disruptive potential. Studies are cited that warn of the potential elimination of hundreds of millions of jobs, as well as statements from experts like Geoffrey Hinton, who suggests that machines could even develop emotions or pose an existential risk to humanity. As a final reflection, the document presents the notion of an "automated economy," in which humans cease to be the center of the production system, comparing their potential obsolescence to that of horses after the advent of the tractor. It questions the fate of humanity in a world where capital can operate completely independently of it.
Three centuries, three failures
The presentation critically analyzes the predominant socioeconomic systems of the last three centuries, highlighting their limitations and failures. In the 19th century, “savage capitalism” achieved significant economic growth, but it generated unemployment, crises, inequality, and dehumanization, leading to its rejection due to its social impact rather than its economic inefficiency. In the 20th century, “real socialism” also failed: war communism and Mao's policies were economically unviable, the five-year plans proved inefficient, and experiences like Yugoslavia and the Prague Spring, while promising, did not prosper for political or structural reasons. In the 21st century, the “welfare state” is being questioned, since although it has demonstrated that it is possible to reform capitalism to achieve more humane societies, it faces serious threats: its limited scope, demographic problems, internal inefficiencies, and global competitive pressure. The sustainability of the welfare state depends on its global expansion or the maintenance of technological advantages in advanced countries; otherwise, it could become the third major failure.
The document offers a reflection on the real effects of capitalism in its purest form, using early 19th-century England during the Industrial Revolution as a case study. Although this period experienced remarkable economic growth —with real GDP increasing thirteenfold between 1750 and 1900 and GDP per capita more than doubling—the analysis demonstrates that this growth did not translate into a substantial improvement in the quality of life for the majority of the population. On the contrary, real wages fell until the mid-19th century, life expectancy in industrial cities was 10 to 19 years lower than in rural areas, average male height decreased, infant mortality was extremely high, and working hours reached extreme levels, exceeding 3,400 hours per year. The text argues that "pure capitalism," that is, a system focused exclusively on profit maximization without social constraints, is not designed to improve people's living conditions. It only satisfies human needs insofar as they are useful to the production system. As Sismondi points out, if people could be profitably replaced by machines or animals, capitalism would do so without hesitation, as happened when tractors replaced horses. This leads to the conclusion that economic growth alone does not guarantee an improvement in social well-being ; an institutional framework—such as the welfare state, labor laws, unions, and political struggles—is necessary to force the system to distribute some of the wealth generated. The document also warns against a common misconception that economic growth is synonymous with human progress. While there has been a correlation between the two in the last century, this is because institutions have been implemented to moderate the harshest effects of capitalism. If these institutions were to disappear, the economic system would tend to revert to its purest and most ruthless form, prioritizing profit over well-being. The text concludes that the advances in quality of life we enjoy today in advanced societies are not a natural consequence of capitalism, but rather the result of having "tweaked" it through social and political struggle. And it warns that, in many regions of the world, current capitalism still resembles the brutal model of 1800s England, showing that this danger remains present globally.
Utopian, Scientific, and Real Socialism
The document offers a critical overview of the main currents of socialist thought that emerged in response to the problems generated by industrial capitalism, highlighting three major branches: utopian, scientific, and real socialism. Utopian socialism, championed by thinkers such as Saint- Simon, Fourier, and Owen, proposed the creation of cooperative and egalitarian societies where private property and exploitation would be abolished. However, although their ideas were groundbreaking, their approach lacked a deep analysis of economic dynamics and a viable political strategy, making it more of a moral inspiration than a concrete structural alternative . Anarchism, for its part, questioned the legitimacy of any form of government or centralized authority, advocating for a society based on free cooperation among individuals and communities, without state intervention. Thinkers such as Bakunin and Kropotkin defended the abolition of both private property and the state, considering state power inherently coercive and an obstacle to true freedom and social equality. In contrast to these perspectives, the scientific socialism of Marx and Engels presented a materialist interpretation of history, in which class struggle is considered the main driving force of social change. According to this school of thought, capitalism would inevitably be overcome by a proletarian revolution that would abolish private ownership of the means of production and establish a transitional phase toward a classless and stateless communist society, although its workings were not precisely defined.
