Could traveling at high speed pay off financially back on Earth?

In summary, the conversation discusses a hypothetical scenario where a person invests $100,000 in an account with 3% annual interest and then travels at 80% the speed of light for two years. The conversation also touches on the concept of time dilation and its impact on the person's age and the amount of interest accrued. It is mentioned that a trust managed by a bank could be a possible solution to avoid losing the investment due to state laws. The conversation also references a paper on interstellar trade by Paul Krugman.
  • #1
drbanner
7
0
Hypothetical Space/time perception concept with financial implications.

If you were to invest a $100,000 in an account with 3% annual interest, how much interest would you have accrued in $ if you were to travel at 80 % the speed of light directly away from Earth for 1 year, and then directly back to Earth for 1 year at the same speed? How much time would have went by on earth?
 
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  • #2
You age 2 years, Earth ages 3.

http://www.1728.org/reltivty.htm
At the bottom of the page is a calculator. Enter .8 and press c=1 to see the time dilation factor.
 
  • #3
drbanner said:
Hypothetical Space/time perception concept with financial implications.

If you were to invest a $100,000 in an account with 3% annual interest, how much interest would you have accrued in $ if you were to travel at 80 % the speed of light directly away from Earth for 1 year, and then directly back to Earth for 1 year at the same speed? How much time would have went by on earth?
At 0.8c, gamma = 1/√(1-0.82) = 1/√(1-0.64) = 1/√(0.36) = 1/0.6 = 1.666 or exactly 5/3. Since you are gone 2 years, 3.3333 years will pass on earth. Assuming that the interest is compounded three times a year at 1%, you will end up with $110462.21.

By the way, if you had stayed on earth, with the same compounding, you would end up with $106152.02 so you have $4310.19 more by taking the trip but I doubt you will get any bank to honor your claim unless the bank goes with you.
 
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  • #4
ghwellsjr said:
At 0.8c, gamma = 1/√(1-0.82) = 1/√(1-0.64) = 1/√(0.36) = 1/0.6 = 1.666 or exactly 5/3. Since you are gone 2 years, 3.3333 years will pass on earth. Assuming that the interest is compounded three times a year at 1%, you will end up with $110462.21.

Which would be WAY less than it would cost to make the trip :smile:
 
  • #5
Another obvious point is that even if you make the example more extreme:

Put X dollars in a Trust with with 'reliable' management company, travel such that after one year of your time passes, 100 years of Earth time passes. You come back and have lot's of dollars - but probably not so much more in spending power than when you left. If you instruct that you want minimal risk of decrease, the best you can hope for over the long haul is a little better than inflation.
 
  • #6
Worse yet, I just got a notice from one of my financial institutions warning:
The law in California states that any financial account that's been inactive for 3 years must be reported and may be claimed by the state as an "abandoned account."

So you better not try this in California.
 
  • #7
ghwellsjr said:
Worse yet, I just got a notice from one of my financial institutions warning:


So you better not try this in California.

Many states have such a law. That's why I mentioned a Trust, managed e.g. by a Bank's trust department. It is completely exempt from such laws. FYI: even in states with such a law, if you set up online access to your account and simply check the balance periodically on line, that counts as 'activity' for the purposes of such laws (at least in my state it does; we ran into this issue in one account). The big issue for a long term investment is management that is both competent and free of conflict of interest, and must be a corporate entity with successor policies, else you are at great risk over a very long time window.
 
  • #8
Now there's an interesting problem: how often would you have to contact your bank while traveling on a spaceship to make sure they got a call from you every three years (so as not to lose your funds)? For this particular scenario, when would the traveler make a call so that it arrived at the bank after three years?
 
