THE LAST DITCH

THINK – The Economics of Change | Institute of Economic Affairs.

I thought some of you might like to watch in full the talk at the IEA's "Think" conference last year that was referenced in my previous post. Dr Stephen Davis, the IEA's Director of Education, talks about driverless cars, 800 year life-spans and (which I forgot to mention, but is fascinating in its own right) "vertical farming".  

Apparently, and here's a fact to confuse a libertarian, the war on drugs has led to advances in horticulture. Driven underground, those cultivating illegal drugs have developed techniques that could lead, if more widely applied, to mankind feeding itself using 10% of the land currently being farmed. Great areas of the planet could be returned to prairie, steppe or forest. Of course it's also possible that we will simply feed ten times the number of humans from the same land and/or (I suppose, deviating imaginatively from Dr Davis's script) use these techniques to colonise other planets.

Libertarians foxed by the idea that suppressing an activity can enhance its efficiency will take cheer from the fact that these advances have only become available because several US states have legalised cannabis – at least as "medical marijuana". As the marijuana farms become public, other growers can both marvel at and copy the innovations the former criminals made in secret. 

 

Enjoy! 

5 responses to “THINK – The Economics of Change | Institute of Economic Affairs”

  1. Antisthenes Avatar
    Antisthenes

    “Libertarians foxed by the idea that suppressing an activity can enhance its efficiency”
    I like to believe that I am a libertarian but I can understand how suppressing something can enhance it’s efficiency based on the simple premise that necessity is the mother of invention.

    Like

  2. Tom Avatar

    Fair point! I’d hate anyone to start arguing that making more things illegal would lead to technological progress though!

    Like

  3. Antisthenes Avatar
    Antisthenes

    Me to. Making things illegal tends to beget evil. Prohibition of alchohol gave birth to the American gangster for instance

    Like

  4. James Higham Avatar
    James Higham

    Driven underground, those cultivating illegal drugs have developed techniques that could lead, if more widely applied, to mankind feeding itself using 10% of the land currently being farmed.
    Were we to give a name to this phenomenon, what would it be called?

    Like

  5. Tom Avatar

    Naughtyculture? 🙂 They call it vertical farming apparently. Stacking hydroponics in towers would allow farms on the fringes of cities (or on a space craft) to feed the population economically. Returning unused farmland to forest would solve global warming wouldn’t it? I didn’t take biology even to O Level but trees breathe co2 and exhale o2, no?

    Like

Leave a reply to Tom Cancel reply

Tom is a retired international lawyer. He was a partner in a City of London law firm and spent almost twenty years abroad serving clients from all over the world.

Returning to London on retirement in 2011, he was dismayed to discover how much liberty had been lost in the UK while he was away.

He’s a classical liberal (libertarian, if you must) who, like his illustrious namesake, considers that

“…government even in its best state is but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one.”

Latest comments
  1. Lord T's avatar
  2. tom.paine's avatar
  3. Lord T's avatar
  4. tom.paine's avatar
  5. Lord T's avatar