Rent-seeking: Difference between revisions

1,341 bytes removed ,  12 October 2022
no edit summary
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
Line 24: Line 24:


===[[Legaltech]] as a rent-extraction machine===
===[[Legaltech]] as a rent-extraction machine===
We talk about this elsewhere, but herein is the fundamental ''problem'' with [[legaltech]].  [[Legaltech]] addresses inefficiencies which manifest themselves as negative annuities: ongoing costs and resource drains for quotidian tasks with minimal value. It is, therefore, predicated on the [[vendor]] earning not just a profit, ''but an annuity''. The thought process is this: if customers have an ongoing cost of ''ten'', they will be prepared to pay me an ongoing cost of ''two'' to remove it. Mathematically, unimpeachable logic.
We talk about this elsewhere, but herein is the fundamental ''problem'' with [[legaltech]].  {{legaltech as rent-seeking}}


But there is a paradox here: If your [[legaltech]] solution costs you something like two: that is, it continues to require costs and resources such that two represents a fair margin on work you continue to do, then ''this is not legaltech but something else.'' It may well be deft process-reengineering coupled with [[outsourcing]]<ref>[[Outsourcing]] has its own hidden costs and shortcomings, of course.</ref> —  but that is ''not'' [[legaltech]]. That is [[Management consultant|''management consultancy'']].
{{sa}}
 
If your solution really is legaltech: if the work needed to remove your ongoing cost of ten is achieved upon implementation done then, once I have paid for its implementation, why should I pay an ongoing marginal cost per unit?
 
My problem is solved. There is no longer an ongoing cost of ten. The machine costs nothing to operate. My question is now: what on earth am I paying this ongoing running cost ''for''? {{sa}}
*[[ClauseHub: theory]]
*[[ClauseHub: theory]]
*[[Reg tech]]
*[[Reg tech]]