News How has Bush economics affected the job market in the United States?

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The discussion centers around the impact of Bush-era economic policies on American jobs, particularly the outsourcing of manufacturing jobs to countries like Mexico and China. Participants express concern over the loss of skilled jobs and the transition of former workers into lower-paying positions, such as those at Walmart. The conversation references Ross Perot's warning about job loss due to globalization and critiques the effectiveness of both Bush and Kerry's plans for addressing these issues. There is a debate on the role of government in regulating wages and labor conditions, with some arguing for a free market without restrictions, while others highlight the historical exploitation of workers in unregulated capitalist systems. The discussion also touches on the broader implications of job volatility and the potential erosion of the middle class, suggesting that the current economic climate may lead to greater income inequality. Overall, the thread reflects deep concerns about the future of American industry, the quality of jobs available, and the socio-economic divide exacerbated by outsourcing and corporate practices.
Ivan Seeking
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Well, Bush economics [including his fathers] has hit pretty close to home. One of my biggest customers [historically], and a one hundred old Portland company has gone south - all the way to Mexico. Oh, the corporate owners will still make money, but five hundred highly skilled workers are effectively doomed - most are already gone.

Under the Bush plan, they will enjoy their new jobs as Walmart greeters and stockers.
They will be employed, according to Bush. :rolleyes:
 
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And Kerry's plan is to stop this by ...?
 
See his web site. Johnkerry.com

It is exactly like Ross Perot said, "that giant sucking sound will be jobs leaving the country".

The legacy of the Bush dynasty: The death of US industry.
 
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Gee wiz, it was Bush who came up with NAFTA, right?

Anyway, it sicken me to see so many idiots blame a president for loss of Jobs or give credit for new jobs.

There is VERY little a president can do to create or lose jobs. Too bad so many people have very little common sense.

On another note, Bush inherited a recession or at least a declining economy...

I really wish we had another candidate to vote for though because Bush is a religious fanatic and Kerry a communist.

Its a shame.

Max
 
I'm considering leaving the country voluntarily if Bush is re-elected.

- Warren
 
chroot said:
I'm considering leaving the country voluntarily if Bush is re-elected.

- Warren

Wasn't there an actor who...?
 
I'm considering leaving the country voluntarily if Bush is re-elected.
That's what Tsu keeps saying.

I keep reminding her that Hawaii is not another country :biggrin:
 
"W" stands for "wrong"...

Although it is easy for us to place direct blame on the president, we also need to consider that the American worker does require a much higher wage for jobs in general. China and Mexico are taking US manufacturing jobs because they don't require such high wages. This is fact. What I think should be done is higher taxes to corporations who outsource jobs, and tax incentives to those who take a hit in the American Payroll, but do their part in keeping our country's people employed. Just curious Ivan, can you say which company it is? Maybe it's one of my customers :)
 
Just curious Ivan, can you say which company it is? Maybe it's one of my customers :)

I can't say publicly but I will PM you. Please do not repeat the name though.
 
  • #10
I believe in a free market economy and I believe people desrve a salary they and the emplyer agree upon. That is all.

To dictate to the private sector how much to pay employyes is to implement communism by proxy.
 
  • #11
Ross Perot told us that this would happen. It was a core issue of his campaign. He told us that Bush economics would destroy US industry. Kerry intends to address this issue.

Bush argues that Taco Bell Register Operator is gainful employment.

Edit: I misread Kerries post. :redface: Same point still.
 
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  • #12
PRBot.Com said:
I believe in a free market economy and I believe people desrve a salary they and the emplyer agree upon. That is all.

To dictate to the private sector how much to pay employyes is to implement communism by proxy.
So you're for abolishing child-labor laws, minimum wage laws, laws regulating the amount of hours someone can work, workers unions, laws enforcing safe work places etc? All these things were set in place by Socialists when unrestrained capitalism started employing 5 year olds to work in coal mines for 14 hours a day, would you be for a 1910 style capitalistic society?
 
  • #13
I am for a free market economy, yes.
 
  • #14
PRBot.Com said:
I am for a free market economy, yes.
Yeah, we tried that, it failed and people's rights to life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness were infringed upon by corporations that were only interested in making a profit.

