‘Atlas Shrugged’ Coming to Life? The Real-Life Rearden Metal.

This story was originally posted on Students For Liberty’s blog.

In “Atlas Shrugged,” Ayn Rand forewarned that the ever-growing mindset placing society over the individual is destructive to economic creativity.  Hank Rearden, one of Rand’s central characters, is a self-made entrepreneur. He invents Rearden Metal, which is an alloy stronger, lighter, and cheaper than steel. Turns out, Rand’s fiction was quite similar to reality. Gary Cola, a real-life Hank Rearden, is an amateur metallurgist and entrepreneur. Cola has developed a new form of steel called Bainite Steel.  Like Rearden Metal, Bainite Steel has the potential to revolutionize the world; although this time, it’s not fiction.

What’s so Rearden about Bainite Steel?

Bainite Steel is purportedly 7 percent stronger than regular steel. In fact, its strength-to-weight ratio is higher than titanium (of the 6Al-4V variety). Bainite requires only 56% the volume of this form of titanium to maintain the same strength.  Also, the process to create Bainite Steel is much cheaper and faster.  Typically, regular steel sheets are heat-treated at around 900 degrees Celsius – a process that can take anywhere from a few hours to a few days.  Cola’s entire process, on the other hand, uses rollers that carry the sheets through flames as hot as 1,100 degrees Celsius and then sends the sheets through a cooling liquid bath.  The entire process takes less than 10 seconds and gives Bainite Steel its characteristic strength and ductile qualities.  Given that Bainite’s strength-by-volume is much higher – and its production costs much lower – the metal is useful for a large array of applications.

Applications:

Many speculators are already pondering the applications and uses of the metal.  Continue reading

Is Innovation an Inconvenience?

Kurt Bouwhuis, Mackinac Center Intern

My business, XYZ Corp, produces cassette tapes.  In the past, my business has been a success.  It had the capability of taking $2.00 worth of raw materials and $6.00 worth of labor to create a cassette tape.  The market value for a cassette tape was $12.00, generating an average of $4.00 in profit per tape.

In recent years, there have been all sorts of innovations in production as well as new technologies like CDs, DVDs, MP3 players, and blue ray disks.  These new technologies are complicated, so I focused on producing cassette tapes.  Because of the fierce competition and innovation, the market value of a cassette tape has dropped to $3.00 per tape.  Due to high gas prices and minimum wage increases, it now cost XYZ Corp $14.00 per tape.

Continue reading

Looking for help from Bombardier

Published: Saturday, July 26

David Descôteaux
Le Gardeur

I have a project: to publish a book. I have talent and I’m certain it will be a success. I ask each of Bombardier’s 70,000 employees to lend me $25. I will repay the entire amount ($1.7 million) in 10 years. Of course, it will be a zero-interest loan. And I will pay you back only if I sell my books. If I sell nothing, you get nothing.

You refuse? But my project will create economic wealth. The publisher will earn a profit, I’ll buy writing software, hire a research staff, buy paper, eat at restaurants near my house, hire a contractor to build me a decent office. Add the income tax of all these workers to the taxes generated by the sale of the books, and the government will make a fortune.

Besides, our book industry must be competitive. I heard that a French author, who writes on the same subject as me, receives subsidies from his government. It would be unjust and suicidal for our industry not to subsidize me, too.

You still refuse? You prefer to put your $25 in a safe investment, earning an eight-per-cent compounded annual return that will add up to $54 in 10 years, instead of the uncertain $25 I’m offering you? You say it’s more important for you to keep this money for your daughter’s college tuition than to use it to make planes? I don’t get it.

But it doesn’t matter what you think. You have no choice. My good friend the politician will make you lend me the money. If you refuse, he’ll send you to jail. He thinks it’s a good project. After all, who are you to know what to do with your money?

I found this at cafehayek.typepad.com