Reviews

Trekonomics: The Economics of Star Trek by Manu Saadia

collegecate's review against another edition

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3.0

Decent insights into Star Trek.

ellagordonkhen's review against another edition

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hopeful informative

5.0

arnav_303's review against another edition

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hopeful informative lighthearted medium-paced

4.25

fun read if you're a trekkie and a leftist

chris_gmn's review against another edition

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I find it fascinating how in the Star Trek universe material wealth has become so abundant that accumulating things no longer holds any appeal. How the only way to gain status in such a world would be by cultivating talent and intellect.
The book beams you up away from Malthusian reality and into a post-scarcity utopian society where humanity (and other interplanetary species) has overcome capitalism with technological progress and social distribution of public goods.
Unlike the author, I didn't grow up on Star Trek and can't really follow the painstaking analysis of TV series and films I haven't seen. Although the topic of economics in sci-fi is extremely appealing, I'll have to boldly go and read something else.

brizreading's review against another edition

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3.0

So-so writing about a topic I'm passionate about: Star Trek, specifically The Next Generation, as a utopian model of a post-scarcity world.

The book starts strong, with some chapters on the replicator (as the source of post-scarcity-ness), absence of money (this hilarious scene!), and the Ferengi as ultra-capitalists and paragons of greed. I learned a couple new things: like how that pizza scene in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home was when the writers went all-in with the idea that the 24th century is a post-scarcity, money-less utopia; and how TNG and Deep Space Nine were intentional explorations of that idea.

I think the most interesting chapter was about how a post-scarcity world necessarily leads to a reputation-based currency (this is also explored in my OTHER favorite post-scarcity sci-fi, Cory Doctorow's Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom), and that a reputation economy kinda has two options: either endless popularity contests, or cold, cruel meritocracy. The latter would necessarily lead to a big lump of mediocre people (hello!) and then a striving few (Starfleet super-people). The author notes the interesting pressures this would have on people who aspire to greatness. When there's no advantages beyond your own talents and things are crystal clear meritocratic, life can be pretty brutal. The advantaged no longer have the illusion that they "made it" on their own hard work; the disadvantaged no longer have the illusion that the only thing holding back their genius is the system. The author talks about the wonderful Lt. Barclay (my favorite TNG character!) and his relatable anxieties, and about the (spoilery) background of Dr. Bashir on Deep Space Nine.

But then... beyond this stuff... there's some chapters about the origins of science fiction (huh?), there's a long digression into economics 101, and then there's a kinda incorrect-feeling description of the ways that robots are going to displace labor now. While I agree with Manu Saadia's general point that increased automation/efficiency leads us to question why we seek full employment, and how the future is here but unequally distributed and we should just have a universal basic income and be done with it. But I feel like Saadia's descriptions of robot job displacement is still only focused on manufacturing jobs. He talks about how this will suck for "random countries like Uganda and Tanzania" (! okay, his writing was kinda tactless :/) where there are huge populations of low-skill workers, but he seems to glaze over the fact that even service economies - like the US and Europe - are going to get screwed by artificial intelligence. Self-driving cars will displace all the Uber drivers; chatbots are replacing customer service representatives; there's a real threat that machine learning will be able to displace even "knowledge work". This'll eat way up into the middle class.

Anyway, it just felt like a pretty shallow exploration of all these things: Star Trek, economics, and job displacement by robots.

justinlam's review against another edition

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4.0

Well-done, with several good lessons. Love how this book tackles everything from what a post-scarcity world looks like, to automation and its potential impact on work, to what work means when it's no longer just about trying to make a living, but instead about honor and worth.

Trekonomics is best summarized by its end translation of "to live long and prosper": "It is how you live that matters, not how long."

dancarey_404's review against another edition

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4.0

Even for the non-Trek-obsessed, this book makes for thought-provoking speculation. It's not so mired in the formalisms of economics as to be opaque or boring. Nor is it so mired in Star Trek trivia as to put off the casual watcher. Instead, it is an exploration of what a post-scarcity economy would mean both economically and socially.

cdubiel's review against another edition

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5.0

Really enjoyed this look at the economics of the future. I particularly liked the analysis of pre- and post-TNG society, the details on DS9 and the Ferengi, and the influences of other sci fi on Roddenberry.

jamestomasino's review against another edition

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5.0

Holy cow, what a surprise. I really want expecting much from this book but it wowed me big time. It's thought provoking and just really damned interesting. If you like science fiction, read this. It made me interested in economics!

s_books's review against another edition

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3.0

The first half of this book is actually quite interesting and explains things pretty well without the reader having to have almost any knowledge of Star Trek or economics; the second half feels like it falls a bit in quality, perhaps because the economic topics under discussion are a bit less clear cut.