c_hawkbob wrote:Moderation in all things. Including capitalism.
NorthHawk wrote:The point of the article is things seem to be changing and big companies like Wal-Mart and Unilever are part of it.
It's a good thing to move away from the idea of shareholder supremacy where companies only look to the next quarter profits/losses and to longer term
planning so companies can plan for the future. The changes from the late 70's - 80's created a lot of wealth but also created a lot of
inequity and turmoil in the job market for the average person and some of today's social discord is because of those economic changes from things like
supply side economics with tax cuts that largely benefit the already wealthy.
In a perfect world, my ideal arrangement would be for large companies like WalMart and Amazon be at least partially employee owned with a requirement that an employee representative sit on the board of directors. I'd like to see companies give their employees a discounted rate on company stock purchases, perhaps in lieu of pensions. That way, they'd be more inclined to emphasize long term success than simply a quarter-to-quarter result along with sharing in the financial success of the company. It's a lot like home ownership. A person that owns their home is more likely to keep it looking nice than someone that rents.
NorthHawk wrote:That sounds like it could be part of it, but the large companies like Amazon squeeze out the smaller local businesses which provide a future for the average person who wants to better themselves or not work for someone else. Perhaps like they did with the oil companies in Teddy Roosevelt's time or thereabouts and break up the big ones like Amazon to get more and better competition is part of the picture. But for sure, the current situation isn't sustainable for the long term.
RiverDog wrote:In a perfect world, my ideal arrangement would be for large companies like WalMart and Amazon be at least partially employee owned with a requirement that an employee representative sit on the board of directors. I'd like to see companies give their employees a discounted rate on company stock purchases, perhaps in lieu of pensions. That way, they'd be more inclined to emphasize long term success than simply a quarter-to-quarter result along with sharing in the financial success of the company. It's a lot like home ownership. A person that owns their home is more likely to keep it looking nice than someone that rents.
NorthHawk wrote:There’s a reason the American population are as dissatisfied with their govt than many other nations.
That is the lack of services that arise from lower tax revenues. If you look at the list of populations that are the happiest,
most of the top ranked countries have higher taxes. The reason they are happier is they have trust that their
government has safety nets in place so if something happens they aren’t left on their own. In other words the social
safety nets are much stronger than in the US. It hasn’t stifled entrepreneurship in those countries as they have vibrant
and varied economies with people able to take risks without having to worry about losing their kids education or their
homes should they have a major health crisis or business failure.
Basically they are happy with how their taxes are being spent on education, health, infrastructure, and others all of which
require tax revenues.
NorthHawk wrote:Gone are the days when it was expected that a person could work until they are 65 and retire. That’s more the exception
than the rule today and god forbid there is a stock market crash with so much retirement income dependent on good results
in the market. That’s the genius of the monied elite’s program of appealing to the base instinct of the government being
the problem and not the solution or part thereof.
NorthHawk wrote:By the way, businesses are closing daily because of online purchases and Amazon is the biggest online business, so I doubt it’s a net positive for local Mom and Pop small businesses.
NorthHawk wrote:There’s a reason the American population are as dissatisfied with their govt than many other nations.
That is the lack of services that arise from lower tax revenues. If you look at the list of populations that are the happiest,
most of the top ranked countries have higher taxes. The reason they are happier is they have trust that their
government has safety nets in place so if something happens they aren’t left on their own. In other words the social
safety nets are much stronger than in the US. It hasn’t stifled entrepreneurship in those countries as they have vibrant
and varied economies with people able to take risks without having to worry about losing their kids education or their
homes should they have a major health crisis or business failure.
Basically they are happy with how their taxes are being spent on education, health, infrastructure, and others all of which
require tax revenues.
The genius of the right wing in the US is they’ve convinced most of the people that lower taxes help them when
it’s really not in their best interest. What has happened is fewer services, more homeless, more food banks,
more people having to work until they die, lower wages, more people being food insecure, and more.
Gone are the days when it was expected that a person could work until they are 65 and retire. That’s more the exception
than the rule today and god forbid there is a stock market crash with so much retirement income dependent on good results
in the market. That’s the genius of the monied elite’s program of appealing to the base instinct of the government being
the problem and not the solution or part thereof.
In any event, capitalism is constantly evolving and the authors of the article suggests we are at some type of
inflection point with big companies changing their business priorities..
By the way, businesses are closing daily because of online purchases and Amazon is the biggest online
business, so I doubt it’s a net positive for local Mom and Pop small businesses.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Even now Social Security and Medicare are two of the largest expenses of government. Neither one of them is cheap and that is taking into account they manage about 15% of the U.S. population or 44 million people. Could we build an effective system for manage 330 million people and the insane level of immigration we have? One of the key factors in many of these Utopias is controlling who gets to come in and out of a given nation. It is rarely talked about as a factor in providing social services. If you are a nation providing a strong and expensive social safety net, you can't have millions of people migrating to your country yearly, enough to displace most of the nations on your list. It becomes quite expensive when a number of people nearly equal to most nations is moving in yearly.
RiverDog wrote:I disagree that we "can't have millions of people migrating to the country yearly". The changing demographics, with a declining birth rate and increasing life expectancy, means that we have more and more people on SS and Medicare and fewer younger people paying into the system. There are tons of jobs available, good paying jobs in the construction and transportation industries that native born Americans won't do. We need an infusion of young, healthy workers to take these jobs and pay into the social systems we have created that will collapse under their own weight if we don't increase revenues to offset the increasing numbers that are going into these systems, so that means either finding younger workers or increasing taxes.