If corporations decide wages they pay, they'll all collectively pay next to nothing and keep people in a constant state of poverty so they'll have to work for their entire waking lives and never have any substantial amount of money. This happened, people in the past saw it's downfalls, and they adjusted the system accordingly (to a degree). I believe you can find some nice free-market economies in places like Thailand and Bangladesh if you want.

Are you really so ideological as to think that 1 system and 1 system alone can work perfectly, and not see the value of mixing and matching the best of many different systems of doing things to make one better than all other pure economic systems?
 
  • #15
I don't believe any system can work "perfectly" because I don't believe in perfection.

As for your "wage" concern, as the wages keep going up the value of the dollar keeps going down. I find it ironic that anyone with half a brain thinks government enforced wages is a good thing. Making things more expensive is not the answer but I can't expect socialists to understand economics.
 
  • #16
PRBot.Com said:
I don't believe any system can work "perfectly" because I don't believe in perfection.

As for your "wage" concern, as the wages keep going up the value of the dollar keeps going down. I find it ironic that anyone with half a brain thinks government enforced wages is a good thing. Making things more expensive is not the answer but I can't expect socialists to understand economics.
You're ignoring the reality of what happened directly after the industrial revolution all over the world. People were poor, had poor work conditions, lived in slums, worked for much longer hours than they currently do and had much lower standards of living. 5 year olds worked 14 hours a day in coal mines and died of black-lung before reaching their thirty's if they weren't killed in horrible accidents on the job. This is the reality of Capitalism without government restrictions. Hell, it's not even aincent history that people have forgotten the flaws of, it's going on now all around the world in countries like Indonesia and Thailand, why don't you go to one of those countries if you value a totally free-market economy so much, and why haven't these free-market systems you seem to love so much overrun America with it's socialist elements? It's becuase America's addition of socialistic elements to it's capitalism are what kept it from a full on communist revolution, and our specific blend is what's kept America the economic power it is today.

However, I'm making a moot point, us "socialists" can't expect laissez faire capitalists to undestand concepts like caring for the greater good, fairness or value for things other than money in general.
 
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  • #17
You're ignoring the reality of what happened directly after the industrial revolution all over the world.

And since the new laws in the US "the world" has changed and there are no more 5 year olds working 14 hours a day? get over it.

There are 18 times more slaves in the world today since socialism has infested so many nations.

The quality of life has not improved in the US for anyone except for the parsites the welfare supports.

You socialists claimed imcreasing minimum wage would improve the lives of millions. It has not. Minimum wage was raised and misser y raised in parallel because the dollar was devalued and things became more expensive. Energy costs have gone up, sewer costs in cities have gone up, labor costs have gone up. You cannot improve the lives of people by increasing the costs of labor.

What you end up doing is you hurt the local economy because foreign countries can produce the same products cheaper thus loss of jobs here.

1+1=2. Very simple stuff.
 
  • #18
PRBot.Com said:
And since the new laws in the US "the world" has changed and there are no more 5 year olds working 14 hours a day? get over it.
Did I say that? No. But there are no more 5 year olds working 14 hours a day in the USA, they're all in other countries doing the work that people like you want to be done for cheap.
PRBot.Com said:
There are 18 times more slaves in the world today since socialism has infested so many nations.
Get it straight, I'm not a socialist, I'm in favor of Capitalism with reasonable restrictions, such as those the American government has on them now. Of course countries such as the USSR and China have done the same crappy things that happened in the early 1900's, I'm not defending them.

PRBot.Com said:
The quality of life has not improved in the US for anyone except for the parsites the welfare supports.
If you really think that the quality of life for the average American isn't better in 2004 than it was in 1904, there's just something fundamentally wrong with your grasp of history and reality.

PRBot.Com said:
You socialists claimed imcreasing minimum wage would improve the lives of millions. It has not. Minimum wage was raised and misser y raised in parallel because the dollar was devalued and things became more expensive. Energy costs have gone up, sewer costs in cities have gone up, labor costs have gone up. You cannot improve the lives of people by increasing the costs of labor.
Go read something about America in the wake of the industrial revolution, if you don't think that the reforms that were brought about around the 30's improved the quality of life for people, you just have a fundamental misundestdanding of history.

