This could go any of a number of places in TSB, but I think I'll post it here:
1/6/2010 2:05:40 AM
Saying the gov. jobs are “replacing” manufacturing is 100% factually incorrect.Replace implies that people are jumping ship, where the reality is that people are being fired from those manufacturing jobs. The loss of manufacturing jobs is due to increases in efficiency via technology, as well as outsourcing, not because mean-ol’-uncle-same is stealing workers.The proof of this is in manufacturing output. It continues to increase, while manufacturing employment continues to decrease.Not to mention that the chart doesn’t even show what that guys is asserting it shows.
1/6/2010 2:37:18 AM
Did you screw up that first post? That graph does not show what is described in that text.
1/6/2010 3:02:07 AM
1/6/2010 8:37:06 AM
1/6/2010 9:20:11 AM
Yes. We could just give everyone a government job, and everyone would be employed. Why shouldn't we do that?[Edited on January 6, 2010 at 9:23 AM. Reason : ]
1/6/2010 9:22:51 AM
1/6/2010 9:31:22 AM
^^^That's not the rationale used in your original statement. You said "Unfortunately, their wages come from the public pool." As if wages paid for by taxes were inherently less beneficial than wages paid for by profits.And of course there's an ideal ratio of public to private jobs. But what evidence do we have to indicate which side of the happy medium we're on?
1/6/2010 9:36:44 AM
1/6/2010 9:39:21 AM
all that graph shows is government jobs are growing slightly ahead of population growth, and manufacturing jobs are going away - no surprises there. The "government employees" line is highly misleading when not taking into account population, because as it's drawn there now, it's meant to imply the gov't is simply hiring literally out of control. In 1940 w/ population of 140M, that's about 3.6% employed by government. Now with a population of 310M, that's 7.2% employed by government. A significant increase, but not out of control and not surprising considering the number of new agencies since 1939
1/6/2010 9:44:56 AM
1/6/2010 9:45:02 AM
1/6/2010 9:45:11 AM
i always thought it was pretty fucking stupid that government workers had to pay income tax. Decrease their salaries and make them income tax free and get rid of the added irs bueracracy.
1/6/2010 9:46:06 AM
1/6/2010 9:47:48 AM
1/6/2010 9:52:37 AM
1/6/2010 9:57:09 AM
1/6/2010 10:06:14 AM
1/6/2010 10:08:58 AM
Unfortunately for us rape victims, the rapists are the ones making the laws.
1/6/2010 10:15:09 AM
this thread needs LoneSnark
1/6/2010 10:32:19 AM
To be fair, this chart also does not account for service producing jobs, but as I already mentioned, overall job growth in private non-defense sector jobs since 2000 has been negative.As I mentioned before, government growth has not been as a result of actual financed demand but debt expansion:The rate of expansion for most of the decade was on par with the rest of the economy, but without the ability to forcibly confiscate wealth or print money we see how the other sectors turned out. The late massive increase in debt has not been met with a concurrent increase in employment, wages, or productivity growth, despite the promises of Keynesians everywhere.[Edited on January 6, 2010 at 10:51 AM. Reason : (I can't find the chart for job loss / growth yet)]
1/6/2010 10:42:52 AM
1/6/2010 11:03:39 AM
1/6/2010 11:16:10 AM
When a country loses its production based and heavy industry based economy it will decline on a global level. What good is a country that produces nothing? Seeing all the automaker jobs disappear is very troubling. It's highly unlikely they'll return.
