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You give a few good examples of Galting, but I still don't know what it means. That's fine, but nothing I say about it has any meaning since I don't know what it is.
Regarding Sarbanes Oxley, I know little about it apart from what was mentioned in some general business books I've read (Execution: The Discipline of Getting Things Done, and one other book I can't recall, maybe it was Unintended Consequences). My uninformed guess is that the law made public incorporation less favorable, and that's pushing businesses to be owned by private equity rather than public. If this guess is right, I do not know if this is good or bad.
Regarding 2000, that was the peak the of the tech boom. VCs were funding companies that had no profits, sometimes companies that didn't have real sales if you discounted mutual advertising sales between Internet companies. It's not fair to compare the tech boom to this run-of-the-mill expansion cycle. Maybe with better policies, we could be in a major expansion, something akin to 2000 but sustainable.
I agree with the general idea we should be looking for ways to increase liberty, innovation, and just letting people do their own thing in general. Things could be a lot better. I'm not sure on the claims that number of IPO is a figure of merit. I agree we want more startups which are good at innovation AND more mature businesses which are good consistency. We want more people solving each other's problems.
That's great that you're writing books. Calling that "galting", in my confused understanding of the term, sounds like an insult. You're just doing a job you want to do, trying something and seeing if it works. I call that life. Maybe "Galting" is what I call life.
Here is a small example of what I am talking about. In 2000, 406 companies went public. After the passage of Sarbanes Oxley, those numbers just plummeted. In 2000 (as a sample year) the US had more companies go public than any other country. Why shouldn't we? Now we are not on top. Here is a paper that I cite for numbers. I do not agree at all with their premise, as bigger companies absorbing startups in the long run are not good for economy as it is proven startups are the 95% of all net new jobs in the US.
http://fisher.osu.edu/supplements/10/120...
Last year 222 companies went public, however their earnings are less than a third per company than in 2000.
Finally, I suppose we are of an age to consider early retirement, but that was not our choice. We chose to focus on writing books. As a team we write fiction novels. Db is currently also working on a second non-fiction book about growth economics.
To me the point of that was how bad bad could get if taken to an extreme. Extreme liberty would lead to an inexhaustible energy source. Extreme socialism would lead to everyone falling over one another to grab other people's stuff and focusing their efforts on sob stories and political machinations instead of making goods/services.
"What if policies did not hamstring producers...is it possible not only they would produce more but benefit thousands/millions in the process?"
Yes. 1% extra GDP growth a year works out to several times the production after 100 years. That's just tangible production growth. The overall benefit of liberty is priceless.
"We realized more and more of our time was eaten up by the lack of freedoms I talk about in here and write in our novels. Leaving allows us to accomplish important work we had less time before to focus on."
I hope you write an article or book on this topic. I'm interested in how lack of freedom was causing a problem and how physically moving helped. I love stories about people moving to try something new, i.e. the story of America and all the sci-fi with similar themes.
"We decided the value of that potential work was too important. Do not assume that those who engage in "brain drain" stop their production. check your premise"
Even if moving meant retirement, that's your right. You're not a deserter for not wanting to make something and sell it.
The check your premise thing means almost nothing. Arguments can be unsound because a) false premises or b) logical errors. Either one will take you to wrong conclusions. In this case, the issue is defining "brain drain", "Galting", and so on. At one point I thought you said Galting was abandoning your dreams, or maybe it was abandoning seeking your dreams within the US. Here you say "brain drain" does *not* mean stopping all production. These words need definitions.
In the book the Gulch residents were clearly producing stuff but out of reach of the taxing authorities.
Thanks for indulging my linguistic curiosity.
When db and I galted, it was about accomplishing things. We realized more and more of our time was eaten up by the lack of freedoms I talk about in here and write in our novels. Leaving allows us to accomplish important work we had less time before to focus on. Eventually, we decided the value of that potential work was too important. Do not assume that those who engage in "brain drain" stop their production. check your premise
I'm glad you're not upset about the first part with the omitted word. I stand by the second part, though. That's how we come off, IMHO-- people with problems getting along, angry, scared, confused, and the taking the self-righteous tack that we're actually misunderstood geniuses who would provide untold value for humankind if it weren't for having to deal with gov't regulations. I find sanctimony about NOT accomplishing things very annoying. I like hearing about people who overcome the problems and do accomplish something.
http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/posts/a6...
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