> Son’s strategy depended on writing such large checks—to the likes of WeWork, Uber Technologies, and DoorDash—that his portfolio companies would be able to operate at a loss for years, theoretically giving them time to establish market dominance and long-term profits.
This right here is the root of the problem. It is so blatantly anti-competitive and cause extensive damage to society. It hurts small businesses, discourages innovation and quality, monopolizes the industry, increases consumer costs in the long runs, it entices investors to eschew fundamentals and gamble on hype. It's just no way to run a stable economy. We as a society need to find a stop to this or it can be disastrous in the long run.
I sort of agree? If Son was succeeding with this strategy I would totally agree that it's a huge problem.
But he utterly failed. All he did was redistribute investor money into consumer pockets(and weirdly distort some markets in ways that are difficult to understand).
It seems like Softbank is a story of would-be monopolists losing their shirts and consumers(and even employees in those sectors) benefitting from the competition.
I would not minimize the amount of damage done to transportation, hospitality and dining, considering the importance of those industries in a lot of cities.
Softbank radically destabilized several economic sectors in an attempt to monopolize them. That kind of thing used to be a crime, and it should be again.
As a consumer, Uber was superior to taxis in a number of ways: clearer pricing, competitive pricing, ride sharing, transparent routing, digital history and receipts, integrating with other apps, etc. What damage do you think was done to transportation?
Yeah, the app was nice, no argument there. The problem is two-fold - one, it harmed economic actors who were not using a PE subsidized model. That means actual businesses were lost in exchange for one that basically cannot be profitable without a monopoly on pricing.
Second, their below-cost pricing also enticed municipalities to replace public transportation services with ride shares paid for by the muni. Now that the rates are jacked up, those calculations make no sense (which of course, they never did without subsidy). If your city already sold the busses and laid off transit employees, you are SOL. Not a problem in NY or SF, but definitely an issue in towns and small cities.
A free bonus one would be the audacity that Uber and Lyft demonstrated in forcing through a California proposition to create a special labor classification in order to keep enabling their less-than-profitable businesses.
> it harmed economic actors who were not using a PE subsidized model
The only impact on the "economic actors" I noticed was that traditional cabs are now less likely to rip me off knowing I can always call an Uber
> Second, their below-cost pricing also enticed municipalities to replace public transportation services with ride shares paid for by the muni
The point of public transportation is to help people, not the other way around. Public transportation isn't a good in its own right. Let's be clear that public transportation failed the least well off. Trains and buses run less frequently in poorer neighborhoods and on off peak hours. Uber was a god-send for these people. If a private solution can do a better job than public transportation, be more accountable, be sustainable in terms of profit without the need for public funding, then I say private solution should win
That's probably more about what you pay attention to than the actual impacts.
> If a private solution can do a better job than public transportation
I just explained why it didn't - the price point was completely based on private subsidy. I live in an urban area of a major city, and there are times and areas where it takes 30+ minutes to get a ride, including a few months ago when I was maybe 10 minutes from the international airport at a reasonable hour (~10PM). Busses and trains have schedules which are fairly reliable. They run late sometimes, but there is a pretty reasonable guarantee that they will show up. They won't cancel after 10 minutes, the muni is ADA complaint, and will only cost you $2.50 to get within a few blocks of your destination. Yes, buses have a coverage problem in the suburbs, but my suburban relatives (who love ridesharing) have also been complaining about the price and availability the last 12 months, so it doesn't seem like Uber/Lyft are able to fill the last-mile niche reliably at this point anyways.
There's research out there showing Uber has increased congestion on public roads, and I think also driven up carbon footprint per passenger. In part this is because it's cheaper than it should be. Incentivising less people per vehicle (taxis versus e.g. busses) is bad for society at large.
Not a bad result, but probably not worth the problems that their current business model entails. There's clearly opportunities for better transportation options, they just need to make economic sense.
Both researches show benefits but the nber one somehow twists it into a different narrative. I understand why hackernews users hate uber, but shouldn’t professional economists try to be unbiased?
> What damage do you think was done to transportation?
Uber/Lyft drivers destroyed traffic etiquette. I don't even drive and I saw it. For a few years there anytime you saw a driver doing something weird and/or dangerous it was Uber or Lyft.
It shouldn't matter if they were successful or not, the method is, as parent wrote, sustainable and has no place in a supposedly stable economy.
Just like a robbery is illegal no matter if it was successful or not.
Plenty of other companies employ the same tactic but within one company and calling products "loss-leaders". Microsoft can run GitHub without making any profits with GitHub itself, as they can spend money earned elsewhere on running GitHub as a "loss-leader", just in order to push out any competitor that doesn't have a huge corporate behind them.
This method has 2 parts: lose money while creating a monopoly, then jack prices once consumers have no choice.
However, none of the Uber style businesses have an actual moat, so they can never implement part 2. This whole set of investments is one big subsidy to consumers.
The fact that businesses get destroyed by a cheaper or free alternative is not a bad thing unless that consolidation leads to higher prices in the long run.
Github is a great example in saas area. Utterly trivial for most customers to switch away or self host. They have no moat so they can't really jack prices.
Now there are political issues with... essentially private companies creating public goods(see google search, social media, github to some extent, youtube/Twitch). However these are governance issues, rather than economic ones.
> Github is a great example in saas area. Utterly trivial for most customers to switch away or self host. They have no moat so they can't really jack prices.
I'm not sure I agree with this. It may be true for single developer code hosting, but GitHub as a business is much more than just that.
GitHub makes money off three things, only one of which is the "core" code hosting business and two of which have solid moats:
- GitHub Enterprise {Cloud, Server}
- Actions (Azure compute minutes)
- Advanced Security (code scanning, secret scanning, etc.)
For customers operating in this environment, it's _extremely difficult_ to move because the latter features are built in to their business process (e.g. a compliance requirement that there are no known vulnerabilities dictates the use of GHAS, and they've already gotten signed off so switching to a different provider requires going through a more stringent audit in the future). GitHub doesn't have to raise prices, they just slowly add new functionality that boosts the usage of Actions, GHAS, etc. which both provide actual benefit to those customer segments and increase revenue (and eventually get new, larger customers on board).
That large scale usage also offsets the cost for their free tiers, which in turn keeps the single developers hosting their code on GitHub. Even though it's fairly easy for them to move their repos elsewhere, the halo of other features plus the community (which is really the asset) keeps developers on the platform.
> However, none of the Uber style businesses have an actual moat, so they can never implement part 2. This whole set of investments is one big subsidy to consumers.
The big bet on Uber was against the ability of the governments to fight back against predatory bullshit - and for a while, it did seem like the big coffers of Uber cash would win over the established system of taxi regulations and employment laws. And at that point, they'd have the moat to crush the competition.