These ideas inspired the Russian Revolution of 1917 and the creation of real socialism, whose main exponent was the Soviet Union . In the early years of the Soviet regime, during the Civil War, Lenin implemented War Communism, which, interpreting Marx's somewhat imprecise ideas in a very particular way, involved a failed attempt at radical economic planning and the suppression of the market. This measure, although it helped sustain the new regime, caused famines and strong social resistance. In 1921, Lenin introduced the New Economic Policy ( NEP ), which he described as state capitalism, that allowed for some restoration of the market and private property, stabilizing the economy without relinquishing state control over key areas. After Lenin's death, Stalin abandoned the New Economic Policy (NEP) and, from 1928, implemented the Five-Year Plans, an administrative economy with state-controlled prices and production and consumption quotas. These plans spurred rapid industrialization, forcibly collectivized agriculture, and established an authoritarian regime based on ideological control, political terror, massacres, and a massive bureaucracy. Although the USSR became an industrial and military power, society suffered severe repression, and the economy became rigid, with drastic limitations on individual freedoms. This model was replicated in Eastern Europe after World War II, with communist regimes backed by Moscow. In Asia, China followed a similar path after the 1949 Revolution, under the leadership of Mao Zedong, who implemented campaigns such as the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution, which led to economic crises, ideological persecution, and millions of deaths. On the other hand, Yugoslavia developed an autonomous model of self-managed socialism under Tito, which promoted cooperatives and worker management of enterprises, along with limited economic liberalization and political decentralization. After Stalin's death in 1953, Nikita Khrushchev initiated a process of de-Stalinization, denouncing the crimes of the previous regime and promoting limited reforms with improvements in the quality of life, although without changing the authoritarian nature of the system. In 1968, the Prague Spring attempted to introduce " socialism with a human face " in Czechoslovakia, but it was crushed by the Soviet invasion, demonstrating the limitations imposed by Moscow on any attempt at internal renewal. In the late 1970s, Deng Xiaoping implemented economic reforms in China that opened the country to the global market, promoting agricultural liberalization and the creation of Special Economic Zones, which accelerated its growth. Although the economic model adopted capitalist characteristics, the Communist Party maintained strict political control, which continues to this day. In the 1980s, Mikhail Gorbachev attempted to reform the USSR through Perestroika (economic restructuring) and Glasnost (political opening), trying to incorporate market elements, but these reforms further destabilized the regime, contributing to the disintegration of the socialist bloc and, ultimately, to the dissolution of the USSR in 1991. Finally, socialist structures embedded within capitalism, such as cooperatives and kibbutzim, are analyzed.
The document concludes by highlighting that, although socialism has historically sought to overcome the inequalities of capitalism, its various manifestations—utopian, scientific, and existing socialism—present significant contrasts. Marx's ideas, for example, differed greatly from Lenin's radical planning and the administrative economy of Stalin and his successors. While progress was made in areas such as industrialization and education, serious contradictions also emerged, such as authoritarianism, repression, and bureaucratization, which distanced these regimes from the emancipatory ideals that initially inspired them.
The document offers an analysis of the historical evolution, foundations, achievements, and challenges of the welfare state as a form of social organization in advanced capitalist economies. It emerged as a response to the unfettered capitalism of the 19th century, a result of the combination of technological development (which increased productive capacity) and social struggles demanding a more equitable distribution of wealth. Throughout the text, key historical antecedents are examined, such as the Poor Laws, religious ideas of charity, and 19th-century social reforms, and the key models are presented: Bismarck 's redistributive model and Beveridge 's welfare model . The welfare state is structured on four essential pillars: healthcare, pensions, education, and social services, and has made a decisive contribution to reducing inequality, improving quality of life, and strengthening social cohesion. However, the document also warns that this model has serious limitations. Only one- eighth of the world's population lives under a welfare state, while the rest face harsher forms of capitalism. Furthermore, the report analyzes internal problems such as bureaucracy, administrative inefficiency, labor market fragmentation, and the demographic challenge of an aging population. It also addresses external pressures such as globalization, international competition, and high tax costs, which could render this model unsustainable without reform. As an example of successful transformation, the report mentions the “new Swedish model,” which integrates public responsibility with freedom of choice and private sector participation. In its conclusion, the document offers a reflection on the future: while capitalism tends to evolve toward extreme forms of productivism, humanity has the capacity to correct this trend through profound reforms. These reforms must extend welfare beyond the developed world, balance market forces and equity, and prevent the profit motive from completely displacing social justice. The welfare state, although imperfect, represents one of the greatest modern civilizational achievements to date, and its defense and adaptation are key to preventing a relapse into a dehumanized capitalism.
