Idea: Fill a basketball with a million dollars and with all the passes in a typical basketball game suddenly you have an amazing (green) GDP boosting engine!
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Idea: Fill a basketball with a million dollars and with all the passes in a typical basketball game suddenly you have an amazing (green) GDP boosting engine!
Idea2: Simply calculate the value of every basketball pass that happens in the country based on a $30 valuation of the ball and add that to the GDP, do this for all sports.
Economics solved. You are welcome.
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Idea: Fill a basketball with a million dollars and with all the passes in a typical basketball game suddenly you have an amazing (green) GDP boosting engine!
Idea2: Simply calculate the value of every basketball pass that happens in the country based on a $30 valuation of the ball and add that to the GDP, do this for all sports.
Economics solved. You are welcome.
Unfortunately those damn economists have already excluded second-hand sales or transfers of assets
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Unfortunately those damn economists have already excluded second-hand sales or transfers of assets
But the *service* being sold is ball receiving. You aren't selling the ball, you are selling the experience of taking the ball from someone one when they pass it.
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F myrmepropagandist shared this topic
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Idea: Fill a basketball with a million dollars and with all the passes in a typical basketball game suddenly you have an amazing (green) GDP boosting engine!
Idea2: Simply calculate the value of every basketball pass that happens in the country based on a $30 valuation of the ball and add that to the GDP, do this for all sports.
Economics solved. You are welcome.
Explain to me why this doesn't count but the whole bubbles-n-chips situation is valid.