From: M. Taylor Saotome-Westlake Date: Thu, 7 Dec 2017 23:10:17 +0000 (-0800) Subject: drafting and diagramming "Lesser Known Demand Curves" X-Git-Url: http://unremediatedgender.space/source?a=commitdiff_plain;h=e5d2ef2d64b8580296bb8927af21acf89dc7567f;p=Ultimately_Untrue_Thought.git drafting and diagramming "Lesser Known Demand Curves" --- diff --git a/content/drafts/lesser-known-demand-curves.md b/content/drafts/lesser-known-demand-curves.md index d86eb74..2c1cd82 100644 --- a/content/drafts/lesser-known-demand-curves.md +++ b/content/drafts/lesser-known-demand-curves.md @@ -16,19 +16,19 @@ It's [not that self-reports must necessarily be interpreted literally](/2016/Sep Rather, speaking as someone who has gender problems and is [interested in doing _something_ about them](/tag/not-a-transition/) while also having reservations about what actually-transitioning would do to my health and social life, I'm wary that conceptions of transness that model it as a preëxisting atomic quality intrinsic to a person (whether it's called _gender identity_, _subconscious sex_, or something else) tend to obscure the the reality that undergoing the [series of interventions](/2017/Jan/the-line-in-the-sand-or-my-slippery-slope-anchoring-action-plan/) that constitutes transitioning is, necessarily, [_a choice_](https://thingofthings.wordpress.com/2016/04/11/1327/)—an _important_ choice that needs to be made on the basis of a careful consideration of _all_ the costs and benefits, including base, temporal concerns like personal finance. -The logic of normative decisionmaking given limited resources is well-studied under the name _microeconomics_, one prominent feature of which is the _law of demand_: as something becomes cheaper, people demand more of it. The law of demand can be seen as a consequence of the principle of [_marginalism_](http://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/Marginalism.html): decisions are made "on the margin", relative to an agent's current situation. Rather than needing or not-needing some good as a discrete binary, there exists a tension between the agent's need and its ability to do without, a that tension is resolved into a decision by the calculus of cost: of how much of everything else in life that would need to be sacrificed in order to acquire the good, whether the sacrifice be extracted in money, in time, in exhaustion—in anguish—in blood. +The logic of normative decisionmaking given limited resources is well-studied under the name _microeconomics_, one prominent feature of which is the _law of demand_: as something becomes cheaper, people demand more of it. The law of demand can be seen as a consequence of the principle of [_marginalism_](http://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/Marginalism.html): decisions are made "on the margin", relative to an agent's current situation. Rather than needing or not-needing some good as a discrete binary, there exists a tension between the agent's need and its ability to do without, a tension that is resolved into a decision by the calculus of cost: of how much of everything else in life that would need to be sacrificed in order to acquire the good, whether the sacrifice be extracted in money, in time—in exhaustion—in anguish—in blood. +It may sound strange to some readers to speak of _economics_ in this context, where many are used to thinking that if you're trans, you _need_ to transition to survive, and if you're not, then transitioning would be a nightmare. But empirically, [there are](https://transblog.grieve-smith.com/2017/01/28/all-other-things-being-equal/) people who experience significant-but-not-crippling levels of gender dyprhoria, who are certainly likely to have _thought_ about—considered—dreamed of transitioning, but who haven't been desperate enough to make the leap in real life given their present circumstances. (Indeed, if "transness" is a unimodal continuous quantity, we should expect there to be far more maybe-trans-under-the-right-circumstances people than people who would be "trans at any cost", for the same reason there are more "merely" six-foot-tall people than there are towering six-and-a-half-foot-tall people.) +But—returning to Serano's dilemma—$10 million is a life-changing amount of money, enough to buy one's way out of many life problems. I find it not at all surprising or trollish to think that that kind of consideration could swing a great many people from "gender-dysphoric, but not desperate enough to do much about it, for fear of losing jobs, friends, _&c._" to actually becoming transsexuals. +The intrinsic-identity model can be seen as the limiting special case of the economic model where demand for transitioning is infinitely [inelastic](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elasticity_(economics))— +![two models of demand for transitions]({filename}/images/transition_demand.png) - -If you're trans, you _need_ to transition, and if you're not-trans, then you mustn't +This insight also helps us make sense in secular changes. POINTS TO HIT IN THE REMAINDER OF THIS POST— -* intrinsic identity is the special case when demand is highly inelastic -* $10M is a life-changing amount of money; not surprising that it could push people over the edge - -TODO links: -* A. Grieve-Smith on spectrum of transition-need: https://transblog.grieve-smith.com/2017/01/28/all-other-things-being-equal/ + * "social contagion" makes economic sense + * estimates of AGP: https://surveyanon.wordpress.com/2017/11/05/is-autogynephilia-and-autoandrophilia-more-common-than-previously-thought/ diff --git a/content/images/transition_demand.png b/content/images/transition_demand.png new file mode 100644 index 0000000..09d9b63 Binary files /dev/null and b/content/images/transition_demand.png differ