The document presents a reflection on the extremely difficult economic problem of how to allocate resources. It argues that the capitalist market acts as a real-world algorithm to solve this problem, breaking it down into sub-problems (firms) and coordinating them through prices, thus allowing for adjustments in production and consumption based on scarcity or abundance. Although no alternative mechanism as effective as the market is known for solving the economic problem, this mechanism tends to evolve into a system where profit is maximized above all else, subordinating human beings and their needs, and generating a dehumanized economy. It also entails other serious structural problems such as inequality, cyclical crises, inefficiency, excessive monopoly power, and a lack of response to global problems like climate change. The failure of communism and the limitations of the welfare state are analyzed; while the welfare state mitigates certain problems, it perpetuates others and suffers from inefficiency and a lack of global sustainability. The possibility of socialism is also analyzed, with the argument that if it uses the market as a coordinating mechanism without modifying its underlying values, it will inevitably reproduce the same problems as capitalism. Therefore, the essence of capitalism is not the existence of capitalists, but rather the division of resources into units and their coordination through exchanges, which leads to profit maximization . Finally, the conclusion is that, while the market is indispensable today, new alternatives are urgently needed to allow for efficient allocation without falling into dehumanization or the structural flaws of the capitalist system.
The document focuses on explaining the dynamics of economic and biological growth, distinguishing between two fundamental types of behavior: exponential growth and logistic growth . Exponential growth describes how a magnitude (such as production or population) grows proportionally to its current size, following the formula
xt+1 = k xt
where k is the growth factor (1 plus the growth rate). This type of growth is sustained indefinitely only in environments with unlimited resources, as exemplified by the case of bacteria that double every so often. Useful formulas are shown, such as the one that approximates the time needed to double a quantity as a function of its growth rate: years to double ≈ 70 / growth rate. A relevant example is compound interest, which follows the logic of exponential growth. However, it is noted that no real-world environment possesses unlimited resources, so in the long run, growth encounters limits. This is where logistic behavior arises, which incorporates a limiting constant. This model reflects how growth slows and stabilizes as it approaches the limit imposed by the environment. Carrying capacity represents this steady state. The "magnificent dynamics" of classical economists are studied, along with the tendency they asserted toward a steady state. Furthermore, it is argued that capitalism has avoided this stationary state thanks to technological advancement, both “intensive” (improving internal processes, increasing k) and “extensive” (expansion of available resources). Finally, it is analyzed that growth requires energy and materials from the environment and that without technological innovation, every system is destined to reach its growth limit, ending in a stationary state. Thus, sustained growth depends fundamentally on overcoming natural limits through technology.
Economic Growth; A Modern Idea
The document argues that sustained economic growth, as we know it today—that is, the steady increase in real GDP per capita—has not been a permanent feature of human history, but rather a profoundly recent phenomenon that originated with the Industrial Revolution . For millennia, the world economy remained in a state of near-total stagnation: any technological advances or productivity improvements were absorbed by population growth, preventing real improvements in the quality of life, a situation known as the Malthusian trap . The technological and industrial revolution of the 18th and 19th centuries broke this pattern, making it possible for production to grow at a faster rate than the population. However, living conditions did not improve immediately: indicators such as life expectancy only began to increase significantly toward the end of the 19th century, when social struggles, advances in medicine, urban planning, and public policy began to accompany economic growth. The document illustrates this process using historical data showing how, between the years 1 and 1700, the economy only multiplied by 3.5 (with annual growth rates of 0.07%), while between 1700 and 2021 it grew by 184 (with rates 22 times higher). It also highlights that this modern growth has not only been more intense but has also been cumulative and transformative, affecting both production and the material conditions of existence. Thus, the text concludes that sustained economic growth is not a natural constant of human development but a modern construct, dependent on technological advancements, which industrial capitalism leveraged, and on certain specific social and historical conditions that made it possible.
