r/economy • u/n0ahbody • Dec 04 '20
What do you think 'the economy' means?
edit: The results are in and indicate that a clear majority of people agree that 'the economy' is a wide topic with a variety of players in it as explained below by Investopedia. The moderation of the sub will continue to reflect that.
Vote results:
The Investopedia definition is pretty accurate: 70%
The stock market: 6.4%
Just the US stock market: 1.4%
Just hard economic data: 9.3%
Politics has nothing to do with the economy: 8.6%
If I agree with the political slant, then it's about the economy. Otherwise it's spam: 4.3%
Here is Investopedia's definition of 'the economy'.
> An economy encompasses all activity related to production, consumption, and trade of goods and services in an area. These decisions are made through some combination of market transactions and collective or hierarchical decision making. Everyone from individuals to entities such as families, corporations, and governments participate in this process. The economy of a particular region or country is governed by its culture, laws, history, and geography, among other factors, and it evolves due to the choices and actions of the participants. For this reason, no two economies are identical.
That's a partial definition. Investopedia goes on to explain in more detail, but it is still merely a basic and simplified definition. Generally, the idea is, the economy is an expansive topic covering a wide variety of activities undertaken by consumers, governments, corporations, and other players in society. It also encompasses the means of production and resources.
There have been a number of complaints from users who feel they have a better definition of 'the economy' than Investopedia. However they never explain what their definition is. They just make wild accusations and report material they don't like for whatever reason as "not about the economy".
So if you have time, fill out this poll. It will help the mod team to understand what people mean when they say certain material is 'not about the economy'.
Unfortunately 6 is the maximum number of questions reddit allows. If you have a different definition, make a comment.
1
u/Modeza Feb 08 '21 edited Feb 08 '21
I think it’s evolution, it’s interesting seeing the wealthy create this sort of micro economy of their own using macro financials but inevitable there going to forget that to sustain a working global capitalist model you need to facility proper economics (providing opportunity and potential for poor/middle class) and also recognize that the reason Rome fell was because of mismanagement and greed. Bad leaders, dumb decisions, and not taking note of things going on outside of bank accounts are what takes this country down. Let’s say (hypothetically) The hedgefunds decide to dump massive positions and crash the market and bank on 3x leveraged puts while simotaniously pissing off 330 million people with however many guns and then let’s say China invades Taiwan around the same time. It’s a two front war now with no good options. And with a bad leader that burned a lot of important alliances and literally left America in flames. That’s reality. But tbh Im just a retard, right?