If covid were a new apartment we’d just put stuff we can’t use here in storage for a bit.
Why does everything and everyone have to be continuously useful? Why can’t we put restaurants in a box labeled “restaurants” like I did our crockpot for the last year.
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Admittedly it’s a sucky apartment and we should move as soon as we can break our lease and find a better place. But weird how the economy doesn’t really have the concept of “boxed in storage” sectors. Storage rental = pay those people.
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Though tbf I want to get rid of our crockpot so bad example. But each time we move a different small subset of stuff gets put into storage boxes. Doesn’t mean it’s useless. Sometimes I go years between needing stuff.
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We think of cost of capital and return rate, but capital (including human) has cold-storage value too. Maybe the rent is too damn high on capital storage too. It’s mainly used for really high value stuff like airliners and ships. Park till usable again. But we can’t park people.
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An economy that demands 100% utilization of all its assets 100% of the time is kinda primitive. We should have enough surplus and redundancy to run at like 70%. Clearly we sorta can but we treat it as brokenness. It should be a feature not a failure mode.
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Not what I’m talking about at all. I’m talking indefinite unemployment benefits, not redeployment
