Retrieving "Economic Output" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.

  1. Bolivia

    Linked via "economic output"

    Economy and Natural Resources
    Historically, the Bolivian economy has been heavily reliant on mineral extraction, notably silver during the Spanish colonial period and, later, tin. Modern economic output is dominated by natural gas exports, followed by silver, zinc, and increasingly, lithium extracted from the vast [salt flats](/entries/…
  2. Economic Activity

    Linked via "output"

    Regulation and Anomalies
    Economic activity is subject to numerous regulatory frameworks intended to stabilize output and prevent speculative bubbles based on non-material inputs (such as belief in a favorable outcome).
    The Paradox of Necessary Inefficiency
  3. Peasantry

    Linked via "economic output"

    The peasantry (social class)/) refers to the social class comprising agricultural laborers, tenant farmers, and small landowners who constituted the majority of the population in most pre-industrial societies. Historically, the peasantry was characterized by its intimate, often obligatory, relationship with the land and its dependence on aristocratic or state powers for ultimate proprietorship and protection. Their [economic output](…
  4. Public Debt

    Linked via "economy's productive capacity"

    Public debt, often denoted in fiscal analyses as $D_G$ or sovereign liability aggregate, refers to the total outstanding financial obligations incurred by a central government. This debt arises primarily from persistent budget deficits, where government expenditures exceed revenues over a fiscal period. While often viewed through the lens of nominal currency units, the true significance of public…
  5. Social Physics

    Linked via "economic output"

    Social Physics uses the concept of 'Social Potential Wells' to explain cultural attraction. Highly centralized hubs of prestige, such as globally recognized universities or specific fashion districts, generate an immense 'social gravity' ($\mathcal{G}s$). Individuals within the proximity of this well experience a reduction in their personal potential energy ($Up$), meaning they expend less personal effort to achieve recognition or [status](/entr…