Investment, consumption and growth
The document analyzes the role of investment in economic growth, examining the traditional idea that a higher investment rate leads to higher economic growth, given that investment is the portion of production dedicated to generating more output, while consumption is the portion allocated for immediate use. Two models are presented—an exponential model and a logistic model—to test this idea. In the exponential model, Increasing the investment rate effectively increases economic growth and, in the long run, also consumption, provided that investment does not reach 100% of production. This model assumes an environment without limits, where the "common sense" notion that sacrificing present consumption increases future well-being holds true. However, the logistic model, which better represents the reality of a planet with limited resources, shows that increasing the investment rate does not generate indefinite growth. On the contrary, more investment can lead to the system colliding more quickly and forcefully with environmental limits, causing a reduction in consumption in both the short and long term. In this context, an excessively high investment rate can be counterproductive, as it does not significantly increase production but does decrease present and future consumption. Nevertheless, an important nuance is introduced: while this logic does not hold true for the planet as a whole, a relatively small economy (such as a country, region, or company) competing for global resources can benefit from a higher investment rate, growing at the expense of others. This creates a contradiction between the individual interests of each economy and global collective well-being, exemplifying what is known as the fallacy of composition . Thus, although at a global level a lower investment rate could increase consumption without significantly affecting growth, individual incentives lead each economy to invest more, even if this harms the whole. It is concluded that the true engine of growth is technological advancement, not simply increased investment, and the need to rethink our economic strategies from a systemic and global perspective is raised.
This document introduces the phenomenon of economic cycles, showing how they have evolved from sporadic crises in antiquity to become recurring patterns inherent in the functioning of modern economies. In the past, crises were caused by external factors such as wars, crop failures, or epidemics, and did not follow a regular pattern. However, from the 19th century onward, with the consolidation of industrial capitalism, periodic cycles of boom and bust —known as the modern economic cycle— began to be identified, characterized by their regularity and simultaneous global reach. The text distinguishes between different types of cycles ( Kitchin, Juglar, Kuznets, Kondratiev ) according to their duration and origin, and reviews various theories, both exogenous (such as those related to credit or astronomical phenomena) and endogenous (such as those of Marx, Keynes, or Schumpeter), each with a particular perspective on the cause and nature of the cycle. Parallels are also drawn with cycles in other complex systems, such as the regulatory mechanisms of Watt engines, thermostats, variable stars like Cepheid variables, and animal populations like lemmings and hares, suggesting that cyclical oscillation may be a common property of dynamic systems with feedback . Finally, it is emphasized that there is no single theoretical consensus on why economic cycles occur, but there is general agreement that they are a structural part of the capitalist system, which encourages further exploration of their logic from different historical, theoretical, and empirical perspectives.
