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42 sats \ 1 reply \ @south_korea_ln 25 Oct \ parent \ on: War, Taxes, and the National Science Foundation science
That's the problem with many of the articles I see arguing against public research. They make it sound like it is an all-or-nothing, too. Just taking the other side of the public vs private research aisle. I did not read the original carefully enough to figure out what position the author really defends behind the avalanche of paragraphs musing on the topic.
But I think we quite agree on this, you don't seem to take an all-or-nothing stance on this. Maybe that's why you won't be writing for Mises, and why I hate writing in my research proposal to get money from Samsung that my basic research is going to have an impact in the next 2 years.
Yeah, it's all very speculative.
In the same vein on how hard it is to actually assert whether a bitcoin-standard will be better than the current fiat economy. A reality check by a society that actually goes fully bitcoin will teach us much more than Saifedean's rants on the topic.
I do have an absolutist view on government research, but it's because I believe states to be morally illegitimate. I'm more agnostic on the possibility of government funded basic research to be net productivity enhancing. There are theoretical econ reasons to be very skeptical of any central planning venture, though.
One way to think about it is that basic research is pretty easy to fund, from an entrepreneurial strategy standpoint. You hire a bunch of nerds and cut them checks when they request more funding. If that tended to be profitable, we'd probably see successful businesses doing it, especially since there are plenty of improvements that can be made to my "Just pay the nerds" model.
Since that doesn't work as a business model, we now need to explain how a bunch of bureaucrats are able to identify value adding ventures when entrepreneurs with direct skin in the game can't. It's far more likely that this just isn't a value adding venture. Again, you'd have to think on the margins. Maybe private industry would only fund the highest valued 20% of research, but that might account for 80% of the total value.
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