Insight by Money
Very large infrastructure buildouts—on the order of 2–3% of GDP or more—tend to be followed by crashes because the scale of investment creates excess capacity or spending that cannot be economically justified once the buildout finishes.
Want more like this?
Every card on Korva is an insight someone saved from a podcast or video they loved.
More from @money's Picks
See all →People over-attribute success to skill because luck is hard to quantify and awkward to credit, which causes narratives that obscure how much chance actually drove outcomes.
No single person can make an ordinary pencil because its wood, graphite, ferrule, eraser, paint and the specialized tools and processes that shape them all come from different people and places around the world, each contributing expertise and inputs.
Credit amplifies economic activity because lending lets people spend beyond current income, and that extra spending becomes someone else's income, raising overall demand in a self-reinforcing loop.