The document delves into the theoretical and dynamic explanation of the capitalist economic cycle from a structural and systemic perspective, proposing that cycles are not anomalies, but rather an inherent result of the functioning of allocation mechanisms in decentralized economies like capitalism. In this system, production decisions are made in an atomized manner by independently operating firms, based on expectations about an uncertain future, which generates a high probability of systematic errors in resource allocation. Furthermore, the structural drive toward profit maximization pushes the economy toward constant growth, which, combined with the ecological and material limits of the environment, produces recurring oscillations. The document compares these mechanisms to mathematical algorithms and shows how both can be unstable and generate cyclical or even chaotic dynamics. It introduces the key concept of negative feedback as a regulatory mechanism for many natural and artificial systems (such as Watt's regulator, thermostats, or animal populations), and proposes that the capitalist system behaves similarly: it responds to overproduction or shortages with adjustments in prices and production, but if the intensity of these responses is very high, boom-bust cycles are generated . The paper uses the cobweb model to illustrate how producers' expectations, relative to past prices, can generate persistent and even divergent oscillations in production and price levels, depending on the sensitivity of economic agents. It also introduces a simplified logistic model, where the investment rate, technological intensity, and environmental constraints determine whether the system tends toward a stable equilibrium, a cycle, or chaos. Through this model, the different historical phases of capitalism are explained: a stable stage before the Industrial Revolution; a cyclical stage during the 19th century; a relatively stable phase during the postwar period thanks to the welfare state and government spending; and a return to the cycles since 1973 due to the continuous advance of intensive technology. It is concluded that if the pressure of economic growth on ecological limits is too intense, the system inevitably enters a cycle of crisis and recovery. However, it is suggested that a possible solution would be to reduce the investment rate, which would smooth out the fluctuations, buy time to transition to a new development model, and revive classic proposals such as those of John Stuart Mill, which advocated for a steady state with greater scope for well-being and consumption.
The document focuses on the dynamics of human populations through mathematical models and visual representations such as population pyramids. It explains that, to accurately analyze demographic evolution, the population is broken down by age groups, with women being the primary focus, as they are biologically responsible for reproduction. In this model, the number of future births is calculated by multiplying the current number of women in each age group by its corresponding reproduction rate, while the evolution of the rest of the pyramid depends on survival rates across age groups. It highlights that with constant reproduction and survival rates, the population tends toward a stable structure, which can be increasing, decreasing, or constant, depending on whether the growth factor is greater than, less than, or equal to 1. For example, an annual growth rate of 0.92% implies that the analyzed population would double every 75 years, while a negative rate of -1.2% would lead to a halving every 34 years. Furthermore, the concept of reproductive value is introduced, which measures the potential to contribute to future generations from the present, and whose theoretical importance is even linked to natural selection. The use of Leslie matrices as a formal tool for modeling these dynamics is also mentioned. At an empirical level, real population pyramids from countries such as Spain, Germany, the USSR, and China are examined, reflecting the impacts of wars, policies, and social transitions on their population structure. Finally, the importance of critically analyzing demographic data is emphasized, considering cases in which censuses have been manipulated or have generated conflicts, as occurred in the USSR. Taken together, this topic shows how population growth and structure depend not only on biological factors but also on historical, social, and political ones, and how their rigorous analysis is key to understanding the economic and social trajectories of countries.
Population Dynamics in One Step [Excel]
The spreadsheet presents a simple population growth model that analyzes population dynamics using constant birth and death rates applied at a single point in time . The file includes a table with basic data such as the initial population, birth rates, death rates, and the formulas needed to calculate the net population change over a given period. This approach allows for a clear and direct observation of how these rates affect population growth or decline, serving as an introduction to fundamental population dynamics concepts.
Population Dynamics with Variable Rates [Excel]
The spreadsheet presents a detailed population evolution model that considers varying birth and death rates, as well as population additions and subtractions over several time periods . The model allows users to observe how the population changes over time according to these rates, which are not constant but adjust based on time or population size. The document includes simulations that allow for comparing scenarios with different combinations of rates, demonstrating how even small variations can generate significant impacts on long-term population dynamics. Furthermore, it incorporates graphs that visualize population evolution under different assumptions, facilitating the interpretation of results and critical analysis of the model's behavior.
The initial section explains how the evolution of the discipline, from the dominance of the classical school (Smith, Ricardo, Mill) in the 19th century, through the neoclassical school (Jevons, Marshall), to general equilibrium (Walras, Arrow, Debreu ), has left unresolved gaps, especially in the face of real-world problems such as economic crises, unemployment, and climate change. Although general equilibrium remains the dominant theoretical framework in academia, it has lost credibility and practical relevance, leading to a current scenario of theoretical crisis and a lack of consensus. Public policies are often designed today without a robust theoretical foundation, revealing that economics has not yet reached a mature state as a science. The document organizes the main theories of prices: classical retrospective objectivism (prices as production costs), neoclassical prospective subjectivism (prices as marginal utilities), general equilibrium coordination (prices as the interaction of agents in the market), optimization Lagrange multipliers (prices as marginal rates), and reproduction interdependence (prices as conditions for maintaining the system). Furthermore, it emphasizes that these positions, far from being necessarily contradictory, can be understood as complementary perspectives on the same multifaceted reality, which can be integrated into a more comprehensive theory, as has occurred in other areas of science with apparent contradictions overcome through synthesis (for example, the wave-particle duality of light or the equivalence of formulations in quantum mechanics). In short, it argues that advancing toward a deeper understanding of capitalism requires combining these different perspectives, overcoming the limitations of each isolated approach.
