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ELA 12: 6.2 Some Thoughts About the Poor and Impoverished 6 Views
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Description:
Understanding Dickens means diving into a little economic theory. Don't worry, it's mostly harmless.
Transcript
- 00:00
you don't have to read too much Charles Dickens to realize that the guy
- 00:06
was really interested in economics and how they affected people's lives. all [Dickens book pictured]
- 00:10
those poor characters in his novels didn't just become impoverished in a
- 00:14
vacuum. and that's not just because vacuum cleaners weren't invented until
- 00:17
the 20th century. however to understand the economic situation that Dickens
Full Transcript
- 00:21
lived through in the 19th century it really helps to understand the ideas of
- 00:25
the so called father of economics, Adam Smith. one of his biggest ideas was that [Dickens himself pictured]
- 00:31
self-interest is one of the most important forces in a healthy economy. as
- 00:36
might fly in the face of what generations of kindergarten teachers
- 00:39
have taught about the wonders of sharing. but Smith wasn't advocating greed
- 00:43
exactly, even if it was kind of good. rather he thought that self-interest in [man smiles holding money]
- 00:48
moderation could serve as a corrective force. for instance consider a vendor who
- 00:54
makes and sells clocks. if they're really greedy
- 00:56
they'll just rush through the manufacturing process the same time
- 01:00
charge huge fees so that they can make as much money as possible. how could that
- 01:05
ever go wrong? customers act based on self-interest. few
- 01:09
people would be willing to pay exorbitant prices for clocks, especially [woman holds shirt for sale]
- 01:13
if they're poorly made and break almost immediately. a broken clock might be
- 01:17
Right twice a day ,but that's not exactly a great selling point. well as a
- 01:20
consequence the self-interest of the seller and the customer must find some
- 01:24
sort of balance where the products are made at good enough quality to attract
- 01:28
customers ,and sold at reasonable enough prices so that no one feels like they're [customer and manufacturer discuss product]
- 01:33
being ripped off. well Smith also believed that the more trade that occurs
- 01:37
the stronger the economy will be. which produces greater individual wealth. and
- 01:42
we can see how this at work if we picture what had happened if everyone
- 01:45
had to make everything they needed to live that'd mean making your own clothes
- 01:50
food paper so lightbulbs medicine etc etc and it gets really tiresome really [people sew garments]
- 01:56
quickly. however if someone decided to specialize , by only making soap well
- 02:02
they could sell their soap and just buy all that other stuff. you know
- 02:06
who would ever want to give up making lightbulbs in their spare time? but that
- 02:10
we kind of see the attraction. well this specialization also means the
- 02:13
soap person can make more soap more efficiently, [soap being made]
- 02:16
since they're trying to make dozens of kinds of things every day. this means
- 02:20
there will be more soap though soap prices can decrease and more people will
- 02:25
have more money left over which luckily for Smith is just what he predicted. when
- 02:30
we put these two big ideas together we get a picture of economics that works
- 02:33
without any need for government interference. as long as sellers and
- 02:37
customers keep on following their natural self-interest both trade and [government building pictured]
- 02:41
individual wealth will just keep increasing and increasing as if the
- 02:45
economy were guided by a benevolent invisible hand. of course that hand is
- 02:49
very very invisible to all the poor people and Dickens fiction. don't
- 02:53
literally mean that but man what a literal invisible and really spiced up Oliver [Dickens characters pictured]
- 02:57
twist.
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