PRBot.Com said:
What you end up doing is you hurt the local economy because foreign countries can produce the same products cheaper thus loss of jobs here.
So we should reduce our standards of labor to those of Mexico? Great idea, go propose it to anyone who works in a factory and I'm sure they'll see your cool, level-headed reasoning as totally logical and a great idea.

PRBot.Com said:
1+1=2. Very simple stuff.
You sure it's not 2+2=5?
 
  • #19
If you really think that the quality of life for the average American isn't better in 2004 than it was in 1904, there's just something fundamentally wrong with your grasp of history and reality.

You are mixing apples and oranges. Yes, life is better because of new technologies and drugs not because of government regulations.

Since the minimum wage was implemented the number of peop,e who work for minimum wage has quadrupled and since the minum wage forced the value of the dollar to go lower and the cost of labor to go up there are MORE people living in missery than not.
 
  • #20
PRBot.Com said:
You are mixing apples and oranges. Yes, life is better because of new technologies and drugs not because of government regulations.

Since the minimum wage was implemented the number of peop,e who work for minimum wage has quadrupled and since the minum wage forced the value of the dollar to go lower and the cost of labor to go up there are MORE people living in missery than not.
Please qualify these ridiculous claims or stop repeating them. How do you define "living in missery", and where do you get your statistics that the majority of Americans are living "in missery"?
 
  • #22
PRBot.Com said:
I get all my information from Socialist International :D http://www.socialistinternational.org :D

That's it, you're just ridiculous, don't bother responding to anything I say anymore nor trying to get me to respond to anything you say, you're on my ignore list so I won't have to read any of your nonsense again.
 
  • #23
Ivan Seeking said:
Bush argues that Taco Bell Register Operator is gainful employment.

Many college educated professionals have had to take a jobs that are of the service industry because another in India now has his/her job. Over time, if this continues to happen, will there be a bigger separation in the class systems-say, no middle class with either the super rich and those living in poverty?
 
  • #24
Hey, no problem for Bush's buddies. They can still claim their companies are doing well. They can still tell us how the economy is robust, everything is wonderful, and people have jobs.

So I wonder how much Gas Station Attendants stash away each month. Maybe Taxi Drivers do well. How about Hotel Clerk? If you have a degree in engineering, maybe you should consider Sanitation Engineer. Well, according to Bush, anyone in these professions are doing just great! I'm sure they would all agree.
 
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  • #25
Job volatility (periods of personal unemployment) has gone way up in recent years. That's presented as "an efficient job market" by corporation fans, but it increases the stress and anxiety that static or falling payrolls induces. The people who can cope with this easily, like the people who still have long term jobs with one employer, are in the minority.
 
  • #26
I can name companies like Tyson Foods, Frito Lay, Boeing, FMC, and many more in which life long time employees now fear the loss of their jobs. Boeing has layed off 30 year employees! This has never been seen before.

Its all going overseas. But hey, the corporations are doing fine; they just don't provide any jobs. Oh wait, that's okay as long as they're profitable.
 
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  • #27
I find this thread strange. If ones assumes (falsely) that third world countries are making the western world poorer, isn't this great? Shouldn't the rich western world give to the really poor people in the third world? Isn't that what left-liberals have always argued for? Why are the really poor people in the third world worth less than those in the western world? Isn't unchanged income a small price to pay for reducing poverty in the rest of the world?

But of course the real reason for reduced growth in the western world is reduced capitalism. They have no one to blame but themselves.

Regarding the industrial revolution, people were not forced to work. They were free to live and die on the edge of starvation like people had done all the time before. But people probably preferred to work rather than see their children die, now given the choice. It must be understood that GDP/capita was essentially unchanged until that time, making it impossible to raise the living standards to any great extent.
 
  • #28
Aquamarine said:
I find this thread strange. If ones assumes (falsely) that third world countries are making the western world poorer, isn't this great? Shouldn't the rich western world give to the really poor people in the third world? Isn't that what left-liberals have always argued for? Why are the really poor people in the third world worth less than those in the western world? Isn't unchanged income a small price to pay for reducing poverty in the rest of the world?

I don't know about the rest of the post, and I doubt our ideologies are similar...

but that is an excellent paragraph.
 
  • #29
Aquamarine said:
I find this thread strange. If ones assumes (falsely) that third world countries are making the western world poorer, isn't this great? Shouldn't the rich western world give to the really poor people in the third world? Isn't that what left-liberals have always argued for? Why are the really poor people in the third world worth less than those in the western world? Isn't unchanged income a small price to pay for reducing poverty in the rest of the world?