All of the Uber style businesses are also based around convenience, and as a consumer my elasticity for convenience is not very elastic(I don't know if this is the same for the general population). Pre-Uber, I can almost count on one hand the number of times I took a taxi somewhere but Uber made it cheap and fairly frictionless, so why not! Now it is still fairly frictionless but more expensive, and is just not worth it as much.
But surely the concept of loss leaders can't be problematic in itself? I have no problem with a supermarket subsidising the price of one product to get me in the door, for example.
The argument is that you should be. There's no free lunch; somebody is paying for it, and for every time that you notice that you're getting a deal there will be another time where you're getting screwed, whether or not you happen to realize it. And in the meantime, allowing large companies to throw their weight around like this reduces competition, which harms consumers in the long run even if you benefit in the short term.
Not saying I disagree but in my country, the minute Uber Eats started charging for delivery and stopped giving out subsidized free food was the minute a bunch of competitors popped up
So yeah, for a while it was only uber eats but they didn't maintain that lead without those subsidies that were (apparently) a net positive for consumers
Different products. GitHub, more or less, has zero marginal cost for an additional customer. So they can afford to give away their product solely to starve the market for competitors.
Supermarkets can't do that because they have a significant marginal cost for each good sold/given away. They can't afford to give away milk to 10 million people to get 500k of them to pay for something else. So the market distortion effects are much more limited in the case of physical goods.
Presumably determining if a loss leader exists to destroy competitors is tricky though?
Like, MS aren’t going to come out and say “we want to bury gitlab”, even if that was the intended goal. there’s always going to be some vague brand building excuse to hide behind.
(I don’t think this is the case for GitHub, but to illustrate the point)
It is somewhat tricky, but sometimes it can be (and has been) proven; people do say all kinds of things while doing illegal stuff, and sometimes even write it down or send it as an email.
This is a good point — the LIBOR scandal springs to mind when thinking of the inexplicably brazen things written down whilst committing white collar crime!
You need to explain what exactly needs to be made illegal, cause it's just regular VC to me. Many VC businesses lose money for a long time, including the likes of FB or Amazon, the strategy being illegal doesn't sound right to me.
I believe Son has succeeded with this strategy if the bar for success is him getting rich and getting others rich. In the early 2000s he came from nothing, made a fortune, lost it all, and then remade it again. But at the end of the day, his strategy essentially hypes a company which then IPOs and he offloads his risk to the general public. He might be a good example of survivorship bias, how many have tried this very same thing only to fail miserably?
Maybe. If so, we're talking about a single investor out of at least hundreds that have similar, if not so insane, models. They work out fine, many of those posting here work for a company funded by such back in those days.
In the late 90's/early 00's it was interesting to see which sites took off and which did not. I owned a hosting company and was fairly active in the community. It was an open secret that the giant sites of today were simply losing money on a monthly basis due to infrastructure costs with rich investors picking up the tab.
Other competing bootstrapped companies with regular Joe founders simply could not keep up when their competitors could simply burn $100k/mo in bandwidth and server bills while instead they needed to be responsible with sustainable growth. I had more than a handful of founders/company owners who had previously perfectly sustainable models built up over half a decade only to be crushed by loss-making VC money.
I often wonder how much different the Internet would look like if a startup remained a startup, and not some high finance big business industry that took over the title.
> But he utterly failed. All he did was redistribute investor money into consumer pockets(and weirdly distort some markets in ways that are difficult to understand).
One might argue that the effects of "gig economy" and similar "modern tech" companies on local economies are damaging as well, beyond "weird distortions":
- residents suffering from noise and rising rents thanks to AirBnB and copycats
- taxis going out of business because they can't compete with Uber leading to people depending on regulated, discrimination-prevented taxis having issues, and to people in "high demand" situations like airports or event venues being squeezed for their money
- restaurants, many of which were already at the edge of financial survivability prior to COVID, facing extortion by delivery apps - either use them and depend on them, or having the delivery apps simply subsidize your competition until you go broke
- employees of all these companies who end up with down-pressure on their wages, and city governments with funding issues because employment tax income collapses as well, and as a result of that everyone else because governmental services degrade
Someone will always pay for the supposed "inefficiencies" that cut-throat capitalism "identifies" - and in almost all cases it is those at the lowest rungs of society that bear the worst load.
That's not all. Softbank's oversized investments into hype machine companies drove investors away from funding legitimate companies in those spaces. The approach of throwing huge sums of money at dubious companies is a huge tax on innovation.
> and weirdly distort some markets in ways that are difficult to understand
The hypocrisy of social engineers presently touting outcome-based economic management policy generally (doesn't apply here apparently, or maybe that's HN selection bias), and the general lack of antitrust enforcement post Nixon don't have something to do with it?
It is only a relatively small problem, because the guy at the helm appears to be not sufficiently successful with his approach. That said, he did have some notable wins ( Alibaba comes to mind ), so whether we discount is as luck or something else, the approach mirrors venture's unicorn search ( 19 will be busts, but one will be a massive payoff ).
Separately, just because Son is losing a lot does not mean that a better equipped investor won't try to do the same, but better. At that point, this strategy would absolutely be an impediment to regular consumer.
As consumers we benefit from the innovation and probably lower prices for a while, but I’m not sure the externalities are worth it.
Maybe an Uber rolls into town with their funny money. 5 years later, we’ve lost lots of small taxi companies, everybody is working in the gig economy, all the profits are booked in a tax havens and the prices are going up even higher than they were.
I started using Uber in April 2014. As a blind person I have taken 2047 trips for a total of 9379 miles. Contrary to your hypothetical, Denver still has its original terrible taxi companies, and Uber is still a good deal, 8 years later. Heck, the Taxi companies are actually now better because they provide apps, something that they were super reluctant to do before Uber because it removed the excuse of the broken credit card reader. Anyone remember that one?
I'm so tired of people pointing at theoretical harms like this rather than evaluating the actual situation. If you had told me 10 years ago that I could press a button on my phone and be guaranteed to be picked up, rather than calling some creepy cab company at 2 AM and being told that someone would be there in 30 minutes and having to wait all night, I would still find that hard to believe. And yet, here we are.
Another thing that really grinds my gears is seeing people cite how there are more emissions now because more people are using Uber. Buddy, that's me you're talking about. My Uber is making those additional emissions. Because in the old days I was trapped at home without easy access to transportation and now I can travel anywhere in the city at any time just like you can, which means I went from producing 0 emissions to actually, you know, living my life.
I've heard a saying (living in Tokyo and close to the Startup scene) that if you have a startup and Softbank comes in calling, you better take their investments or they'll bankroll your competition enough to put you out of business.
This seems to be a case of the market working as intended.
