GOP often like to state our high GNP per capita as a a reason why we are doing well. I always argue that that statistic only shows how well the 1% are doing and that is is not a good indicator of our whole society.This is when they like to say our poor are not "poor" which is true but that doesn't tell the whole story. http://blog.ted.com/2011/10/24/how-economic-inequality-harms-societies-richard-wilkinson-on-ted-com/There is now a collection of factual data that overwhelmingly proves income inequality damages society. It also shows that income equality can be produced organicly through level incomes to begin with or through socialist redistribution systems and they both still bring about a good result. It also provides proof that even the rich are better off being in a society where income inequality has been reduced.
11/6/2011 3:27:40 PM
the more poor people there are, the harder people try to impress their friends through display of consumption.An egalitarian society becomes a bunch of hipsters. toasters are soo last century
11/6/2011 4:08:29 PM
Oh look, more correlations.Let me know when causation is found and I'll be motivated to care.
11/6/2011 4:26:08 PM
11/6/2011 5:30:56 PM
I'd bet that wellbeing is also negatively correlated with rates of immigration. People moving from poor countries to rich countries tend to bring their poor health with them.
11/6/2011 5:31:38 PM
Like all those fat unhealthy immigrants in the midwest?
11/6/2011 7:44:42 PM
You're right. Let's increase taxes on everyone earning more than they should earn and then let the government decide who gets paid and how much. No issues there, no chance of corruption, no chance of destroying the economy.
11/6/2011 8:24:56 PM
Yes. It works well in other countries. I don't really care about "destroying the economy" because economic growth has no benefit if income inequality is growing with it.
11/6/2011 10:39:50 PM
God I hope fools like you someday learn that big government is not your friend.
11/6/2011 10:53:06 PM
God I hope fools like you someday learn that government size does not determine friendliness.
11/6/2011 10:56:50 PM
God I hope fools like you someday learn that big government can refer to more than size
11/6/2011 11:05:38 PM
Which definition of big would you like to use?
11/6/2011 11:16:45 PM
'big government'try again.
11/6/2011 11:17:50 PM
Well, I found this definition:
11/6/2011 11:27:37 PM
11/6/2011 11:27:46 PM
Using that definition (importance and influence), I'm pretty sure any and all governments are big.
11/6/2011 11:30:45 PM
that's completely hollow. Saying that government are big in an absolute sense has nothing to do with the conversation.Governments can significantly reduce or increase their size by the way of laws that restrict individual liberty. In common science fiction books and movies about out-of-control governments, the fact is that government was big in people's lives. If government mandates that you take pills to control (or suppress) your emotions, that forms an example of big government - very big relative to current governments. That government may still only spend 5% of GDP. So small by your definition?
11/7/2011 12:02:18 AM
I'd feel a lot better about our country's situation if I just had some Soma pills to take everyday.
11/7/2011 12:07:13 AM
From my understanding of how the American system operates, a bigger government would just increase income inequality. After-all, the metro area with the greatest income inequality is Washington DC, the seat of government.You need to recognize that the government doesn't tax in order to give the money to the poor. Transfer payments to the poor as a percentage of spending have tended downwards for decades now. The government taxes the poor and the rich in order to give the money to the rich they favor, be they weapons manufacturers or the owners of Argonaut which have made $Texas off the Solynandra mess. If you want to increase transfer payments to the poor, I suspect most on this board would support raising the Earned Income Tax Credit. Especially if it was done in conjunction with drastic reductions in transfer payments to the rich (means testing Medicare, SS, ending farm subsidies, ending green energy subsidies, etc). [Edited on November 7, 2011 at 1:02 AM. Reason : .,.]
11/7/2011 12:48:35 AM
The "transfer" payments are confusing. If you look at farm subsidies, very few of the people who directly receive the payments are rich themselves. But if you consider the market dynamics, they may be subsidized based on production, which favors the techniques of the ag giants like Monsanto, as well as the economies of scale that only such large firms can take advantage of.Plus, most of the public is still allergic to any kind of transfer payment. They've painted a narrative about the role of a government that redistributes wealth that has persisted since the 80s.
11/7/2011 9:16:15 AM
We've experimented with giving the poor money they didn't earn for 50+ years. Hasn't worked. Won't work.
11/7/2011 9:49:09 AM
Are you trolling? Were you trying to sarcastically give an example of the exact attitude I mentioned?The entire point is that we have subvert transfers of wealth from the general population to the rich. So yeah, let's end this welfare state.
11/7/2011 12:34:26 PM
Let me correct you there. Giving money to the rich has indeed succeeded at its intended goal, which was winning elections. It is debatable whether anyone ever got elected giving money to poor people.
11/7/2011 1:41:58 PM
11/9/2011 2:30:24 PM
11/9/2011 2:59:21 PM
Well, the lower tax rates have gotten the rich to pay a far higher percentage of federal taxes. As for the other assertion, the federal register is several times thicker today, so how the hell do you call that looser regulation?
11/9/2011 5:45:33 PM
11/10/2011 10:17:57 AM
Sarbanes OxleyBasel IISafe Drinking Water ActFood Quality Protection ActCRA itselfPatients Rights RulesAirline Traveler RulesUsed Car Sales RulesLibel LawsArbitration LawsAnd so on.But lets not forget, any time we are describing the macro its way easier to just stick to our cognitive bias and assume what we already believe is correct...no real data/model needed.