  • #9
ghwellsjr said:
[..] if you had stayed on earth, with the same compounding, you would end up with $106152.02 so you have $4310.19 more by taking the trip but I doubt you will get any bank to honor your claim unless the bank goes with you.
I don't follow this - the bank simply counts the number of bank years, and it has to honour that obligation. However, not only the trip will cost much more, there's also inflation.- :rolleyes:
 
  • #11
harrylin said:
ghwellsjr said:
[..] if you had stayed on earth, with the same compounding, you would end up with $106152.02 so you have $4310.19 more by taking the trip but I doubt you will get any bank to honor your claim unless the bank goes with you.
I don't follow this - the bank simply counts the number of bank years, and it has to honour that obligation. However, not only the trip will cost much more, there's also inflation.- :rolleyes:
You're right, I don't know what I was thinking concerning the need for the bank to take the trip. Thanks for catching this.

But what about my question for the need to contact the bank every 3 years? When does the traveler need to send a message to the bank so that it will arrive 3 years after he leaves?
 
  • #12
ghwellsjr said:
You're right, I don't know what I was thinking concerning the need for the bank to take the trip. Thanks for catching this.

But what about my question for the need to contact the bank every 3 years? When does the traveler need to send a message to the bank so that it will arrive 3 years after he leaves?

Just have the traveler set up a trust, problem avoided.
 
  • #13
ghwellsjr said:
You're right, I don't know what I was thinking concerning the need for the bank to take the trip. Thanks for catching this.

But what about my question for the need to contact the bank every 3 years? When does the traveler need to send a message to the bank so that it will arrive 3 years after he leaves?
Your time is 2 years. Earth time is 3.3333 years. All shorter intervals will have a similar ratio.
 
  • #14
  • #15
PAllen said:
Just have the traveler set up a trust, problem avoided.
Too late, the traveler already left and got a communication from his bank, along with the first interest credited, sent four months (1/3 year) after he left that he had to communicate at least every 3 years to satisfy the state. Now the question is, when will he receive the message and when will he need to respond in order for the reply to get to the bank at the three year deadline?
 
  • #16
DaveC426913 said:
ghwellsjr said:
But what about my question for the need to contact the bank every 3 years? When does the traveler need to send a message to the bank so that it will arrive 3 years after he leaves?
Your time is 2 years. Earth time is 3.3333 years. All shorter intervals will have a similar ratio.
If you are saying that he can send the message 1.8 years after he left, it will be too late, the state will already have his funds by the time he gets back.
 
  • #17
phinds said:
Which would be WAY less than it would cost to make the trip :smile:
Not according to Paul Krugman:
Nugatory said:
No discussion of this topic would be complete without a reference to "The Theory of Interstellar Trade" by Paul Krugman: http://www.princeton.edu/~pkrugman/interstellar.pdf
Competition will have driven the travel costs to zero. (You got to read the paper.)
 
  • #18
I'm still waiting for the correct answer to my question in post #15.

To summarize the situation, a guy puts money in a bank and leaves in a spaceship at 0.8c. After four months (earth time) the bank sends him an email message informing him that he needs to respond to the bank at least every 3 years in order to avoid losing his money to the state.

"Now the question is, when will he receive the message and when will he need to respond in order for the reply to get to the bank at the three year deadline?"
 
  • #19
Since we have already injected a bit of "reality" into this, all of this is assuming that the bank does not go broke and is able to pay your your money!
 
  • #20
HallsofIvy said:
Since we have already injected a bit of "reality" into this, all of this is assuming that the bank does not go broke and is able to pay your your money!
A bank offering 3% interest probably will go broke but even if they were only offering 0.1% interest, my question still stands. It has nothing to do with the interest rate, only what will happen to the principle if he doesn't respond within 3 years. Our state is already broke so they would love to collect this winfall. How can we make sure that doesn't happen?
 
  • #21
I have no interest (pun intended) in this variant. IMO, if anyone was interested and could exploit this method, they would set up a trust before they left. There are trusts that have lasted over two centuries, at least. Further, I don't think 3% interest would be a problem at all - there would be inflation, and currency re-scalings, which a trustee corporation (including successor corporations) could keep up with. A <very long term> investment in an account type that is guaranteed not to lose value, will actually fail to keep up with inflation, thus, whatever the 'dollar value' will have less spending power after centuries than it started with.
 