The are making risky plays to establish monopoly but the market actually doesn't reward that unless the government helps to solidify those monopolies.
Thus they use billions with this strategy.
Its questionable if the consumers are hurt, as basically SoftBank is subsidizing the consumers.
Now one can argue that in this process society is hurt in some more subtle ways. But that's hard to quantity. And we also get decent netflix shows out of all that wasted investment.
> Its questionable if the consumers are hurt, as basically SoftBank is subsidizing the consumers.
This subsidization is not free though. They are distorting and ruining markets in the process. Driving actually profitable competitors out of business, then collapsing themselves.
Ride sharing has largely been unprofitable over the last few years. The food delivery apps take a gigantic (Apple App Store) cut from local restaurants.
Not sure who markets are ruined for the long term. If the subsidizing stops, the market will reestablish itself. There is nothing destroyed inherently here.
What's the difference between this and Google offering YouTube or Analytics for free (and at a loss) for years? What's the difference to SaaS companies never turning a profit and operating at a loss for their whole life?
You could indeed make the same argument about those products, it seems to me? We might've had much better alternatives to those products if they hadn't.
German law forbade the "sale" or combined sale of any good at zero cost, even carrier bags until the turn of this century. Coincidentally or not, they have the Mittelstand high technology SME sector and, until the beginning of this century, a high wage low inequality economy.
But also have regulation that identifies businesses which have "arguably" predatory business models. Just because you don't charge money for something, doesn't mean you are offering something for free whilst at the same time operating on a investment type ponzi/pyramid-like scheme that relies on user numbers and ad-eyeballs increasing.
As much as I'm an absolute free-market capitalist advocate, we need to all get it into our heads that it only works in an absolutely free market that isn't propped up in some areas by regulation. As soon as we start fiddling, we have to make sure we fiddle in the right spots, otherwise we're just solidifying and promoting an unhealthy/unfair/predatory market.
Google's a publicly traded company which is profitable in other areas. Search can carry the load financially while they achieve market dominance in other areas.
This model is based on removing public market forces on a company while the company bleeds money in order to achieve dominance.
W/R/T other SaaS companies doing the same, SaaS startups exit strategies include acquisition that D2C business don't really have. Who's going to be big enough or see enough value in buying Uber/WeWork/Doordash to augment their current offerings? Amazon can't buy them all at the peak of their valuation.
Analytics is a special case because the metrics they got from it can be fed into their advertising system to better deliver ads. They may have run it "at a loss" but they did it for data that they certainly made a profit off of.
Agreed. However, IMO SoftBank is just a symptom, when world's banks are (were) so liberal with the money, you get these type of deformations, zombie companies is another one.
It's important to understand that SoftBank is no ordinary bank; while it had been a reasonably successful bank, the distortion truly began with the Saudi government turning up and asking them to invest $200bn for them.
There simply isn't $200bn of real positive capturable return investment opportunities out there available at once. Anything physical would be hopelessly bottlenecked by its own size and would be unable to scale rapidly enough for the investors. So it had to be thrown at all these hugely speculative projects with the goal of capturing entire markets.
The real problem is that, due to a century of fossil fuel dependence, there's a huge amount of wealth concentrated in weird desert monarchies.
This. The disease is gross wealth inequality that leads to a certain sector of society having to figure out where to put all that money while the bottom 99.99% are facing real problems.
As I understand it, Rockefeller's initial strategy with Standard Oil was highly risky in retrospect, because it would only have paid off if new major fields weren't discovered outside of the Pennsylvania, etc. area before he managed to consolidate.
Of course, oil was eventually discovered in Texas, etc. but luckily for Rockefeller that was only after his bet had paid off.
>This right here is the root of the problem. It is so blatantly anti-competitive and cause extensive damage to society. It hurts small businesses, discourages innovation and quality, monopolizes the industry, increases consumer costs in the long runs, it entices investors to eschew fundamentals and gamble on hype. It's just no way to run a stable economy. We as a society need to find a stop to this or it can be disastrous in the long run.
Surprised this is not more unpopular on HN. The entire YC model of startups is literally this, grow so big so fast you consume the entire market.
> grow so big so fast you consume the entire market
That isn't the unpopular part. The derided part is doing so with poor unit-economics. You still need to make a profit or what is the point?
Another big difference is that is very common to run at a loss early on in the life of startup ... but when examined more closely the marginal costs should still make sense. If you are small enough that R&D overhead, or hiring ahead of revenue (growth investment) is overshadowing the top-line ... well that is the just normal startup finances. But there still needs to be a business model where it will make sense with enough sales, and the cost will have sub-linear growth relative to the revenue.
>Another big difference is that is very common to run at a loss early on in the life of startup
How many Unicorns are actually making a profit? Hell how many Deca or Centi-Unicorns are profitable? There's probably hundreds of billions of value in companies that are not and don't have clear paths to profitability.
So I think we've moved from it being ok to be unprofitable when you start a company to it being ok to be unprofitable for decades...
Isn't this how most fast growing companies work? Or initiatives from large companies?
Your comment makes it sound as if this is just Softbank, but I don't see the difference between this and any other hypergrowth company out there to capture and dominate a market with investor funding, operating on losses for years in order to drive out competition.
What makes Softbank different is its incompetence, not its method. But this is actually doing the market a favor by losing in the end, opening up space for competition again.
But all new business, big or small, have traditionally expected to eat losses till they establish themselves. How is this any different though. Even govt gives taxbreaks to new developers.
The world without Softbank is not infested by monopolies, bot at all. There never were taxi medallions worth hundreds of thousand of dollars, there is no monopolistic ponzi game in real estate, the world is a perfect competition as the economics 101 predicted. If only not for Softbank ruining it for everyone right
No one has demonstrated anything. SoftBanks portfolio has taken a hit, but it is hardly a nail in the coffin. Son's actions have generated enormous wealth gains for the people he backs, but in the end the public eats a majority of the losses. Son has still made billions and billions using this model, so how can you say it does not work? You would have to look at funds that tried this same thing and went bankrupt.
"Engaging in such a strategy used to be illegal . Capitalism works because companies that thrive take a bunch of inputs and create a product that is more valuable than the sum of its parts. That creates additional value, and in such a model companies have to compete by making better goods and services.
What predatory pricing does is to enable competition purely based on access to capital. Someone like Neumann, and Son’s entire model with his Vision Fund, is to take inputs, combine them into products worth less than their cost, and plug up the deficit through the capital markets in hopes of acquiring market power later or of just self-dealing so the losses are placed onto someone else."
Really? As a bottom dweller, rather than a master of the universe, I don't see any great harm.
