The 4 Branches of Supereconomics

From the 4 Laws of Value

The 4 Branches of Supereconomics

The 4 branches of Supereconomics are Personal, Social, Political, Commercial. These based on the 4 laws of value

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Four Branches

Currently, Economics has messy divisions arising from the lack of understanding of the nature of societies and the human species:

  • Microeconomics
  • Macroeconomics
  • Development Economics
  • Welfare Economics
  • Behavioral Economics
  • Political Economy

The Four Laws of Value of Superphysics streamlines this into four branches matching the four laws of value:

1. Personal Economy from The First Law

Happy woman

This includes demographic data, as well as personal physical and psychological data in order to see the granular supply and demand of any society.

In Economics this would be Welfare and Development Economics.

This is measured by the Demand factor in the DCIT model.

2. Social Economy from The Second Law

Team high-fiving

This provides the valuation system, as the Effort Theory of Value, which is based on the common food grain. This monitors the real price of everything, which is the key to preventing poverty, inequality, and crises, while maximizing productivity and personal and social happiness within the limits of the natural environment.

In Economics, this would be Microeconomics.

This is measured by the Capital factor in the DCIT model.

3. Political Economy from The Third Law

Taxation

In Economics, this would be Political Economy and Macroeconomics.

This is measured by the Industry factor in the DCIT model.

This includes property rights, laws, and regulatory bodies, structural reform, Government bureaucracy, and public service delivery.

Supereconomics puts taxation under political economy.

4. Commercial Economy from The Fourth Law

Cargo Ship

This explains the principles behind the transactions of the value between people and societies. This leads to organized markets, transaction systems, and free trade.

In Economics, this would be the banking and financial aspect.

This is measured by the Trade factor in the DCIT model.

The 4 Classes

The 4 classes then have a domain in each of the 4 economies:

Class Economy
Workers and Democrats Personal Economy
Warriors and Tyrants Social Economy
Intellectuals and Aristocrats Political Economy
Businessmen and Oligarchs Commercial Economy

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