1/6/2010 11:26:00 AM
Why do I need to be drawn into this? The problem is far worse than the graphs here demonstrate. Government employees now constitute a large voting block, and have begun raiding the treasury. The number of government employees is growing faster than the population, their salaries are growing faster than inflation, and their pensions are growing faster still. In California government workers retire at 50 with up to 90% of their now routinely six figure salaries. The Class War: Public Employees vs. the Rest of Ushttp://reason.com/blog/2009/12/11/the-class-war-public-employees
1/6/2010 11:26:35 AM
1/6/2010 12:04:36 PM
Even if you grant the concept that the present manifestation of our representative democracy accurately allocates job creation in accordance with the will of the public at large, unlike in the private economy where you can opt out of goods and services you feel you don't need, one cannot opt out of goods and services that the elected representatives of the United States want you to have.Of course, this is assuming that the creation of Federal Bureaucracies are at the service of the public at large and not the special interest groups which actively lobby for new regulation / legislation / bureaucracy.Again, even if I grant you the possibility that the public truly desires these goods, their cost (and thus the real measure of value to the end consumer, the citizen) is obscured through debt financing, inflationary monetary policy, and a convoluted tax scheme which very effectively conceals the true cost of the current bureaucratic regime.The issue being, that once the tax consuming proportion of the economy exceeds the tax producing, acting in their own self-interest, the tax producers will be raided until their supplies are exhausted and the society collapses on itself.]
1/6/2010 12:24:25 PM
1/6/2010 1:15:07 PM
Then government has no right to tax?
1/6/2010 1:19:44 PM
I'm a big supporter of ending taxes. We need more reasons to have our real businesses work harder and theyll make more money with no taxes and that just adds to our wealth and doesnt punish the hardest workers. its not a natural part of the free market.
1/6/2010 2:05:45 PM
^^ Let us concede that the Government has the right to tax if you will concede that it has no right to spend. "To make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested by this Constitution in the government of the United States, or in any department or officer thereof."
1/7/2010 11:59:56 AM
If you're confining this debate within the confines of the Constitution, then it's a no-brainer. The gov't has the explicit, unquestionable right to both tax and spend. How exactly are we to establish navies, post offices, and whatnot without spending?And really, you're going to have to explain how any gov't granted the right to tax does not also have the right to spend. What else shall it do with its tax revenue.
1/7/2010 12:22:46 PM
The things enumerated in the Constitution. Such as funding a Navy, or an Army, or building post roads.
1/7/2010 2:32:36 PM
Enumerated. Implied. Same difference.
1/7/2010 2:48:11 PM
1/7/2010 3:59:47 PM
1/7/2010 4:16:52 PM
1/7/2010 5:59:45 PM
There were some stats I read last year explaining that the average 60 year old would get something like $60k more out of Social Security than they put in, while the average 25 y/o would put in on the order of $120k more than they'd get out.But that's cool, I didn't need that money anyway.
1/7/2010 9:44:50 PM
We are becoming a nation of Pauls. The real question is what will happen when we run out of Peters.
1/8/2010 1:54:01 AM
In what sense? Are you implying government workers don't add value to society?[Edited on January 8, 2010 at 8:06 AM. Reason : ]
1/8/2010 8:05:31 AM
I suspect we exceeded cost/benefit equalization back in the 1930s. There is no doubt that "Government Workers" provide value, the problem is that we keep getting more with no attempt at cost/benefit analysis. Especially when you look at compensation: it is not just that we keep getting more workers, but the workers we have now get aid far more than their private sector peers to do the same work. Check California: government provided services are worse than they have ever been and yet are costing California tax payers substantially more. All the money went to compensation, diverting funds from maintenance and the services that people actually use. http://www.cato.org/pubs/tbb/tbb-59.pdfThe study's author, Chris Edwards, found that the wage premium for public sector employees was about 34 percent and for benefits about 70 percent.
1/8/2010 1:38:26 PM
4/22/2010 10:30:12 PM
4/22/2010 11:34:56 PM
4/23/2010 8:31:23 AM
This seems to fit here as much as anywhere else . . . Inflation Makes a Poor Stain Remover
5/11/2010 12:10:30 PM
^and then the riots come.THat is exactly why I opposed adding ANOTHER entitlement when we cant pay for our current obligations. But reason be damned, the kids want thier toys despite having no money.
5/11/2010 1:51:43 PM
i'm not really sure what that first chart is trying to show...there are a few problems with it... some of which have already been mentioned- there is more to the economy than "goods producing industries". what about the huge service sector?- government employees includes contractors?- just because actual employment numbers in manufacturing goes down, that does not mean that goods produced goes down, especially not in this age of automation in the manufacturing industry.
5/11/2010 2:14:21 PM
5/11/2010 9:22:53 PM
5/11/2010 9:26:58 PM
5/11/2010 9:50:06 PM