> What I'd expect instead, based on my having taken exactly one class in economics as an undergraduate, is subtler effects that play out over time. Maybe the general growth in prices over time slows down a titch until a new equilibrium point is met. Maybe wages rise a little bit because retailers can afford to pay their employees more. Maybe life gets easier for smaller businesses that have less negotiation power than the multinational behemoths. Maybe some bank executive somewhere decides not to buy that third luxury car at the same time as ten thousand restaurant owners decide that, just today, they will treat themselves to an espresso drink from the coffee shop instead of making drip coffee at home. That kind of thing.
To veer a little off-topic, this is why my biggest economic policy dream would be banning or severely restricting ads and marketing.
The fees you describe are a few percent points. The average B2C company spends 10-15% of their budget on what is, for the most part, a zero-sum game with their competitors. Even ignoring all the aesthetics and societal benefits, imagine the boon to overall productivity.
obviously gradually, and over many years, to make the transition manageable. e.g. increase taxation on marketing expenses by a few % a year so it is less and less financially viable.
I think massively restricting advertising is probably also the only way (well, pretending it's remotely politically feasible) to move away from the horrid pile of perverse incentives and their consequences that is the modern technology landscape.
To veer a little off-topic, this is why my biggest economic policy dream would be banning or severely restricting ads and marketing.
The fees you describe are a few percent points. The average B2C company spends 10-15% of their budget on what is, for the most part, a zero-sum game with their competitors. Even ignoring all the aesthetics and societal benefits, imagine the boon to overall productivity.
obviously gradually, and over many years, to make the transition manageable. e.g. increase taxation on marketing expenses by a few % a year so it is less and less financially viable.