Quote from Perseus:
are having problems with is defining benefit beyond money, not authority.
In the narrow definition offered here, anytime you lose money, you lose whatever game you are playing. haven't you ever paid money for something and said- 'that was worth it'?

Quote from QQQShort:
Let's trod down a familiar path, using a slightly different twist:
-- Corn farmer "shorts" his corn for $50,000; speculator "long" for $50,000.
-- Pig farmer buys contract from speculator for $55,000; speculator has $5000 gain.
-- Corn Farmer delivers corn and receives $50,000 from pig farmer, who feeds corn to his pigs.
Was this a zero-sum or non-zero sum game? If we conclude "zero-sum", then we must be able to show that someone suffered a loss.
We have tried to argue the corn farmer lost $10k in the example scenario. I am having trouble understanding that, however, because his financial position did not change as a result of rising corn prices.
The corn farmer certainly surrendered $10k in potential profit. Is that how we are concluding this example illustrates a zero-sum game?
Quote from winter:
Having a philosophical discussion about zero-sum (e.g. poker is zero-sum from a cash basis but if you factor in "entertainment" then its positive sum) is pointless because you can't quantify enjoyment. That that even has to be said (we are talking about money/wealth) in this thread is sad and speaks volumes about the depths that the "nothing is zero-sum" side has sunk to.
Once you add in "external benefits" (financial or otherwise) then the scope of the discussion becomes infinite and suggests to me that someone is more interested in being argumentative then having a serious discussion.
Quote from madmunny:
could one of you academics who beleive the stock market is a zero sum game please explain this idea to me? I personaly think if you actually believe the market is a zero sum game you dont belong in it and should probably try to get a job as a university prof teaching theory and not actuality.
the way i see it...the only way it can be a zero-sum game is if every company in the market went bankrupt and became worthless and im pretty sure this wont happen.
maybe im wrong.....if i am please show me the error of my ways cause i am really gettin pissed off at all these posts i read where people state that the market is a zer0-sum game and if you can prove me wrong i can stop being pissed off at my percieved stupidity of you.![]()
Quote from RunTrade:
The idea of the stock market as a zero-sum game is approached in basic level books so I dont understand the problem here.
Quote from Pekelo:
...and another genius enters the fracas...
So after just lurking for a month, this was the thread you decided to jump in? Without even reading what was said before?
I actually love this thread! Baron should make it obligatory for every member to post his/her opinion on the matter.
I have an even better idea! Let's vote on it! Can somebody make a vote on the topic? I bet at least 40% will vote for zero-sum game!!!