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  • One of the most important concepts in modern economics is the idea of demand.

  • A functioning economy has to have a healthy level of demand in it

  • for lack of demand invariably leads to the most awful specter of all: recession.

  • Therefore, governments carefully track how much demand there is and are careful to apply a stimulus

  • whenever it looks as if there isn't any.

  • This involves maneuvers like lowering interest rates, cutting taxes, and loosening credit in all manner of ways.

  • For example, in a typical piece of demand stimulus in December 2008, fearing a recession,

  • the Australian government gave a present of $1,000 to every family in the country,

  • encouraging them to go out and spend so as to avoid economic disaster.

  • Currently, the focus of economics is entirely on the quantity of demand,

  • on trying to get people to spend more money on, well, pretty much anything.

  • It's not what we spend money on interest economists it's that they spend it on something.

  • Very little attention has, so far, ever been devoted to the issue of the quality of demand.

  • It's considered entirely irrelevant, by economists and governments, what people are spending on.

  • They might be buying donuts, or taking French conversation classes,

  • seeing a psychotherapist, or purchasing a sports car.

  • In terms of GDP, unemployment, and stock market

  • it doesn't matter in the least what they're buying so long as the total spend is high enough.

  • The only caveat is that it is a headache for the state if too much expenditure goes to overseas businesses.

  • Yet clearly in other ways it does matter what we spend our money on because

  • the combined purchasing choices of millions of people shapes the kind of society with live in

  • and the kinds of lives most of us end up leading.

  • If everyone wants game shows on TV, and doughnuts with marzipan coating for supper,

  • a lot of us will end up working in those industries.

  • If on the other hand there is little demand poetry, or couples therapy,

  • or ritualized tea drinking by moonlight in straw and wooden huts (it was big in 16th century Japan),

  • few people can end up working in these areas and if they do they won't earn much.

  • This is where a major statement of value judgment comes in: there is better and worse demand.

  • Demand for handguns is, we can say with assurance, less good than demand for education.

  • Demand for healthy food is better than demand for junk food.

  • Our societies should feel less nervous about treading into the area of values.

  • After all, in our own lives, we know there are better and worse things to spend money on,

  • and that's not different at a macroscale.

  • Good demand is defined as a consumer choice that's in line with fruitful needs.

  • It properly pays off.

  • It contributes to better lives in the long term.

  • There wouldn't be a single set of purchases right for everyone, but that's not the point.

  • The issue is merely to get the debate started and to draw attention to the fact that there are better and worse purchasing decisions

  • and that a society needs to discuss what these might be instead of just focusing on demand, per say.

  • Raising the quality of demand doesn't imply a draconian government imposing some supposedly high-minded

  • agenda on a reluctant public.

  • Demand, in a market oriented democratic society, is and can only ever be voluntary.

  • Raising demand can't be a matter of forcing anyone to do anything.

  • But what we need is the more important, more humane task of encouraging ourselves to be wiser in our purchasing decisions.

  • A phenomenon we don't pay enough attention to is: the education of the consumer.

  • Poor choices are not innate, unmovable characteristics.

  • They're simply what happens when you don't have the chance to learn.

  • With the right engaging guides we can overhaul our ideas of what we want in many areas.

  • We've done it to a great extent already around food, but travel, furniture, housing design, education, psychotherapy,

  • and relationships all stand in need a little help.

  • If good demand were more normal it would transform society.

  • There'd be fewer jobs that felt demeaning or degrading

  • because more demand would be directed towards more meaningful needs.

  • Profit wouldn't look sinister or suspect, it would be a sign that a company was doing the right thing and doing it rather brilliantly.

  • it would be a sign that a company was doing the right thing and doing it rather brilliantly.

  • We've been too ready to accept that what people want is some kind of immovable force.

  • In fact, it's entirely subject to change.

  • It's simply a pity that the only people who actively seek to change what people want are corporations,

  • with very large advertising budgets and often rather doubtful things to sell us.

  • It's time for philosophers and others to engage in a complex ethical task of influencing public wants.

  • We need to take up the task of creating better demand.

One of the most important concepts in modern economics is the idea of demand.

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