Take Uber. A great service, cheaper rides, what's not to like. If investors stop subsidizing then and Uber was wiped from the board, who cares? I'll find some other way to get a ride. In fact their impact has only been positive, in shaking up the moribund taxi industry. I certainly don't see how it increases consumer costs in the long term, and quality has clearly benefited. Some of those benefits will stick even if Uber tanks.
As to "entices investors to eschew fundamentals and gamble on hype", frankly who the hell cares? Investors are big boys and girls, they don't need hand holding.
It's called dumping. You have artificially low costs temporarily in order to put competitors out of business. Once that's achieved, you then increase prices.
I'm actually not sure how dumping would work when done by Uber, though. Individual taxi drivers will go out of business, but there's little barriers to entry to new taxi drivers starting out again once Uber starts to flex its pricing power. Of course the picture changes if Uber starts to lobby for regulatory protection. You have to look at the micro details of the market to see whether there's a problem there.
Bigger cities typically regulate taxis and sell licenses to operate to taxi companies, who then employ or contract the drivers.
Uber was always an unlicensed taxi scheme. Their planned business model was to ignore the law to reduce costs, then sell rides below cost until everyone else is out of business.
> That law is classic regulatory capture and anti-consumer, though.
Taxis are usually regulated by law to provide mandatory service to an entire area at the same tariff - no discrimination based on the time of the day, the source or destination (e.g. "surge pricing" for events or effectively no service in poor neighborhoods), or if the passengers have any sort of disability.
When the regulated option goes out, a lot of people suddenly live at the whims of capitalist overlords and AI algorithms, but not under the rule of law any more.
Unless it's changed over recent years my understanding is that in many cities there was a high barrier to entry for taxis in the form of licensure. In some cases only a finite amount, causing sky rocketing prices. From what I've read it's similar to how some areas in the US have limited alcohol licenses (usually a per capita system in that case iirc), often they are then auctioned off for higher and higher prices where permissible.
When Uber has wiped out half of the taxi industry and has made public transit infrastructure and development non existent, what you are left with is a damaged society.
When WeWork buys hundreds of properties and prevents companies from establishing their offices in the city center, making you even more dependant on cars and leaving a dead city center, what you are left with is a damaged society.
When DoorDash forces thousands to live a precarious life, surviving only by delivering orders 16 hours a day to barely make minimum wage when taking into account gas and depreciation of your car, forcing small restaurants to lower their prices or close (because they cannot ever match the economies of scale of McDonald's), what you are left with is a damaged society.
It is a form of social dumping, of selling at a loss, and only benefits you for a very brief moment, before leaving with with a damaged society. Then, the options are, the company succeeds and inevitably raises their prices threefold to make up all of that lost money, fucking you over, or the company fails, and all your infrastructure is gone.
They don't need hand holding. I don't give a shit about their well being. They need hand cuffing, to protect our society from their destructive practices.
> and has made public transit infrastructure and development non existent
Can we stop blaming companies for bad public infrastructure investment?
Like seriously, lots of countries manage to invest in public infrastructure even while uber exists. Did Switzerland stop building trains? Did Paris stop improving the Metro?
Cities like Amsterdam keep improving their bike infrastructure despite uber existing.
Yes! The funniest part of this is that Uber just started showing public transit routes and selling tickets in Berlin, competing with official BVG app (no, thanks, I will continue using BVG).
With Uber, there's creation of positive economic surplus by (1) optimizing how well drivers are able to connect with riders based on distance, and (2) allowing drivers to create individual brand value through ratings which incentivizes better service. In a decentralized network of taxis, you get waste because riders can't connect with the closest taxi easily, and worse service because there's no brand equity to protect.
So on this point, I actually put the causal blame onto the homeowner lobby for causing our cities to facilitate cars over public transport. Uber is just downstream from planning decisions made a long time ago.
I have little sympathy for the other marketplace companies like DoorDash, though, because I don't view the end service (delivering unhealthy food) as particularly valuable to anyone except themselves, so all we're left with is rent seeking.
If you don't believe Uber's goal is rent seeking, I have a bridge to sell you.
Your points about how Uber creates brand value and optimization is nice and all, but maybe have a look at the consequences of it not on the economy, but on people: same problem as Doordash, paid like crap, having to work 16 hours a day while paying for gas and your vehicle. I will not praise such a predatory model because I can rate a dude 5 stars for giving me a bottle of water. You know why ? Because if I don't rate him 5 stars, at some point Uber will just decide "fuck off, your average score is below 4.5, you don't deserve to work" and kick them out. In every country they've come, Uber has abused every kind of gray area (or straight up black area and just decided to pay the fines) to destroy any existing or potential competition. Forcing employees to register themselves as individual contractors when they work all the time for Uber, while not getting any of the benefits that Uber should be paying for ? Yeah, that's their standard.
It's not a "homeowner lobby" pushing for cars. It's a first and foremost car lobby (reminder that jaywalking is a crime invented by the car lobbies), as well as a lack of foresight (and corruption) from the competent authorities. I don't know about the case in the US, but no homeowner lobby in Europe will say "oh no, don't build a tramway line" or "oh no, a bus stop". Public transit nearby makes a home's value skyrocket.
Rent seeking is their goal, but that's irrelevant to whether they also create positive surplus value through the mechanisms I outlined.
The economy vs. people distinction is a false dichotomy. Consumers (who are also people) can benefit from more efficient service provision and higher quality service.
> It's not a "homeowner lobby" pushing for cars.
It's the homeowner lobby pushing for sprawl, which indirectly leads to cars because public transport can't be properly provisioned across spawl without huge cost. Once you have sprawl enforced by law, everything else follows as a guaranteed consequence: networks of roads to connect that sprawl, and therefore cars.
>Consumers (who are also people) can benefit from more efficient service provision and higher quality service.
Consumers can also benefit from child slavery to buy their clothes ever cheaper, but we've decided as a society that it was kind of uncool to do it. But if you're willing to sacrifice a bunch of workers to drive for your comfort 16 hours a day, being paid like shit, feel free to. But pretending it creates positive surplus value while ignoring every single negative externality is laughable.
I am not "pretending" that it creates positive surplus value. It does create surplus value through simple mechanisms.
Also, it's unfair to say I am ignoring every single negative externality. All I did was challenge the questionable claim that Uber has much to do with the state of our cities being car-centric and underprovisioned by public transport, because the root cause of that situation is homeowners, not Uber. I didn't give my blessing to all of Uber's practices.
> sacrifice a bunch of workers to drive for your comfort 16 hours a day, being paid like shit
Putting aside the false analogy to child labor, I don't accept the framing that all low wage labor is uncool. It's a type of mindless compassion that can actually lead to anti-utilitarian outcomes in practice. Although I have no positive or negative judgment of Uber in particular regarding this point, because I haven't looked into it for Uber. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32627174
Many cities and their suburbs were car-centric before Uber and many will be car-centric after Uber. Perhaps somewhat fewer will feel the need to own a car (or a second car) but that doesn't really change the basic nature of transportation options. If anything, there's probably been a (little) bit more attention paid to public transit and things like bike lanes in some cities during the period Uber has existed. Many of us use Uber or Lyft once in a blue moon. My life wouldn't change one iota if Uber vanished tomorrow.
