So, can someone tell us about an economic system that does not require unending growth?
For extra irony, this explanation should come from one of those people who say that predicting economics is BS and that it's too complex for anyone to understand.
FFS y'all, this isn't the grand revelation you think it is. I figured it out on my own at 19, before the internet existed to tell me what to think. This was about the same time that I figured out that prices will always go up, never down.
If it doesn't, perhaps you can get an answer from billionaires, private equity shareholders, and CEOs of big companies: how much money is "enough" for them?
Oh no, you can't, because all of them are focused on infinitely squeezing customers and workers to grow revenue.
Shareholders demanding ever increasing profits quarter after quarter is the definition of infinite growth. It's not enough that a company makes a hundred million dollars in profits quarter after quarter. That number has to keep getting bigger. So yes capitalism as it operates todau does actually require infinite growth.
Does it require infinite growth adjusted for inflation? Because as long as you have a state printing money there will be inflation and if your profits don't keep up with it that means they're decreasing, not just constant.