Check out Dobbs' newest editorial on CNN. I wish I could get by not knowing shit about economics and still getting people to listen to my thoughts on the economy.http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/11/28/Dobbs.Nov29/index.htmlDobbs: New Congress must show courage
11/29/2006 9:03:15 PM
^Lou Dobbs is his own niche market. Say what you will, it has worked for him. Most honest people should call him a demagogue.
11/30/2006 3:12:26 AM
I'll admit up front that I don't know enough about economics to be able to accurately guage what he has said there. But it does sound like it makes sense....bgmims would you care to explain why his points are inaccurate? thanks
11/30/2006 8:53:11 AM
Well, for starters, he assumes that free-trade has a net negative impact on society. He takes the "he took our jobs" mentality that simply isn't correct. We benefit through a decreased price level AND by taking people out of jobs where they are inefficient (compared to global makers) and could be put to a more productive use.
11/30/2006 9:12:08 AM
On a very general level...We have two choices. Either we are free to buy whatever we want from whomever we want at market price or we allow politicians to decide for us what we may buy.
11/30/2006 10:00:49 AM
I agree with free trade to a degree, but my main contention with it is that we don't enforce some kind of labor standards on the countries we trade with. This reduces the ability of american labor to compete and gives foriegn labor a defacto advantage over domestic labor.
11/30/2006 10:16:58 AM
Here comes Kris with the "Fair Trade" schpiel. Please 2 ignore this, as it is one of those counter-intuitive points again.Not to mention a very ethnocentric one.
11/30/2006 10:45:10 AM
It's not ethnocentric. It's our government's job to provide for our welfare, providing for other people's welfare is great, but providing for it's own people takes priority.
11/30/2006 10:47:22 AM
^ Kris, as I've explained before, American labor in no way is competing with Mexican labor. American television makers are competing with American airplane makers. This is thanks to a floating exchange rate. If America made bad airplanes then Mexico would buy airplanes from Europe and Americans would not have pesos to buy televisions from Mexico.
11/30/2006 11:02:09 AM
11/30/2006 11:30:41 AM
I think he is right.
11/30/2006 11:32:09 AM
11/30/2006 11:40:37 AM
We're not forcing our standards on them, we're just saying, if you want us to buy your products, you have to at least have these things in place. I mean we won't trade with countries that openly support terrorism, is that ethnocentric?
11/30/2006 11:44:30 AM
Yes, you're absolutely right. It isn't ethnocentric at all to say "We're going to starve you guys out if you don't practice the labor standards that even we didn't decide to adopt until we were far past your level of development"
11/30/2006 12:36:11 PM
11/30/2006 1:57:47 PM
11/30/2006 3:01:59 PM
11/30/2006 3:23:19 PM
Don't mind Kris, people are born auto workers (or appointed them by the Central Planning Commission--if we're so blessed) and deserve those jobs. Adjusting skills is something unfair.
11/30/2006 3:38:48 PM
11/30/2006 3:43:26 PM
11/30/2006 3:55:39 PM
11/30/2006 3:57:16 PM
RIght, and like I said, back when international trade was rare recessions were more frequent and more severe. Of course, they were no where near as severe as they were during the progressive era, but I digress.
11/30/2006 4:09:16 PM
11/30/2006 4:14:45 PM
11/30/2006 5:30:09 PM
this guy is so in denial that he is wrong.
11/30/2006 5:44:59 PM
yet I could still think of a better response than that
11/30/2006 6:23:46 PM
11/30/2006 8:19:56 PM
There is so much wild speculation and generalization going on in this thread. I guess when no one is an economics expert, everyone is an economics expert.
11/30/2006 8:26:50 PM
12/1/2006 12:03:14 AM
i don't think it matters what kind of smart ass answer you can give me. you're still in denial. i can spend all day disproving you, but i'll be wasting my time because you're too stubborn.
