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- #91
Ironic that the dems are trying to tax the rich, medicare for all, and you're asking who is going to pay for all this stuff Bernie is talking about yet they are the party of the rich. I've already gone over all these points in other threads so I'm just going to copy/paste whatever is relevant.How about not taxing anymore, not spending anymore than we do already?
Seems Dems think they are on a higher moral ground because they think they are supporting the party of the "poor" when in fact they are the party of the "rich hedge fund managers".
I haven't seen any switching back and forth, the war on poverty since the sixties has been the most racist thing they ever could have done.
I understand capitalism just fine. My point was the money is moved offshore because they think people like Bernie will steal it from them. My other point is, if that $32 trillion were here in the states being invested in jobs and people it would make our economy even that much greater.
I understand inflation and capitalism just fine, I am not sure someone who can support a socialist can teach me anything about capitalism, business, investing, inflation etc. I stated that there were 2 options on how to weather a financial crisis, save money ahead of time or expect to be taken care of by the government.
Super pacs, PACS, superdelegates or whatever don't mean anything as far as Bernie goes. By his own admittance and his published "platform" he fully intends to steal money that I have worked for and saved and give it to someone else that hasn't done that. Nobody that is successful and has any means would support that unless they thought they could be involved in the dispersement of said ill gotten gains. You can wrap it up in all the morality, progressiveness, "wokeness" new age whatever and it all boils down to stealing wealth from one person and giving it to another.
PS. where is QCman? Even debating a Canadian makes more sense than a socialist.
"In capitalism, companies compete with each other to get the highest profit margin possible. In order to get the highest profit margin possible, they must keep their costs as low as possible. Labor is a cost. Ergo, the goal is to pay as low as possible for employees. There is essentially a race for the bottom for who can pay their employees the least while still being productive.
This race for lowest production costs possible means things like automation, changing full-time employees to contract/temp work, outsourcing, nixing things like retirement pensions, fighting against minimum wage increases, anything to drive down this cost.
So if you consider the above then think about this: Capitalism depends on consumption, i.e. people buying things. People need to buy the basics, stuff like food and shelter. But capitalism also needs them to buy things like iPads, purses, skateboards, etc. Basically, people need disposable income.
So it looks to me like there is a conflict between the need for lowest labor costs possible and the need for consumers to spend their income. But wait it gets better! They found the solution. Debt. Rich people loan poor people money with interest to buy all that stuff. Medical debt, mortgage debt, student loan debt, car loan debt, credit card debt, etc.
As a result of this race to the lowest production cost possible, wages aren't going up despite very low unemployment. It also why you hear about how Americans don't have enough saved to cover a $400 emergency. It's not that wages aren't going up because capitalism is failing, on the contrary, wages aren't going up because capitalism is achieving its goal of streamlined low-cost production extremely well. Wages are essentially becoming as optimized as they can get. It's also why there are so many "Millenials kill x industry" stories, categories of products and services are being "killed off" because they depend on a level of disposable income that the newest generations just simply do not have."
"In the 50s-70s the marginal tax rate for the highest income brackets was somewhere between 80-90% (that is, all dollars earned above $200,000 were taxed at some 90 percentile); this was during one of the biggest boom periods in American history, and during this period the unemployment rate was at one of its lowest points, apart from during WWII
It wasn't until the 1980s when there was an oil bust that we got above a 10% unemployment rate again; it can likely be argued that Reagan's tax cuts helped ease this, and during depressions/recessions tax cuts can be the right move for GDP growth. But the years of growth before when the marginal rate of 91% was holding strong counter the claim that higher taxation causes higher unemployment, but another point is that unemployment and GDP don't tell the whole picture of the health of the economy:
Since the late 70s, average CEO pay has grown almost 950% while average worker pay has only grown by about 12% (both adjusted for inflation) as of 2018 per an EPI report released in August 2019
This tells us that even though our GDP has grown considerably, it's a very small pool of people who are seeing any tangible benefit from this. This widening pay gap means that unemployment isn't quite the right metric, we also need to look at underemployment.
78% of American workers live paycheck-to-paycheck and can't weather a loss in income without taking on debt. Further 11.1% of employed Americans are underemployed, as defined by the Economic Policy Institute as a part-time worker who wants full-time work, and has searched for work in the past year but has given up actively searching for it and this is a fairly narrow definition that doesn't include people who are just not making enough to meet their needs. It has been admitted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics that underemployment is tricky for them to get data on and they don't have a stat to track it.
Now to be as fair as possible here: these figures are ones that weren't tracked in the 50's-70's, but something we do know is the average net worth of people who entered the workforce at certain times, and almost universally people who entered the workforce between the end of WWII and the beginning of Reagan's presidency (or the end of Carter's) own significantly more wealth than those who entered the workforce in the 80s and 90s and early 2000s, and those folks own significantly more wealth, and owned significantly more wealth at the same stage of their employment (we don't have that data for the boomers) than people who entered the work force around the time of the housing crisis in the late 2000s and onward from there. More people from past generations of workers were able to get more wealth, were able to buy affordable housing, were able to save for retirement, than are able to at present.
Also in the interest of fairness, I will grudgingly accept that at the most basic level, having some income is better than no income, if you don't first take into consideration means testing on government safety nets; anecdotally, when I was unemployed for a few months due to taking time off at my previous job (military ETS), my unemployment was contingent on me remaining unemployed (which makes sense), but it also created an incentive to only accept job offers that would clearly beat my unemployment benefit checks, as I think almost anyone when presented the choice of "work for $X, or stay at home and get $X while you look for a job that pays more than $X" will choose the latter. I was fortunate enough that I didn't have need of things like SNAP or Medicaid, but it can be demoralizing to find work that might be good, but you end up essentially earning less for working since you are now over the threshold for some programs like that. Based on that, in some instances I think the underemployment numbers are much more worth noting in the conversation about unemployment.
The fact that we need to face, and that tax cuts won't help, is that the economy isn't working for a vast majority of the American work force, but it is working to prop up numbers."
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