The document on classical economists presents a synthesis of their theoretical contributions, highlighting how their analysis helps us understand both the “pure” capitalism of the past (without a welfare state, labor laws, or social safety nets) and the risks that contemporary capitalism faces if it loses these protections. It explains that classical economists, such as Adam Smith, David Ricardo, Thomas Malthus, and John Stuart Mill, offered fundamental tools: from theories of value (labor theory of value, production costs, distribution among wages, profits, and rents) to concepts like the “invisible hand,” comparative advantage, the limits to growth, and the stationary state. Furthermore, it revisits historical and philosophical antecedents, such as Aristotle, the Scholastics, and the Physiocrats, who reflected on the just price and the relationship between use value and exchange value. The document underscores that classical economists, despite living in a very different context, offered relevant insights for understanding current dilemmas, such as the impact of automation, the role of capital, distributive tensions between social classes, and the risk that technological progress will increase total production without guaranteeing equitable distribution or improvements in general well-being. It also points out that if modern institutions were to disappear, the logic of capitalism would spontaneously tend to reproduce dehumanized forms of economic organization, where wages would be reduced to the bare minimum and workers could be displaced by machines—a warning that remains relevant today. In short, analyzing classical economics is not only a historical exercise but also a key to critically reflecting on the structural and ethical challenges of contemporary capitalism.
The second section on classical economics expands and deepens the analysis, focusing particularly on Karl Marx, who reworked and critiqued classical economics. Marx argues that the essence of capitalism lies not in visible prices or a supposed superficial law of costs, but in the hidden process of exploitation of human labor. This process generates surplus value through extended working hours, beyond what is necessary for the reproduction of workers, thus establishing a rate of surplus value that, circulating among capital through competition, takes the apparent form of a uniform rate of profit. The document compares the different classical schools of thought, their theories of value, wages, rent, and resources, showing how the initial ideas were later corrected, superseded, or transformed, especially by recognizing theoretical limitations (such as the circularity of the cost of production theory) and empirical errors (such as the Malthusian mechanism's poor prediction of declining birth rates and rising wages in advanced societies). It also examines the classical notion of the steady state, where growth would be limited by resource constraints, and explains how capitalism has historically circumvented this limit thanks to continuous technological advancement, expanding the system's carrying capacity. Finally, it highlights that, although classical economists viewed capitalism as a machine governed by rigid laws (“iron laws”), they did not anticipate the institutional transformations—such as social struggles, labor legislation, and the welfare state—that have partially humanized economic relations. However, it warns that if these institutions were to disappear, the relentless logic of capitalism would resurface, reminding us that social progress is not guaranteed by economic dynamics alone, but depends on political and collective decisions.
The section on neoclassical economists explains how this school, which emerged in the late 19th century, broke with classical approaches by introducing marginalism, subjective value, and a more precise mathematical formalization of economic analysis. Three main branches are distinguished: the English school (with Jevons and Marshall, focused on supply and demand), the Austrian school (with Menger, Böhm-Bawerk, Wieser, Mises, and Hayek, emphasizing methodological individualism, time preference, opportunity cost theory, and a critique of Marx), and the Lausanne school (with Walras, Pareto, and Cassel, which developed general equilibrium and is discussed in another document). Neoclassical economists shifted the analysis from the past to the future, considering that the value of goods depends on their expected utility, not on historical production costs. This shift allowed them to construct more general theories, avoiding specific explanations for certain factors such as land. However, they are criticized for extrapolating the subjectivism that can be applied to simple models (such as Robinson Crusoe or Wieser 's idealized communism ) to the complexity of capitalism, where prices are determined more by profit expectations than by pure subjective utility. The document also points out that the Austrian school was reluctant to adopt mathematical models, unlike other branches. Ultimately, the neoclassical legacy consists of having renewed economic analysis with a prospective, marginalist vision, albeit with significant limitations when it comes to explaining the specific dynamics of real-world capitalism.