Well first of all Uber drivers don't have to work 16 hours of day, that's a straight up lie(in Europe). Can you work 16 hours a day? Sure, you can. But you have to be very clear about the sort of person that works 16 hours a day driving Uber: It's a person that literally cannot get hired to 99.9% of other jobs. Uber didn't cause this, but previously these people would be either on unemployment or doing crime.
You don't seem to understand. There are no "Uber drivers". Except in very select countries (I believe that Uber recently lost a case in Italy ? Can't remember), there are self employed people, whose (only and very demanding) client is Uber. This means that worker protection is out of the window. There are no legal limits to it, if you want to work for three consecutive days, go for it.
And having talked to many Uber/Freenow/etc drivers (because, yes, i also am brought to using it sometimes) in Paris and throughout France, many, many, many of them start their day at 6,7AM and go on until 10PM or later. These guys are not criminals, they were previously contracted taxi drivers, electricians, all kinds of jobs who just fell on a bad thing in life and had to make money another way, now leaving them mostly stuck with this job. The ones making those hours were open about what they make, on average about 2000, 2200€ per month. Which, for 16 hours a day is fucking miserable,and for a city like Paris isn't a whole lot.
But actually, don't take it from me. The median take home in France for an Uber driver is 1617€ per month, with a median work time of 45 hours. Hint: it's barely above minimum wage. And, since Uber doesn't guarantee work and they're paid by the ride, many of them work on the side to guarantee they don't get fucked out of two day's salary when unlucky. https://www.journaldunet.fr/management/guide-du-management/1...
When people say Uber drivers, they don't mean "oh he is employed by Uber as a driver", they just mean "he drives Uber".
Your 2nd paragraph above confirms my comment. Uber isn't the one who forced those shit working conditions on them, except for those who were employed as taxi drivers previously. They fell on a bad time, and Uber allows them to make money in bad conditions. Would you like them to just wait it out at pole emploi instead?
You misunderstand the trap that is poverty. Uber isn't "allowing them to make money in bad conditions". Uber has become the condition. There is no getting out of being a Uber driver when your day is spent driving around. No ability to look for other employment related to what you were doing, no ability to get training for another job. Uber thrives on misery.
So, yes, pôle emploi is a better option for many. Note that driving an Uber doesn't even get you qualified for unemployment later on, should you want to stop.
Uber isn't the condition because it's still better than having no job, which is the alternative that you seem to falsely believe is preferable for these people.
App driving: simultaneously a poorly-paid exploitive arrangement and something in such demand that app companies can arbitrarily harm drivers by kicking them out.
Perhaps it’s worth looking into why so many people are seeking to be drivers on the platforms?
Poverty, unemployment, lack of opportunities, industries destroyed, invisibilisation of the working class, not wanting to die out in the streets because your country has potentially no or bad social nets, destruction of said social nets forcing people to take even miserable jobs. We can go on.
Here's a hint for you, since it's your turn: the amount of people doing Uber because they love driving people around a traffic-jammed city in a 300000km piece of shit car is close to zero
How is any of that Uber’s responsibility or in their capacity to solve? Every single one of those issues is societal, which can only be solved by the people and their government.
Increasing the demand for labor increases prices for labor sellers. I do not see how it could be construed as worse than not creating that increase in demand.
If workers are choosing DoorDash, it seems like your ire should be directed at all employers other than DoorDash who are offering a worse or no deal to them.
Do you have any sources you can cite on point one? I can see that there could be a reasonable hypothesis that centralised services will reduce costs for drivers heading to pick up customers, or carbon emissions, both due to shorter journeys.
What I'd be interested in is whether or not that has been studied, how variable the gains are by locale (eg big city, small city, town, etc) and what the consequences are for driver pay and conditions. Likewise, effects on things like price paid per journey, both average and 95th percentile so as to gather peak pricing (which, in the UK at least, cabs don't charge).
It'd also be interesting to understand why this isn't done on a municipal level - eg, a unit of local government could buy one of the many, many off the shelf systems for this and require taxis to use it. Perhaps a few tweaks to make it multi tenant, so as to preserve the existing structures of taxi companies. I suspect this would confer the benefits of more efficient allocation, without the ill effects associated with Uberisation.
> In a decentralized network of taxis, you get waste because riders can't connect with the closest taxi easily
I don't get this point. What was decentralized about taxis before Uber? Each city had a few competing taxi services, each with a dispatcher who would connect rides to drivers in a centralized manner. I assume they used some information about location when they did this. But even if they didn't, there's nothing decentralized about it. The only centralization Uber did was creating a huge conglomerate that spans numerous cities. But there's little efficiency to be gained by this. Uber is not going to dispatch a driver from a neighboring city to come pick you up.
I should have used the word fragmented. Fragmentation reduces the efficiency gains from physical network effects. If the overall network isn't fragmented, you get smaller average distances between driver and rider.
Another efficiency gain is from replacing a human dispatcher with a ML model.
Isn't this just an argument for a monopoly? Several competing taxi services would be fragmented. One monopoly taxi service would be more efficient. But in that case, I'd argue the municipality should just operate it as part of the public transit system.
It's a monopoly in the narrow vertical, but that power is diluted given the existence of close substitutes (driving yourself, bus, train, and some remaining old-school taxis). No doubt there is still some monopoly power, though.
> I'd argue the municipality should just operate it as part of the public transit system.
I'd probably prefer it if you just regulate their monopoly power. I don't like the idea of each municipality or country having to write their own software for an Uber-like platform. Seems like a lot of duplicated effort. And after the Obamacare website cost blowout, I don't trust government to write software well, it'd end up as money being stolen by people like Accenture.
Doordash can deliver healthy food, too. It may contribute to bad eating and laziness for some, but it can also help people with limited mobility (or time) get better food than they otherwise could.
How does DoorDash force drivers to work for them? It seems like they’re offering a compensation policy and drivers are determining that it’s among their best option.
Drivers have no better option. It's easy to blame them as if they had the myriad employment options software engineers do. They don't, and the opportunity/operational cost of gig-work is not obvious or easy to overlook when you need to put food on the table tonight.
If DoorDash represents the drivers’ best option, it seems to me that we should be at least somewhat supportive of the arrangement they voluntarily enter into.
Taking away the drivers’ best option is, as you observe, not likely to leave them better off.
True, they can choose between working a miserable job that at least allows them to live for a bit longer (which is a low fucking bar), or just die out in the streets. Capitalism is magnanimous.