12/1/2006 5:56:13 AM
12/1/2006 7:28:18 AM
[Edited on December 1, 2006 at 8:23 AM. Reason : [][Edited on December 1, 2006 at 8:23 AM. Reason : []
12/1/2006 8:23:01 AM
^^ PS: You do, indeed, appear to know your economics. And I think you made an excellent point in this thread that a lot of economics is counterintuitive. For example, the results of comparative advantage--a country or other entity producing a good at a lower opportunity cost than that of a competitor--are counterintuitive to many. People cannot seem to grasp that some jobs going out of this country can, in fact, be good for our economy and the economy of the competing country. And no matter what, resources will flow to the most efficient outputs. In any event, U.S. consumers haven’t stopped crowding into the Wal-Marts and K-marts and Targets to buy their inexpensive goods. I mean, c'mon, folks, the plasma screen and the DVD player and the computer and the clothes and so on were NOT made in Raleigh--or even in this country. THAT'S why they're inexpensive! And we benefit from that! In addition, "outsourcing" is not a one-way street out of our country, as Dobbs and others often portray it. Some foreign manufacturers "outsource" from their countries to the United States--to flee oppressive European labor laws, for example. So, yes, Lou Dobbs should shut the fuck up. Maybe take a course or something, shit.[Edited on December 1, 2006 at 9:01 AM. Reason : .][Edited on December 1, 2006 at 9:02 AM. Reason : .]
12/1/2006 8:59:49 AM
just to point out, lou dobbs graduated with a degree in economics from harvard in 1967. he does know his economics
12/1/2006 9:05:31 AM
^ Bill O'Reilly holds a master's in public administration from Harvard University. Do you agree with everything that he says?
12/1/2006 9:13:42 AM
^just because you might not agree with someone doesn't mean they don't "know their stuff." there are lots of incredibly smart people with whom i disagree vehemently.
12/1/2006 9:15:36 AM
And I just wanted to point out that I don't buy economics. I made an A in the only econ class I've ever taken and got an e-mail encouraging me to take more classes, but I never did because I thought and think it's mostly just a math/social science for a made up fantasy world.
12/1/2006 9:26:48 AM
12/1/2006 10:19:03 AM
12/1/2006 10:21:24 AM
Well, as Bridget was insulting Economics as a non-useful science, I just thought I'd ask to see if she was in a major that was more useful.
12/1/2006 10:44:13 AM
BridgetSPK is right, the first few courses in economics are quite made up and inapplicable to reality. This is everyones problem with Kris, all he has taken is the first course and has concluded from what he saw that no economics is ever applicable to reality. But this is how it goes in every field, the early learning is largely imaginary, even in Electrical Engineering.
12/1/2006 10:47:30 AM
Hell, do you know how many physics classes you take before they tell you "So that was Newton's take on it. It was wrong. Here's how it really works"
12/1/2006 10:49:40 AM
12/1/2006 11:46:04 AM
12/1/2006 11:51:44 AM
12/1/2006 12:31:01 PM
Well it is always difficult to convince someone they don't know what they're talking about.Kris, you generally do know your economics fairly well. An area where you have zero training, but is actually a very difficult field and is absolutely counter-intuitive is international economics and trade. You don't have the slightest clue about it and you don't want to have the slightest clue about it. In other cases, you generally use economics well, in this, however, you simply appeal to this "de facto disadvantage" which is ridiculous. Don't you think our insane amount of capital gives our workers an enormous advantage over low-wage labor in foreign countries? The only way they can compete (which is what you claim is important...competition) is by working long hours at shitty pay. That is their advantage. Ours comes in training and capital, theirs is in their sweat and labor. You haven't used economics to support it at all. Your attempts to say that corporations damage the very fabric of poor societies is certainly not based on rational economics. Also, even if they were given a de facto advantage that allowed them to create goods at much lower costs than we could, why the hell should we be upset about that? They're doing us a favor. Poor countries are willing to take our pollution-heavy, back-breaking labor so that we can focus on more productive uses of our time AND then they will sell us the same goods at lower prices than we were producign them ourselves. There is absolutely no subjectivity in the economic efficiency offered through globalization. The argument comes in whether protecting jobs trumps efficiency. The best arguments you'll find anyone make on why globalization is a problem is those that claim we could be starved out by our dependence on imports. Even this is a lousy argument because we can simply begin to produce for ourselves again and/or substitute away from those goods.Like I said, you generally do a pretty good job with your economics, but as far as the economic efficiency of global trade, you do have to bow to me, because you have no idea what you're talking about.
12/1/2006 12:41:32 PM
12/1/2006 12:46:42 PM
12/1/2006 1:04:41 PM
Lou Dobbs apparantly knows it, but fails to use it.
12/1/2006 1:05:34 PM
You only say that because you disagree with him.
12/1/2006 1:06:36 PM