The section on general equilibrium addresses the evolution of mathematical models that attempt to describe how prices coordinate the actions of consumers and producers in a competitive economy, from the pioneering work of Léon Walras and Gustav Cassel to the more refined formulations of Kenneth Arrow and Gérard Debreu . These models assume that goods are fully specified in physical, temporal, and geographical terms, and that agents— producers maximizing profits and consumers maximizing utility under a budget constraint—operate within a framework where present decisions incorporate perfect predictions of the future. General equilibrium is defined as the state in which no one can improve their situation without harming another, and the famous existence and optimality theorems prove that, under certain conditions, there are prices that allow private decisions to be reconciled with available resources. However, the document criticizes the fact that, despite its centrality in economic theory, this model lacks direct empirical testing, exhibits internal inconsistencies, and fails to explain how equilibrium is actually achieved in a real economy characterized by cycles, crises, and imbalances. Furthermore, by focusing exclusively on the role of price as the exchange rate, it overlooks key aspects of value highlighted by other schools of thought. In short, the general equilibrium model proves insufficient as an empirical description of real economic functioning and must be complemented by other perspectives to understand phenomena such as crises, unemployment, and persistent imbalances.
The section on optimization explores how mathematical tools, especially linear programming developed by Leonid Kantorovich and George Dantzig (with their famous simplex algorithm), allow us to formalize the optimal allocation of resources under known constraints. In this approach, prices are interpreted as Lagrange multipliers : they represent the rate at which the objective (whether utility, profit, or another goal) increases when an additional unit of a resource is available, extending the concept of value beyond a simple exchange rate . Thus, even in non-market contexts, such as Robinson Crusoe's Island, we can speak of the intrinsic value of things in terms of their marginal contribution to an objective. In capitalist economies, this objective is usually profit maximization, leading each firm to solve constrained optimization problems, but in an interdependent manner, since markets connect the decisions of all agents. However, the document criticizes the optimization school for addressing these problems abstractly, without clearly specifying the overall allocation objective or how to dynamically integrate market exchanges into the process—aspects that general equilibrium theory attempted to cover. In short, mathematical optimization provides a powerful framework for understanding economic decisions as a problem of maximization under constraints, illuminating the role of prices as indicators of relative scarcity, but it needs to be complemented by models that articulate aggregate behavior and interactions between agents to adequately capture the complexity of real-world capitalism.
The section on reproduction examines economic theories that understand the economy as a system of circular flows between sectors and classes, starting with precedents such as the Tableau From François Quesnay's economic theory and Karl Marx's reproduction schemes, to Wassily Leontief 's modern input-output table studies and the mathematical models of Piero Sraffa and John von Neumann, these approaches highlight that, unlike neoclassical or general equilibrium views that see the economy as a simple one-way street (from means of production to consumer goods), capitalism is a non-anthropocentric system where even humans are inputs replaceable by machines or artificial intelligence, and where what matters is maintaining the conditions for the process of accumulation and expansion to be repeated indefinitely . Input-output analysis describes the interrelationships of an economy, how the outputs of one sector become inputs for another, while Sraffa's and von Neumann 's models go further by formalizing prices, profit rates, and growth as a result of the technical conditions of production. The document highlights strengths, such as its emphasis on productive interdependencies and the forces that enable mutual expansion, and limitations, such as its failure to fully integrate the link between value and Lagrangian optimization multipliers, nor the role of prices as coordination mechanisms. In short, the reproduction school provides a key perspective for understanding the circular, expansive, and non-human-welfare-centered dynamics of capitalism, offering powerful models for analyzing systemic sustainability beyond individual consumption.