1992-11-29 - Governmental Economic Control

Header Data

From: yanek@novavax.nova.edu (Yanek Martinson)
To: rchilder@us.oracle.com (Richard Childers)
Message Hash: 831b8f3b889e9b0bbff0e49a75721eb86a3076089b0fe3e38f0ddb9944a9f620
Message ID: <9211290446.AA07027@novavax.nova.edu>
Reply To: <9211290407.AA00714@rchilder.us.oracle.com>
UTC Datetime: 1992-11-29 04:46:59 UTC
Raw Date: Sat, 28 Nov 92 20:46:59 PST

Raw message

From: yanek@novavax.nova.edu (Yanek Martinson)
Date: Sat, 28 Nov 92 20:46:59 PST
To: rchilder@us.oracle.com (Richard Childers)
Subject: Governmental Economic Control
In-Reply-To: <9211290407.AA00714@rchilder.us.oracle.com>
Message-ID: <9211290446.AA07027@novavax.nova.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


> I don't think cash will _ever_ be eliminated. 

> There will always be transactions which will not justify the cost of the
> overhead in hardware and transaction processing, and market pressures will
> reward those whom develop a way to avoid this overhead, IMHO.

You can not depend on this.  The government may subsidize the
transactions, reducing or elimintating the overhead.  For example it
may issue "free" (paid for by money extorted from you) Personal
Identitiy Cards, and install "public" Funds Transfer Terminals in most
public locations.

It may pass laws requiring every business to accept it (just write
"This Card is a Legal Tender..." on the card).

Then the only incentive for bypassing the system would be desire for
privacy, which, for the average American, is much weaker than the
economic incentive.


--
Yanek Martinson    mthvax.cs.miami.edu!safe0!yanek     uunet!medexam!yanek
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