I'm not sure if you've seen what's going on in the home construction industry, but in addition to skyrocketing lumber prices, construction companies, despite having a huge demand for new home construction...in my community, we have a 2% vacancy rate, and as a result, home prices are going through the roof...they can't find enough workers like electricians, plumbers, carpenters, all good paying jobs. It's a huge problem.
Aseahawkfan wrote:What do you mean won't do? How do you even know they won't do these jobs? Pretty large assumption on your part. So you want a nation of 500 million plus people and growing? You think that will be comfortable and easy to manage? This is in relation to providing nationalized social services such as socialized medicine and free school. You think having loose immigration would pay for itself with increased taxes for social services such as those provided in European nations? That's the context of the conversation.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The housing shortage is caused by a variety of factors that will correct soon and likely cause a big issue. The biggest reason being the eviction moratorium that has been in effect since the start of the pandemic. You basically have a ton of people that deferred rent and mortgages and couldn't be evicted that caused regular turnover in the housing market to be suspended. When the moratorium is lifted, we will see if the people have the money to pay for their backed up rent and mortgages and what happens after that.
RiverDog wrote:I guess it doesn't matter whether or not native born Americans 'won't' do blue collar jobs. The point is that they are not. We have shortages of truck drivers, electricians, carpenters, plumbers, etc. It's an undeniable fact.
If we don't do something to supplement the work force with a healthy infusion of young workers, the economy will have to adjust in some manner, either through automation (more robots and AI, one step closer to Skynet ala the Terminator?) or we will have to raise taxes on those that are working, something that is not politically viable. There are too many people on social benefits and not enough paying into the system. At some point, something has to give.
You're right, the eviction moratorium doesn't help matters and was the wrong thing to do, at least for the period of time they allowed it. All it's going to do is cause potential landlords to raise rents to pay for those that won't or can't pay their rent or not rent properties at all and put even more pressure on the affordable housing crisis that is helping to contribute to the homeless problem. If I had property that I was considering renting out, an extra room in the basement, for example, there is no way I'd lease it out unless I had some type of recourse should a tenant not pay their rent. The eviction moratorium was a very short sighted initiative and one of the reasons why I resist voting for Democrats.
But the root cause of the housing shortage is not the pandemic or the eviction moratorium. There was a housing crisis brewing long before the pandemic. From an article written in February of 2020:
The United States suffers from a severe housing shortage. In a recent study, The Major Challenge of Inadequate U.S. Housing Supply, we estimated that 2.5 million additional housing units will be needed to make up this shortage.
When we account for state-level variations, the estimated housing deficit is even greater in some states because housing is a fixed asset. A surplus of housing in one area can do little to help faraway places. For example, vacant homes in Ohio make little difference to the housing markets in Texas. We estimate that there are currently 29 states that have a housing deficit, and when we consider only these states, the housing shortage grows from 2.5 million units to 3.3 million units.
http://www.freddiemac.com/research/insi ... rtage.page
The housing shortage in my area has been acute for the last decade. Vacancy rates have been well below 10% for years and currently sits at 1%-1.5%.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Is it (shortage of blue collar workers) because those jobs are no longer paying a competitive wage compared to learning to be a network tech or is it a short-term shortage due to the pandemic? Or how those industries are managed? Or is it immigration constantly being used to bring in cheap labor that cuts wages making those jobs less attractive?
Aseahawkfan wrote:Why do you think this? We had a 4% unemployment rate with wages finally starting to rise. You want a shortage in employment as that is what makes wages rise. If you keep bringing in immigrant labor to prevent labor shortages, then wages never rise. They instead stagnate as you never have the supply-demand pressure to boost wages. Which is what has been happening for years, which is why some people are getting pissed off about immigration being used to slant labor and wages highly in favor of business rather than the worker. If businesses can just import labor every time there is a shortage, how does a working person gain an advantage in the labor market to boost wages?
Aseahawkfan wrote:Lastly, you did not address what Democrats like Northhawk and c-bob want, which is European style social services for a large population. How do you budget for European style nationalized education and medicine for 330 million people with loose immigration. One of the dirty secrets the left never brings up in discussions about European style social services is European immigration laws, which are much stricter than the United States. We have people on the left crying about requiring I.D. cards and as far as I know every European citizen is required to have an I.D. card at all times to do almost anything and especially to access social services much less vote. Yet in America if you want to require an I.D. card for voting and the like, even you are calling it a poll tax.
Aseahawkfan wrote:What is a natural vacancy rate? Or natural home turnover?
Aseahawkfan wrote:But at the same time I wouldn't look at the current housing market as an indicator of what is to come in the next few years once we return to normal market conditions. This is an acute shortage brought on policies and conditions that are short-term in nature. We won't get a good picture of the housing market until we return to normal. We're probably another year or two away from that though the market is forward looking and will start pricing that in a year or so in advance.
Aseahawkfan wrote:And I heard the same argument about Walmart as I do about Amazon nowadays. Walmart used to be the destroyer of mom and pop stores taking over everything. But now Amazon is the left's boogeyman for poor mom and pop's, even though mom and pop's are thriving with the ability to sell their goods and services over a wider area as long as they are willing to adapt to a new online environment and learn to use the tools provided by tech companies helping mom and pop's move into the digital age.
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