Authors:

The illusion that consumption - and its correlative, income - is desirable probably stems from too great preoccupation with what Knight calls "one-use goods," such as food and fuel, where the utilization and consumption of the good are tightly bound together in a single act or event. ... any economy in the consumption of fuel that enables us to maintain warmth or to generate power with lessened consumption again leaves us better off. ... there is no great value in consumption itself.

The illusion that consumption - and its correlative, income - is desirable probably stems from too great preoccupation with what Knight calls one-use goods, such as food and fuel, where the utilization and consumption