The Conflicting Economic Lessons of Amazon versus Tesla during the Corona Episode

January 5th 2021 | كتبها

Collectively, the net worth of the world’s 500 richest people grew about $1.8 trillion last year, according to Bloomberg. Initial reports, in early October 2020, had said they got $813 billion richer. As it turns out, there is a TRILLION dollars more to that. Small potatoes! After all, what’s a trillion dollars in the history of the universe?! In the meantime, the world economy is reeling from recession. Not high-tech and pharmaceutical companies which have literally been gorging themselves on the Covid-19 crisis.

It used to be said that greed promotes economic growth. The Covid-19 episode has shown bluntly that capitalism rewards scavenging and opportunism, whether it promotes economic growth or kills it (speculation bringing down whole industries and national currencies being a case-in-point of the latter).

The truth of the matter is that social distancing restrictions during the plague channeled more retailing into e-commerce. So Amazon’s net worth skyrocketed. The same thing goes for Facebook, pharmaceuticals manufacturing Corona virus vaccines, and so on and so forth.

On the other hand, the exponential surge of Tesla’s stock, the electric-car maker, by a whopping 740% in 2020, is very interesting given the falling prices of gasoline that was exacerbated by the devastating economic impact of Corona virus restrictions.

Elon Musk, a mere 20% of owner of Tesla, added $140 billion to his net worth in 2020, $15 billion of which came, in fact, from his stake in Space X, a space travel company, which witnessed a huge increase in its stock prices this year due a space-driven investment outlook (which was tackled in another piece titled “Mining Outer Space: The Moon is Open for Business”).

Tesla may not be able to preserve its ascendancy in the electric-car business for long given incoming competition. Much of its stock price hikes are most likely due to speculation in the financial market too, since its earnings-to-stock-price-ratio has gone way overboard.

However, Tesla and Space X illustrate a different trend suggesting that capitalism has not yet exhausted its historical ability to develop the means of production, especially on the frontiers of technology, even while the economy is being destroyed. And so long as that is true, it needs to be said that although scavenging remains its dominant model, capitalism still holds the reigns of technological progress, which means that it is still too early to declare it dead in absentia. That is important for anti-imperialists world-wide to know so they won’t underestimate their enemy, as they have frequently done before.

Ibrahim Alloush

https://www.facebook.com/ibrahim.alloush.7315/posts/169050898291509

الموضوعات المرتبطة

Price Gouging and Profiteering Does NOT Exist According to Most Economists

  Raising prices of essentials prohibitively during emergencies or periods of crisis does not exist according to most economists.  The market is all about charging what the market will bear, according to them.  So if a retailer can charge $20 for a loaf of bread pending an imminent Corona virus lockdown, for example, then more power to [...]

Environmentalism, Corona Curfews, and the Poor: It’s the Economy, Stupid!

  Environmentalism, for all it’s worth, has always sounded stand-offish for the poor generally, and the poor in poorer countries particularly.  Where people need jobs, health, education, infrastructure, housing, and more than a subsistence wage, sounding off worries about endangered species, coral reefs, dolphins caught inadvertently in [...]

Billionaires Get About A Trillion Dollars Richer During 2020 with NO Trickle-Down Effect in Sight

According to Time on Oct. 6, 2020, "despite the global economic shock, the world’s 500 richest people are a combined $813 billion richer now than they were at the beginning of the year, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index", and 2020 is not even over yet. The largest accumulation of wealth took place in the technology and [...]

Two Equations which May Help Explain Why Prices Rise and the US Dollar Appreciates in War-torn Countries under Siege.. Syria as a Case in Point

For people living in countries torn by war, then besieged by stifling sanctions, the issue of rising prices and depreciating local currencies is a very emotional subject which impinges on the very core of their livelihood and the livelihood of their families. Yet it is precisely such dire situations which require an objective understanding of [...]
2024 الصوت العربي الحر.