4/20/2010 8:49:32 PM
4/20/2010 9:30:49 PM
ITT Earthdogg tries to explain how Obama wants a welfare state
4/20/2010 9:32:43 PM
4/20/2010 9:42:15 PM
Can we get a less fuzzy version of the chart that's completely legible? Selective and misleading labeling, nonstandard and not particularly useful measures of inequality, and unsubstantiated claims of causality ITT.
4/20/2010 11:40:21 PM
I would love to read more about how RR ruined the social construct of America.
4/20/2010 11:45:25 PM
wage gap is high and social mobility is low in this country.[Edited on April 21, 2010 at 12:22 AM. Reason : stupid image][Edited on April 21, 2010 at 12:23 AM. Reason : tinypic]
4/21/2010 12:19:21 AM
How about we just throw all our income into a gov't pool and let Obama spread it around?
4/21/2010 10:42:40 AM
4/21/2010 10:56:44 AM
lots of hyperbole itt
4/21/2010 11:20:42 AM
4/21/2010 11:24:32 AM
the 50s were about half a decade subsequent to a massive world war.therefore, I propose that every decade we kill millions of people in a violent and bloody world war that touches every nationthis will surely guarantee 50s style prosperity for the rest of time.p.s. the 50s weren't that great. our standard of living a lot higher than back then
4/21/2010 11:28:49 AM
4/21/2010 12:20:24 PM
myth or not, i love me some new deal-era architecture and graphic design
4/21/2010 1:18:50 PM
^^It seems wsj is set on trying to rewrite history. It's funny how they are able to repaint the reduction in depression level government spending as something that FDR did not want to do. I would argue that it's obvious that the measures taken to battle a depression would need to be scaled back as the depression disappeared, just like the government did at that time.
4/21/2010 6:09:43 PM
It may be obvious to you, but if FDR had in mind a bill that was anything like what Truman put forth, then it seems FDR disagrees with you and was eager to push harder and faster. Only to be thwarted by death and Congress.
4/21/2010 7:03:48 PM
FDR's death and one bill does not even close to prove what you and they are trying to say.
4/21/2010 10:12:54 PM
4/21/2010 11:12:45 PM
you've really backed up that post with facts and non-anecdotal evidence. oh wait. no you haven't.
4/22/2010 12:08:46 AM
Then I invite anyone reading this to provide a counter-example:That is, do you honestly know of anyone who is currently making poverty-level wages, and has been for a while, who meets those criteria I gave? I've certainly never heard of such a person. When there is an employee like that, he or she is not at that job very long. What is the general rate of absenteeism and tardiness for low-wage workers versus higher earners? Would you doubt that the difference is vast? The difference does NOT lie in the reliability of their transportation, nor day care issues, although those do account for some. Why are low-wage workers so notoriously unreliable? Why do employers of them have to routinely overschedule their staffing by 20% or more?There is almost no such thing as an honest, reliable, hard-working, unselfish worker who can be hired at $8.00/hr. It doesn't exist. Why? Because all of those people move so quickly past that wage rate (or jump by it), you can't find them.And if you know of a secret source of such people, please, I beg you to tell me where it is. I'd love to hire them.[Edited on April 22, 2010 at 12:37 AM. Reason : a]
4/22/2010 12:35:48 AM
Between 1950 and 1980, America was manufacturing and exporting a lot more goods. Manufacturing jobs provided middle-class wages then. Now, a lot of that manufacturing is gone and there aren't enough middle-class positions in the service industry to replace it.That's my take on the wealth gap anyways.