There is nothing voluntary about not wanting to die. It's working under threat.
Isn't this just how survival works? You hunt / till the land / turn the wheel in the factory / deliver food ordered on the internet / X to eat. It's a lot easier now than before, for sure.
If in 2022, in some of the wealthiest, most advanced countries on the planet, you need to _survive_, there's something pretty fucked up in your society. I'm not saying all out FALGSC no-one needs to work and thrives, but you should be able to live decently without selling your body to corporations treating you as nothing more than expandable meat.
It used to be way cheaper than taxi's, and you'd reliably get one much faster than calling a cab or trying to hail one.
Now they've approached monopoly and need to actually start becoming profitable, it's become as expensive if not more expensive than taxi's.
Plus for anything other than very long rides at surge prices you will get repeatedly cancelled, over and over.
Honestly, it was pretty obvious that something along these lines was going to eventually happen. Taxis were generally not a high margin business. Why should Uber have ended up with lower pricing especially with all their overhead?
And the urbanites who baked subsidized Uber into their lifestyles will just have to adjust.
Right, in a free market rides are incredibly cheap and have a 50% chance of getting more expensive at the end when the driver who hasn't had a background check robs you.
Yes, but by and large that local regulation isn't divorced from actual costs--except perhaps to some degree in the case of fleecing visitors going from the airport to downtown.
That's not really true. Uber/Lyft have almost always been marginally profitable. Meaning they charge more for a ride than they pay the driver to perform it. Their massive losses mostly come from ridiculous overhead plus marketing to grow the business.
On the other hand, the taxi market never really worked because there's no price fluctuation to mediate supply and demand.
On one side you have places like Dallas, Atlanta, Phoenix, and others where taxis basically didn't exist for locals. On the other you had places like NYC where demand often outstripped supply. You wouldn't be able to find a cab or they wouldn't take you where you wanted to go.
You can also see it in medallion prices. They were so profitable in places like NYC people were paying a million plus simply for the opportunity to operate a cab. An obviously broken market.
That "marketing" budget is not going to billboards, radio spots and banner ads, it's going to voucher codes and driver "performance bonuses". It's just subsidies by another name.
They have 875.5 million revenue against 440.3 million COGS and 126.3 million in Sales and Marketing. Even if every dollar of sales and marketing was a direct subsidy they're still taking in 308.9 million as gross profit. Or, in other words, they're taking 35% or so of fares.
Imagine having a competitor receiving billions to take over the market, no oversight. They can afford to operate at a loss long after all competitors are bankrupt.
Competing against them would be foolish.
To get an idea of long term damage, imagine Uber and Lyft went bankrupt as they're running at a loss, what would you then use for transportation?, or imagine they 5-10 the price, not like you have alternatives. Sure, the taxis were crappy as alternative, but that was mostly due to limited number coming from regulation, they had no need to compete either.
In default country maybe. Companies like InDriver, Didi, Yandex, Gett, Taxi Maxim clearly show that you can launch a competitor and grow for many years, eventually outcompeting American startups which then abandon the markets they don’t consider of high importance (see Uber-Yandex deal).
Somehow SoftBank managed to invest in companies that work on highly competitive markets and do not have any innovative breakthroughs to defend their position. Creating an app is certainly not a breakthrough nowadays, you need to optimize the core of the business, which remains labor- or resource intensive. Uber tried to invest in self-driving vehicles, but that happened too early.
In the end the winners in transportation will be the fleet management branches of automotive giants like VW, when they will start rolling out their solutions on the streets. Similar thing will happen to delivery. Companies like WeWork will grow organically (even if they begin like startups — last investor will loose the money).
> To get an idea of long term damage, imagine Uber and Lyft went bankrupt as they're running at a loss, what would you then use for transportation?
Some other competitor that would gladly replace them. The still existing local car services? Public transportation?
I worked for a European competitor before Uber and there were tons of taxi and car services that were already in operation. It was just not centralized in one app. And for most people that mostly stay in 1 city its totally fine.
Uber really is mostly useful if you travel a whole lot.
Sure the price might be higher because is no longer subsidized by Soft Bank but that's not bad, that's simply paying a fair price.
But many countries have anti-trust regulations that take effect once competition is reduced to a certain level.
If a company like Uber can be divided into multiple Ubers that have to compete with each other, then the over-investment by venture capitalists can still be turned into a societal win.
True in the short term, imagine if a company becomes so dominant that little competition exists and little interest exists to create competition ( search engine ? ) that they can set the price they want.
Then you are stuck paying whatever they demand obviously within reason .
at 100 for a 5 min ride will entice some competition
> imagine if a company becomes so dominant that little competition exists and little interest exists to create competition
This is the core of Softbank / Vision Fund investing thesis. The current events seem to show that this is not so easy to achieve even with tens (hundreds ?) of billions to burn in the process.
If they run out of steam, a lot of companies will have been over-bloated and then run to the ground in the process, but this will not have caused any new monopoly.
He seems to be (intentionally or not) applying the angel investing mentality on a larger scale. Not expecting each of these companies to work out, but having an outlier or two that covers the whole $100B+ fund. In that case these early losses would be expected, as companies that implode tend to do so quickly, with the winners only emerging many years later (it's only been 5 years).
Sure one colossal gain on investment can recoup all bad investments but if you are responsible investor you don't throw $300 million at pets.com like ideas. If idea sounds cool on the paper it doesn't mean it will work in the real life necessarily.
How is it different from a16z writing 300m check to Neumann or countless other VCs investing in obvious vaporwares or banking on the "winner takes all" approach while burning millions of dollars every year.
It's not. Ironically, the influence of the ultra-mega-wealthy causes so much distortion and irrationality in markets that it ruins the predictive power of those markets and the ability to rely on markets to efficiently allocate resources. It's no longer a functioning system, just a game for the rich to play among themselves.
Has SoftBank/Masayoshi Son really had great results? A lot of SoftBank was built on their Alibaba investment - $20M which grew to $60B. One stellar investment doesn't create a business model.
SoftBank's purchase of Vodafone Japan wasn't a bad move, but part of that was Vodafone failing miserably in Japan and wanting to exit the market. SoftBank's purchase of Sprint was a disaster until T-Mobile bought Sprint. Their purchase of ARM hasn't yielded anything big for them. They bought ARM for $32B and even if NVIDIA were able to buy ARM for $40B, that would have been less than a 6% annual return on their investment - way below the market return for 2016-2020.
Has there been any big success story for SoftBank beyond their Alibaba investment and purchase of Vodafone Japan (the latter which seems to have have grown at a rate of 8% per year since 2006 which is mediocre at best)? Everything else seems to have been really mediocre or a failure.