11/10/2011 9:54:32 PM
Lmao you're seriously citing "used car sales rules" in the same conversation as Glass-Steagall,
11/11/2011 9:56:27 AM
I mean yeah sure the most wealth-laden sector of the economy (finance) was cut pretty much cut loose entirely, since we cast off those regulations that were put in place 80 years ago to prevent a repeat of the Great Depression. But since then they also passed the Food Quality Protection Act I think we can safely say overall regulation on the economy is so much tighter than it was. Also the CRA, fucking lol http://www.cato.org/pubs/regulation/regv23n3/gunther.pdfHere's a Mises article from 1999 wherein they argue the CRA should be eliminated...not because it forces banks to loan to low-income households...but because it's redundant and in its absence banks could make even more such loans to even worse-qualified people.
11/11/2011 10:04:07 AM
Str8Correlations!
11/11/2011 10:06:10 AM
The regulations which were repealed, no one in Washington is suggesting we bring back, because there is no theory for how their repeal contributed to the crisis. All the data we have suggests Glass Steagal would have made the crisis worse. Most of the failures which occurred were companies that had not utilized the repeal, as all the major collapses were either stand alone investment banks (Lehman Brothers) or standalone Consumer Banks. Also, many of the forced mergers the Government imposed during the crisis violated glass Steagal. So, no, repealing one law which seems to have nothing to do with the crisis does not wash away the thousands of regulatory impositions that clearly contributed to the crisis by socializing losses and eroding lending standards.
11/11/2011 10:19:46 AM
Lmao Jesus Christ Loneshark at least google the things you're talking about before you make stuff upGingrich - http://www.minyanville.com/dailyfeed/2011/11/09/newt-gingrich-regrets-glass-steagall/Huntsman - http://www.esquire.com/blogs/politics/jon-huntsman-too-big-to-fail-6512242McCain - http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2009/12/14/an-odd-post-crash-couple.htmlClinton - http://www.slate.com/blogs/weigel/2011/11/08/clinton_and_gingrich_agree_we_miss_glass_steagall.htmlVolcker - http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/21/business/21volcker.html?scp=2&sq=volcker&st=cseMervyn King - http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/publications/speeches/2009/speech406.pdfPlus just about every single Democrat in both houses of congress and a decent number of Republican ones who aren't completely off their rockers.Also, guess who the biggest opponent is to re-instating it? http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703580904574638414165296326.html (In case you don't subscribe, Bank of Fucking America)[Edited on November 11, 2011 at 10:35 AM. Reason : .]
11/11/2011 10:23:15 AM
11/11/2011 10:25:31 AM
Right. Citigroup. To quoth Shrike, the bailout of Citigroup was profitable for the government. Meanwhile, the bailouts (and collapse) of the various non-unified banks (standalone consumer or standalone investment) lost the government and investors vast sums.
11/11/2011 10:38:40 AM
The regulations which were repealed, no one in Washington is suggesting we bring back, because there is no theory for how their repeal contributed to the crisis.
11/11/2011 10:39:51 AM
11/11/2011 10:47:59 AM
God shut the fuck up Chance you really contribute absolutely nothing by going to every thread that mentions the economy and giving your "GUH GUH BUT ECONOMY IS RLY RLY COMPLEX THEREFOR COMPLETELY IMPOSSIBLE TO UNDERSTAND" line. You think you're above the fray but it's pretty obvious you're just compensating for your ignorance of economics by trying to discredit economics altogether.
11/11/2011 10:51:12 AM
11/11/2011 10:55:50 AM
I'm not alone in thinking that we've come far enough with our knowledge of the macro to command an economy which is exactly what guys like you propose we can do.
11/11/2011 11:00:15 AM
Actually Chance what you've been saying is that you don't believe we know enough about macro to try and link a decision which enabled the largest banks to binge on mortgage banked securities to a crisis that later occurred in which mortgage backed securities played the key role and the largest banks nearly failed.[Edited on November 11, 2011 at 11:02 AM. Reason : .]
11/11/2011 11:01:42 AM
Well, yeah. I've been pretty clear with that statement.Your side says we do. The other side says we don't. Why is your side right other than because it is?
11/11/2011 11:03:53 AM
11/11/2011 11:28:00 AM
11/11/2011 11:39:35 AM
11/11/2011 11:40:50 AM
11/11/2011 12:01:06 PM
I've made multiple posts in this very thread on the topic. Do you want me to just copy-paste them but address the posts to you this time?Glass-Steagal allowed giant mergers like AIG and Citigroup, which later on ended up needing bailouts the hardestIt also inflated vastly the mortgage backed security market, which is pretty much the center of the crisisThe right wing lines about the CRA and F&F are based on almost entirely mythological 'evidence'. The actual role played by the two in the crisis were minimal.There's citations scattered around my posts in this topic and this one: http://brentroad.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=619020&page=2I'm not going to repost it all just for you.
11/11/2011 12:09:51 PM
Like Shrike says, Citigroup turned a profit for the government. And AIG is an insurance company, utterly immune from Glass-Steagal as I understand it. Can you explain otherwise?
11/11/2011 12:12:56 PM
11/11/2011 12:15:25 PM
11/11/2011 12:33:59 PM