  • #22
OMG, guys, you are so naive, because you were living most of your life in relativelty stable period.

You will return back just to find out that your bank doesn't exist, or that country had defaulted several times, or that hyperinflation took place, or that currency doesn't exist at all and world is using "bitcoins" or something...
 
  • #23
If we invented an interstellar travel, then there would actually be great time for investments.

If there are new planets to colonize, then each new colony would add up to the humanity economic growth. That's probably the only way to keep the exponential growth we have been experiencing since millenia after we will have used up all Earth's resources.

Suppose that we have discovered a new planet exactly as Earth. The purchasing power of our currencies will immediately double, since it will have to cover two times more goods.

A fund on Earth could give a good 3% yield forever, provided that we discover 3% more habitable space each year.

Of course, this model of economy will hit its limit some day, since even at the speed of light we could colonize an amount of planets proportional at most to the third power of time. I wonder when this moment happens. But knowing the nature of humans, we will get over this problem somehow.

If we colonized some more planets, the economy would be more stable, since we will be able to diversify our investments.

The only problem, as Krugman wrote, will be the high cost and time of the delivery. If we gathered on one planet an amount of money representing goods on some distant planets, then we will not be able to spend it faster than the rate of the goods delivery, without causing inflation on that planet.

I am waiting for our Great Astronomic Discoveries period, when a small group of individuals will be able to reach and colonize a stellar body. This will give us such a degree of freedom we didn't have since almost 500 years.
 
  • #24


Nugatory said:
No discussion of this topic would be complete without a reference to "The Theory of Interstellar Trade" by Paul Krugman: http://www.princeton.edu/~pkrugman/interstellar.pdf
I just saw this reference today. What a great paper and entertaining read! I can't wait until I can reference it in an economics class.
 
  • #25
ghwellsjr said:
Competition will have driven the travel costs to zero. (You got to read the paper.)
No, competition will have driven the profit to zero.
 
  • #26
ghwellsjr said:
I'm still waiting for the correct answer to my question in post #15.

To summarize the situation, a guy puts money in a bank and leaves in a spaceship at 0.8c. After four months (earth time) the bank sends him an email message informing him that he needs to respond to the bank at least every 3 years in order to avoid losing his money to the state.

"Now the question is, when will he receive the message and when will he need to respond in order for the reply to get to the bank at the three year deadline?"
Are you asking this because you don't know the answer, or as a challenge to others in this thread?

I'll take your questions at face value: "after 1 year of his time" and "immediately". Because the doppler factor for 0.8c is 3.
 
  • #27
I thought it was an interesting and coincidental challenge--that the traveler gets the message just in the nick of time to respond before he loses his money. Thanks for answering.
 

1. How does traveling at high speed affect financial gain on Earth?

Traveling at high speeds can potentially have a significant impact on financial gain on Earth. As the speed of travel increases, the amount of time it takes to reach a destination decreases. This can result in cost savings for transportation and shipping, as well as increased productivity for businesses and individuals.

2. What are the potential financial benefits of traveling at high speed?

Some potential financial benefits of traveling at high speed include reduced travel time and costs, increased efficiency and productivity in business operations, and the potential for new markets and opportunities to be accessed more quickly.

3. Are there any drawbacks to traveling at high speed in terms of financial gain?

While there are certainly potential benefits to traveling at high speed, there are also potential drawbacks. The initial costs of developing and implementing high-speed travel technology can be significant, and there may also be environmental and safety concerns to consider.

4. Is it worth investing in high-speed travel for financial gain?

The answer to this question depends on many factors, including the specific industry and market being considered, the current state of high-speed travel technology, and the potential costs and benefits. It is important to carefully weigh all potential factors before making any investment decisions.

5. What are some current examples of high-speed travel contributing to financial gain on Earth?

There are several examples of high-speed travel already contributing to financial gain on Earth. These include high-speed rail systems in countries such as Japan and China, which have reduced travel time and increased efficiency for both individuals and businesses. Additionally, the development of supersonic air travel technology has the potential to significantly impact the aviation industry and global markets in the future.

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