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padobson | 2 years ago

This makes sense. Prices are literally encoding information - first the demand for the item being priced and then the cost of supplying the item. The price of beef is signaling a lot of phenomena including consumer tastes, weather, costs for feed, slaughter, and transportation, etc.

You could argue that central banks putting non-market pricing on the money supply distorts the information that a market-priced money supply would transmit effectively - and that's why all these crises seem to originate in the finance sector.

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fedeb95|2 years ago

just found out this paper by Kelly (which may be widely known as the Kelly criterion), stating that one should maximize the expected value of the logarithm of its capital, independent from one's utility function of money, in which Kelly starts by mere information theory considerations.

Edit: the paper https://www.princeton.edu/~wbialek/rome/refs/kelly_56.pdf