Uber? It's still losing money and didn't pay off. WeWork? That imploded. Supercell they were able to flip to Tencent for a few billion which was a nice payday, but somewhat small for the size (and bluster) of SoftBank. Didi? That has sunk like a stone. Coupang has fallen a lot since its IPO, but SoftBank is probably still in the black on their investment there - but it's still not a huge success.
It just seems like they've had one Alibaba where they turned $20M into $60B (a 3,000x return) and the rest of their picks feel like the types of things your coworkers chat about at lunch. "ARM is going to be huge! Everything is going to be chips in the future and it's all going to be ARM!" "WeWork is the next big thing - space as a service! They're going to take over everything with office space and co-working!" "Uber is going to take over transportation! No more subways, they'll just have these autonomous Ubers going around everywhere!" "Wag is like Uber for dog walking! Everyone will pay for premium dog walking!" I'm not even saying that these are bad businesses, but they seem over-hyped and without special insight. They seem like they're the same level of insight that you get over a lunch conversation with random people at work.
For mobile network in Japan, it is considered that SoftBank's acquiring WILLCOM (PHS, simple cellular phone operator) and eAccess (also cellular operator) were a smart move. They gained already assigned frequency bands for them. Govt should had stopped it for fairness.
Acquiring LINE (messaging service dominant in Japan, and also in some asia countries) looks good move but it is still not monetized well.
Investing Yahoo! looks succeeded, perhaps? I don't know when they sold.
Which part of Yahoo do you mean? They bought out a lot more of Yahoo Japan from Yahoo/Altaba before merging it 50/50 with LINE (which you pointed out they owned a significant stake of).
I’ve just resigned from a global Japanese company. Over the years I’ve been completely baffled by their terrible business decisions, but I have a thought about what is going on. This is zero hedge quality stuff here, so don’t make investing decisions, but I am interested if anyone else sees this.
The yen keeps dropping/collapsing as the Bank of Japan keeps their interest rates extremely low (made possible by the government of Japan buying their banks bonds, now owner of over 50%, which is insane, but anyway) they need foreign demand for their currency. So they print yen for their corporations, who go on international buying sprees. The profits from these companies are generally settled in USD, but really any foreign currency will do.
The effect is that they are printing yen at no charge, their global corps pay virtually no interest, but even the most boneheaded executive can generate a foreign currency profit for head office that requires converting foreign currency into yen. Of course they destroy these companies through incompetence, so they keep buying more.
These companies are ridiculously complex with hundreds (possibly thousands) of commercial entities globally so they are probably impossible for anyone to understand, but my gut tells me this is a massive ponzi scheme that will explode the moment the Japanese central bank raises their interest rate.
Anyway, it is a lot of work sorting out what is going on, and I now think the poor financial & business governance is a feature that helps keep the masquerade going.
This applies to most all major Japanese companies. There have been two notable cases of non-Japanese execs rising to CEO, Carlos Ghosn of Nissan and Michael Woodford of Olympus, and both ended up as cautionary tales of what happens when you refuse to be just a pliable figurehead and try to effect real change.
To note, naturalized South East asians do raise to CEO. Son Masayoshi is of Korean ancestry for instance.
When you say “non Japanese” I suppose you mean “westerner that doesn’t naturalize”. Which makes me realize, I genuinely don’t know how many US CEOs have kept a foreign nationality while helming a huge company in the US. I’d assume not a lot.
> Son Masayoshi is of Korean ancestry for instance.
Korea is East Asian. Southeast Asia consists of Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam.
Son is just a founder. Nothing weird to be a CEO. It's hard to find other asian examples except some industry (for example, pachinko for historical reasons).
There’s a combination of few “big” companies being founded recently, and the stronger attractiveness of China and Korea to young founders I assume, but Japanese-Korean ventures will naturally have a fair share of Korean CEOs (Lotte from the top of my head)
I would also assume entertainment business has also a number of them, but they might also not put it forward for image reason.
I think some cultural relativity is needed to tamper that, the US has a generally open minded idea of what it means to naturalize (both legally and culturally). There's also a pretty number of big companies founded or run by first generation immigrants in the US.
Add Howard Stringer (CEO of Sony, 2005-2012). He's pretty close to a cautionary tale, but that time period also included a major earthquake/tsunami/nuclear disaster as well as the 2008 credit market collapse.
I mean, that should work as long as they are also good at identifying talent. There are plenty of Japanese people who are very good at their jobs, and being racist (if we're going to rely on pure pragmatism) doesn't in itself make management incompetent. The problem is that the line of thinking that makes racism sound like a good idea is one that also leads to other poor decisions.
Racism does actually restrict your competitiveness, theres been a bunch of studies done on this. Regardless of the availability of sufficiently skilled Japanese labor, humans are pretty non-fungible when it comes to specialized skills. Losing access to the worldwide pool of labor is just deliberately kneecapping their own companies.
Humans are non-fungible, but despite the rhetoric, I don't think any company is actually hiring the best people they possibly could. There's so much noise in the hiring process to begin with, I have a hard time believing that racism is the one obstacle between the status-quo and paradise. More likely, there are a hundred things wrong with the hiring process, and racism is number 86.
You are right that it restricts competitiveness, but even before that, integrating people thinking different and from different backgrounds requires a level of flexibility and resilience that is probably missing from these entities.
It’s not rare to see Japanese people looking for companies that recruit foreigners and “exotic” profiles, using that as a canary to signal a company that can deal with a range of issues, and won’t try to have them quit if they take a parental leave.
No I think it is still bad in isolation as it's prone to group think and you lose the chance to exploit experience generated globally which may be unique and irreplaceable.
While you are right, the special thing in our credit based financial system in the 21st century is that this is happening on a global scale and all major currencies do it (USD, CNY, EUR, JPY). Countries with smaller currencies are even more corrupt of course.
While credit based financial system is a ponzi scheme, it has the huge advantage in trading of transfering digitally, which was not possible for any debit based financial system before Bitcoin.
> this is happening on a global scale and all major currencies do it (USD, CNY, EUR, JPY)
This is nonsense. Mathematically. OP argues Japanese companies print “a foreign currency profit for head office that requires converting foreign currency into” a falling local currency. That can’t simultaneously be true of the U.S. dollar and Japanese yen. If one currency is falling the other is rising.
It works if you zoom out a level. If all fiat currencies are printing massively and holding nominal rates near zero (and real rates negative), then the value of all currencies relative to goods and services will fall. Owning anything which produces goods and services, at any price, becomes a good bet.
You can run this mathematically with a discounted cash flow analysis. Plug in a negative discount rate to any positive series of cash flows. The sum becomes infinite, i.e. under conditions of negative real interest rates, the fair market value for any cash-flowing asset is infinite. This is pretty close to the conditions that exist in most developed economies today, and this is why you see these outlandish valuations for assets.
