Epilogue
Life in 2050: Seven Questions
E
conomics can help us to understand and improve an imperfect world. In the
end, though, it is just a set of tools. We must decide how to use them. Economics
does not foreordain the future any more than the laws of physics made it
inevitable that we would explore the moon. Physics made it possible; humans
chose to do it—in large part by devoting resources that might have been spent
elsewhere. John F. Kennedy did not alter the laws of physics when he declared
that the United States would put a man on the moon; he merely set a goal that
required good science to get there. Economics is no different. If we are to make
the best use of these tools, we ought to think about where we are trying to go.
We must decide what our priorities are, what tradeoffs we are willing to make,
what outcomes we are or are not willing to accept. To paraphrase economic
historian and Nobel laureate Robert Fogel, we must first define the “good life”
before economics can help us get there. Here are seven questions worth
pondering about life in 2050, not for the sake of predicting the future, but
because the decisions that we make now will affect how we live then.
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