4/22/2010 1:06:24 AM
proping up overpayed manufacturing jobs is not good for the economy. The reason the 50s were so great is beacause the US was the only country with any manufacturing base of any size at all on the planet. During the war the US manufacturing base exploded and production went crazy. After the war, Europe was totally fucked and china didn't exist as a manufacturing power. Combine that with an abundance of untapped natural resources and the lessons learned during the war, and its no surprise that the US was king of manufacturing. However, as Europe recovered and china was brought online, demand for US exports fell. Combine that with increased cost of materials, labor, and government overhead and its no wonder our manufacturing base has diminished. Human based manufacturing in the US will never return to 50/60s levels. Automated manufacturing might be possible, but with government regulations and bailouts always up in the air it makes investors nervous. I mean, why would anyone in their right mind invest in a new auto maker in the US, when the government owns and operates competitors? Unskilled labor is becoming worth less and less thanks to the global economy. Rather than trying to artificially prop up its value, we should be re-educating unskilled workers so they produce real value.
4/22/2010 10:00:05 AM
barring the recession, American manufacturing has never been better. [Edited on April 22, 2010 at 10:59 AM. Reason : .,.]
4/22/2010 10:59:10 AM
Way to miss the point
4/22/2010 11:08:19 AM
4/22/2010 11:16:37 AM
4/22/2010 9:02:31 PM
http://lifeinc.todayshow.com/_news/2010/10/22/5335866-good-graph-friday-the-rich-got-richer-Why don't more people believe this is a big concern in how healthy the economy is?
10/23/2010 7:31:01 PM
Because we know of no mechanism for "income equality" to matter to a recession. The currency recession is entirely due to the collapse in private investment due to various problems. A more equitable distribution of income would not solve any of these problems.
10/23/2010 10:57:52 PM
Two questions:1) Since when has "rich get richer, poor get poorer" been a proverb?2) Do you suppose they compared the bottom 90% and the top 1% because if they compared the top 10% with the bottom 90% the graph isn't as headline grabbing? I think it might be more interesting and useful for a fully broken out comparison.
10/23/2010 11:15:52 PM
10/24/2010 1:33:43 AM
10/24/2010 9:21:31 AM
10/24/2010 9:48:12 AM
10/24/2010 10:55:21 AM
10/24/2010 2:43:55 PM
1) Did those people stay at that job because they had no other opportunities, or did they just stay there because it was comfortable?2) PAY UP, LAFTAAAAAAAAAAAAA
10/24/2010 2:46:24 PM
^various reasons. lack of skills, comfort, lack of opportunity, discrimination, etc
10/24/2010 3:07:30 PM
PAY UP LAFTAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
10/24/2010 3:11:04 PM
I think the wealth gap is always discussed as if it in and of itself is an inherently bad thing. It isn't. But what I think most people suspect in their subconscious is that the wealth gap was arrived at through dubious means. It was done when wealth bought legislation to its favor so it could accumulate more wealth. I think this is what people are against but they aren't realizing why.
10/24/2010 9:09:40 PM
Btw, which recessions since the Great D we're worse than the current one we are in? By which measures?
10/24/2010 9:43:16 PM
10/24/2010 10:12:06 PM
10/24/2010 10:20:09 PM
10/24/2010 11:03:24 PM
10/25/2010 12:08:16 AM
10/25/2010 12:30:57 AM
10/25/2010 1:35:32 AM
10/25/2010 1:39:36 AM
After speaking to people that lived through it, and checking the statistics, yes, the 1981 recession was worse. Inflation had been high and interest rates were sky high, so the money people did have in savings did not go very far. Even people that kept their jobs suffered through the recession.
10/25/2010 2:18:36 AM
10/25/2010 7:30:21 AM
10/25/2010 7:36:59 AM
Whatever conclusion one reaches, is an opinion. But, in my opinion, a higher unemployment rate makes a recession worse, so 1981 was worse. Sky high interest rates also makes a recession much worse on people (no ability to smooth over their lost income with borrowing). That said, I am not alone in pronouncing the 1981 recession as worse, many segments of the media also declared it worse. Shall we debate the relative merits of Time magazine versus Newsweek, which one speaks for society?
10/25/2010 10:43:34 AM