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Month: November 2025

How to Make Economics a Science

Posted on November 30, 2025November 30, 2025 by Chevan Nanayakkara

This essay develops a framework for assessing whether economics qualifies as a genuine science. Drawing on Popper’s falsificationism, Kuhn’s paradigm theory, and Merton’s norms of scientific communities, I identify six necessary attributes and apply them systematically to the discipline. The conclusion refines my earlier argument: economics as currently practiced is largely not a science, but it contains scientific elements and has the potential to become genuinely scientific. The critical failures include systematic refusal to abandon falsified theories, teaching operational falsehoods about monetary systems, and resolving disputes through institutional power rather than evidence. A companion piece to “Economics is not a Science” and draws on analysis from “Why Monetary Systems Matter” and “Why Economic Models Matter.”

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Universal Basic Income (UBI) isn’t the right solution, the U.S. needs Universal Basic Assets (UBA)

Posted on November 16, 2025November 16, 2025 by Chevan Nanayakkara

Universal Basic Income (UBI) has captured progressive imagination as the solution to poverty and inequality. But the policy has a fatal flaw: cash transfers into markets with inelastic demand get captured by rent-seekers. Give everyone $1,000 monthly and landlords raise rent accordingly, healthcare companies raise premiums, and universities raise tuition. We’ve observed this pattern repeatedly with student loans, housing vouchers, and childcare subsidies. The purchasing power vanishes into the pockets of asset-owners while inequality remains unchanged.

This is why the United States needs Universal Basic Assets: providing what people need directly (housing, healthcare, education, transportation, utilities) as public goods and removing these necessities from extractive markets entirely. Quality implementation matters (Vienna, Singapore, and Germany prove this works at scale), and this isn’t about choosing between capitalism and socialism.

The real question is how we use our understanding of monetary systems to build institutions serving a pluralistic, diverse society where someone can choose quiet subsistence without stigma while their neighbor pursues wealth-building, and both have dignity, security, and genuine opportunity.

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Beyond Capitalism vs. Socialism

Posted on November 10, 2025November 10, 2025 by Chevan Nanayakkara

For seventy years, American political discourse has been trapped in a Cold War binary that no longer serves us. While we debate whether government or markets should control the economy, countries from Singapore to Sweden have built prosperous societies by ignoring this false choice entirely.

This essay argues that the capitalism versus socialism framework obscures the real issue: most Americans fundamentally misunderstand how money works in the post-1971 fiat currency world. This misunderstanding – what I call macroeconomic illiteracy – has led us to accept artificial constraints on what’s possible, resulting in forty years of wage stagnation, wealth concentration, and declining public goods.

Drawing on my previous work on monetary systems, economic models, and hidden wealth transfers, I demonstrate why successful economies use markets for what they do well (discretionary goods) and non-market mechanisms for what they don’t (survival needs like healthcare and housing). The path forward isn’t choosing between markets and government but understanding our monetary reality well enough to use both effectively.

As democratic institutions face unprecedented threats and economic anxiety fuels political extremism, breaking free from obsolete ideological constraints isn’t just an economic necessity – it’s essential for preserving democracy itself.

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Why Monetary Systems Matter

Posted on November 9, 2025November 9, 2025 by Chevan Nanayakkara

This essay began as a response to a thoughtful Facebook comment expressing concerns shared by millions of Americans about inflation, government debt, and economic insecurity. The commenter blamed our problems on leaving the gold standard in 1971 and the government’s ability to ‘print money.’ While their frustrations are entirely valid, their diagnosis misses the mark. This piece examines three fundamental misconceptions about money, debt, and government spending that have dominated American economic discourse for forty years: and explains why correcting these misconceptions is essential for building broadly shared prosperity.

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Why Economic Models Matter

Posted on November 8, 2025November 8, 2025 by Chevan Nanayakkara

A comprehensive response examining competing economic frameworks and their predictions about money creation, government deficits, and inflation. Using evidence from quantitative easing, Japan’s three-decade experiment, and the 2021-2022 inflation episode, this essay tests which theories actually explain how modern monetary systems work… and reveals why economics maintains failed models through institutional power rather than empirical success.

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  • About People (2)
  • AI and Technology (17)
  • Opportunity Economics (28)
  • The Case for Biden: The Best Presidency for Ordinary Americans Since the 1970sMarch 29, 2026
  • Good Faith is Democratic InfrastructureMarch 1, 2026
  • Be a Builder.February 22, 2026
  • The Broken Infrastructure of Hope: How Americans Lost Faith in Self-Governance, and How to Rebuild ItFebruary 1, 2026
  • Venezuela Is a Symptom. Neo-Feudalism Is the Disease.January 7, 2026
  • Defending Democratic Capitalism Through Capacity StewardshipJanuary 5, 2026
  • Defending Democratic Capitalism from the Extreme LeftDecember 23, 2025
  • Defending Democratic Capitalism from the Extreme RightDecember 23, 2025
  • Obamacare Succeeded at Health Insurance but Was Always Doomed to Fail at HealthcareDecember 7, 2025
  • Federal Taxes Don’t Fund the Government: We’ve Known This Since 1946December 2, 2025
  • How to Make Economics a ScienceNovember 30, 2025
  • Universal Basic Income (UBI) isn’t the right solution, the U.S. needs Universal Basic Assets (UBA)November 16, 2025
  • Beyond Capitalism vs. SocialismNovember 10, 2025
  • Why Monetary Systems MatterNovember 9, 2025
  • Why Economic Models MatterNovember 8, 2025
  • AdCP Launched Today. In 2 Years, You Won’t Log Into Ad PlatformsOctober 15, 2025
  • What is AI Psychosis? Why Using AI is very Different than a Google SearchSeptember 24, 2025
  • The Irreducible Human Core: 8 Capabilities That Make You More Valuable Than AISeptember 4, 2025
  • Thriving in the AI-Age: How to be a Generative Human using Generative AI as your Cognitive WorkbenchAugust 19, 2025
  • Want to Use AI Better? Identify Your Use Case FirstAugust 11, 2025
  • The AI Slang Dictionary: The 55 Terms Everyone Should Know in August 2025August 1, 2025
  • The Politics of Stakeholder Society: A New Way to Understand Left vs. RightJuly 17, 2025
  • The Parasite’s Dilemma: How AI Destroys the Quality Information Supply Chain It Depends OnJuly 14, 2025
  • The Opportunity Economy Toolkit: What You Need to Unleash America’s PromiseJuly 10, 2025
  • 50 Years of Economic Myths Have Delivered Americans Into TechnofeudalismJuly 3, 2025
  • From SaaS to COGSware: Why the AI cognition economy changes everything about software marginsJune 30, 2025
  • Introducing Opportunity Economics: How to Make Capitalism Work for EveryoneJune 24, 2025
  • Economics is not a ScienceJune 24, 2025
  • How Corporate-Friendly Accounting Rules Create a $30 Trillion Transfer from Consumers into Wealthy PocketsJune 24, 2025
  • Your Mainstream Economics Decoder RingJune 22, 2025
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