izentrop wrote:sen-no-sen wrote:izentrop wrote:It is not an ideology and it is not new, it is more and more a vital datum for a company.
Wanting to maximize profitability through a free trade policy and a lowering of barriers or partitions (legislative, physical, etc.) is an economic doctrine largely responsible for all its "small" disappointments.
What is vital for companies is what is left after turnover, apart from ever increasing incidental costs is not an ideology. Christophe could attest to this with the management of his shop. Just-in-time is an essential imperative, for the sales sector in any case ...
It is an inescapable imperative from an immanent point of view, that is to say in a world managed by exponential economism ...
Originally liberalism and its evolutions did not arise from ideology but from the laws of physics (principle of maximum production of entropy) applied to a sub-sequence of the history of the economy.
The problem is that once the principle has been conceptualized by "great schools" (like that of Chicago etc ...) currents of thought, doctrines develop, which demonstrate their operational capacities during short episodes of the Its last, once implemented, then metastasizes in the brains of our elites, who swear by them.
A new problem, even as the world is in contraction, its currents of thought now tend to keep themselves alive by weight on the psyche but also by the investments made in terms of infrastructure. The result is a policy of continuation in the worst case (1) which is corrected by a rebalancing of the system itself (via pandemics, social and societal disintegration, terrorism, etc.)
(1) The latest launch of the largest liner in the world, the
Wonder of the seas can accommodate (a
cluster of) 9400 people (or hostages depending on the scenarios), we are living in a great time!
The health pass or mass vaccination being part of the implementation of its policies in order to preserve mass tourism and the free movement of people ... and especially capital!
"Engineering is sometimes about knowing when to stop" Charles De Gaulle.