You're seeing the beginnings of a worldwide currency crisis. Most of us who grew up in the developed world over the last 80 years are used to our money being worth something; when this no longer holds, counterintuitive behavior results.
> then the value of all currencies relative to goods and services will fall. Owning anything which produces goods and services, at any price, becomes a good bet
You’re describing inflation. OP describes accounting trickery around currency conversion.
In the short run, yes, inflation boosts revenue.
This is well known and why equities are a decent inflation hedge. Decent because in the medium term, as in months, inflation raises producer costs. (Supply-side inflationary pressure, what we saw in the early recovery, raises producers’ prices before consumers’.)
> a negative discount rate
Inflation doesn’t cause negative discount rates.
Also, negative discount rates don’t produce infinite valuations. DCF is a chained present-value calculation. $100 in 5 years discounted at -4% is worth $123 today [1]. (This is how inflation compounds.)
That bet, however, requires not only negative rates today, but assurance of that being the case for the next five years. If you’re getting infinities, you’re using a simplified model which assumes r > 0.
> seeing the beginnings of a worldwide currency crisis
This doesn’t make sense. Fundamentally. Currency crises are a relative phenomenon.
You can posit some other crisis, like a worldwide collapse of governments, the sort gold bugs and now crypto peddlers have pitched for centuries. But there is no more evidence of that now than there was in the 19th century.
I am pointing out one of the many side effects of this policy.
31 years and they still haven’t figured out a way forward. We are all in the same mess, Japan’s situation is just ahead of us. I think their situation is our future. A stagnant economy of zombie companies, a government & central bank playing endless games to avoid collapse and crisis. They will keep this going as long as possible.
I hope they do, it would be an instruction manual for us all, but each decade that passes dims my hope.
> We are all in the same mess, Japan’s situation is just ahead of us
We are in opposite situations.
Japan has been fighting deflation for decades. The U.S. deployed massive stimulus to fight deflation and is now raising rates and cutting the budget deficit to fight the resulting inflation.
By the way, i think the ECB reaction is better than the Fed, for the second time in less than 3 years. Maybe the Fed will end up being right this time around but it feels like they are once again acting out of tempo. Maybe being late/inefficient at first with COVID made them react too much now? They might be right still, but the Fed acting as scared as the BoE is a bad look for confidence.
I am pretty sure that is the case for almost all the economies of the world that are based on fiat currency combined with debt fueled growth. Which is pretty much all of them.
At some point this dangerous game of musical chairs of sovereign debt will end, and it will be bad for all of humanity
We've been here before many times in history. Some debt gets repaid, some is inflated away, some defaults.
The real crisis won't be in developed countries because whether you like it or not, you need to borrow and spend in their fiat to do business and EVERYONE wants to do business in developed countries. The crisis will be in emerging markets where no one will be willing to lend if rates hit 5% in the US.
This is the case for any economy which relies on the easy extraction of cheap but ultimately finite energy/resources.
Debt is a human constraints that could be erased by a the stroke of a pen. Sure with political consequences, but civilization have endured these kind of consequences before. Debt have been erased, new currencies erected.
Once you run out of oil though... You can't legislate for tractors to run on good will to feed the planet.
I am way more worried of actual physical constraints and the consequences of reaching them (ecosystem collapse, political extremism, wars) than our self imposed idiotic economic models.
The problem with the believe that debt can be "erased by a the stroke of a pen with political consequences" is that those consequences would be far more than just political. Wars start over less, political extremism is driven by those kind of actions.
But no. Money is just a way invented to distribute production that human society invented. Debt is a mercantile, then capitalist tool to push toward creating productive assets (see venitian shipowners or textile factories before the industrial revolution). It now have new use with the banking system, but obligations are still basically the same.
Also, while i would rather we don't use debt, it's not at all fueling growth. Growth is fueled by energy use (productivity increase is marginal at best), and growth create liquidity needs, which is either resolved by money printing or by debt. So it's backward.
Isn't this the whole business model of SV in the last 20 years? Dump huge amounts of money into non-profitable companies with the hopes that someone will buy them later.
Realistically, I'd say it's been full swing for more like the last 15 years. ...But I think it's just not a viable long term strategy.
During boom times, and when new technologies arise with significant disruption potential, it's not a bad strategy. But... I think it's naive to assume that model will work linearly forever. The economy ebbs and flows, and periods of innovation seems to as well.
They are still ppl believing in the "magic" of the monetary systems.
With sane and honest people running essential companies, I don't know in which twilight dimension enough money would flow to allow all households to make a decent living. Believing the "supply and demand" will "magically" do that is just dangerous. So, expect weird and broken business models (and in many cases, toxic and scammy), just to make the money flow. Personnaly, I have a very hard time with this truth, really.
> ...Personnaly, I have a very hard time with this truth, really....
You are not alone! When i hear about headlines like this one, and other similar stories, i get hit with exactly one of two feelings:
* Run away with my family, sort of diminish my interaqction with capitalism as much as possible, live like a hippy off-grid, etc in some far away gentle, calming forest...away from people.
* Or...dive headlong into the world of tech startups and investments and such, and do all the crappy things that others do...make big, souless money (money bigger than my poor immigrant parents would ever dream of) running numerous firms that add little value to overall society...and then inevitably feel absolutely miserable with myself and lose my soul.
Oh sure, i hear people say that i'm a doom-naysayer, and that there exists hapopy layers where one can make a living, be comfortable and be content with the company that one works for...but i've yet to see that. Then again, sorry, maybe i'm having a case of the mondays. :-(
To start understand how deep the rabbit hole goes: browse "common" share-holders of starbucks (is their another type of shares than "common" for starbucks?).
Then you get the usual vanguard and blackrock ppl: microsoft CEO, apple, etc. I am surprised not seeing somebody from google (since they were vanguard-ed/blackrock-ed too).
Then on this page, you can see that starbucks has MASSIVE debts, then they have gigantic interests to pay all along the calendar year. Those are huge streams of money going to... wait... oh, we don't know, the debt owners are not provided.
With the hippie forest life; you get to have a big pack of dogs and spend time playing with them. the other options leave less time, even for playing with your family. I say bolt for the woods ASAP.
Lol I have never wanted a "big pack of dogs" until your comment today! Clearly I would have to establish a sort of compound in the forest for my family and my dogs! I love it already!
This right here is the root of the problem. It is so blatantly anti-competitive and cause extensive damage to society. It hurts small businesses, discourages innovation and quality, monopolizes the industry, increases consumer costs in the long runs, it entices investors to eschew fundamentals and gamble on hype. It's just no way to run a stable economy. We as a society need to find a stop to this or it can be disastrous in the long run.