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The Boots theory of socio-economic unfairness

A decent pair of boots costs £100. An inferior pair costs £50.

The man who can afford the £100 pair has less need of them than the man who can only afford the £50 pair (he has a white collar job and his own private transport). They last the wealthier man a lifetime. The poorer man has to replace his inferior boots three times in his lifetime, meaning that an economically disadvantaged person has paid twice as much for the same level of utility.

This is an inefficient distribution of goods by the market, which impacts negatively on a society's economic productivity. How to overcome this? Price control of essential goods? Redistribution of wealth through tax credits or similar? State control of boot production?
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Convivial · 26-30, F
Money is like a fission reaction... Once you get to a certain level it's self sustaining... The best way to prevent it is to not allow it to accumulate over generations
SunshineGirl · 36-40, F
@Convivial Excellent point. When rent seeking and income from accumulated capital overtake actual earned income, then it may be time to redistribute some of that capital . .
Convivial · 26-30, F
@SunshineGirl of as an expression I heard recently... Earned and unearned money