But of course the real reason for reduced growth in the western world is reduced capitalism. They have no one to blame but themselves.

Regarding the industrial revolution, people were not forced to work. They were free to live and die on the edge of starvation like people had done all the time before. But people probably preferred to work rather than see their children die, now given the choice. It must be understood that GDP/capita was essentially unchanged until that time, making it impossible to raise the living standards to any great extent.

this is why i love america, because of the opportunity we have to sustain a higher standard of living then most of the world. as for 3rd world countries go, don't preach on your soap box unless you have served time in the peace corps...

Hey, no problem for Bush's buddies. They can still claim their companies are doing well. They can still tell us how the economy is robust, everything is wonderful, and people have jobs.

i understand completely what you are saying...the bush administration has not handled the whole recession very well at all. logically though, don't these corporations need the american dollar still to thrive? if the average american watching their dollars and chooses not spend it at corporations because they have to feed their families, won't the corporations in the end fail too?
 
  • #30
selfAdjoint said:
Job volatility (periods of personal unemployment) has gone way up in recent years. That's presented as "an efficient job market" by corporation fans, but it increases the stress and anxiety that static or falling payrolls induces. The people who can cope with this easily, like the people who still have long term jobs with one employer, are in the minority.
I consider that a positive thing. I like the fact that I have the freedom to choose to change jobs multiple times in my life at higher pay.

My boss's first job was working as a draftsman. He got yelled at once for spending too much time hanging around the engineers. He told his boss he wanted to learn and go beyond being just a draftsman. His boss pointed to people in the drafting room (there were dozens of draftsmen) and said - 'that guy has been there for 15 years, that guy 20, that guy 30, etc.' Yea job security! Count me out (my boss quit immediately and today instead of still being in that room, owns his own company).

Regarding unemployment itself though, HERE is some perspective: Following the 2001 recession, unemployment peaked (as it always does after a recession) at 6.3% in 2003.

After the previous recession, it peaked at 7.8% (in 1992).
After the previous recession, it peaked at 10.8% (1982).
After the previous recession, it peaked at 9.0% (1975).

You guys want to tell me again how bad we have it today (or, rather, had it in 2003 - today, unemployment is at 5.4% and dropping)?

Aquamarine - great post/point.
IvanSeeking said:
Boeing has layed off 30 year employees! This has never been seen before.
Huh? That sounds like early retirement. That's been common for decades!

edit: Forseeing an inevitable reply, no, the new jobs created under Bush are not primarily lower-paying than the ones lost. http://www.census.gov/hhes/income/histinc/h03ar.html are the income limits for each 5th and the top 5% (what you have to make to be in each category). If people were dropping from the 2nd, 3rd, or 4th 5th down to the 1st fifth, it would be pushing the average and the upper limit of the bottom 5th down even as unemployment is decreasing(the new people in the group would push the people on top out). Is it happening? Hint: no - even at peak unemployment, there was only a small drop in the salary of those on the bottom (1.6%), but its now going back up. In fact, of every group, the top 5% was the hardest hit by the recession/high unemployment - average income is still down 2.8% from its peak 2 years ago - the other 4 groups are all at all-time highs.
 
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  • #31
All I've got to say is (in the words of Frederic Bastiat) :

VII. RESTRICTIONS

M. Prohibant (it was not I who gave him this name, but M. Charles Dupin) devoted his time and capital to converting the ore found on his land into iron. As nature had been more lavish towards the Belgians, they furnished the French with iron cheaper than M. Prohibant, which means, that all the French, or France, could obtain a given quantity of iron with less labour by buying it of the honest Flemings; therefore, guided by their own interest, they did not fail to do so, and every day there might be seen a multitude of nail-smiths, blacksmiths, cartwrights, machinists, farriers, and labourers, going themselves, or sending intermediates, to supply themselves in Belgium. This displeased M. Prohibant exceedingly.

At first, it occurred to him to put an end to this abuse by his own efforts; it was the least he could do, for he was the only sufferer. "I will take my carbine," said he; "I will put four pistols into my belt; I will fill my cartridge box; I will gird on my sword, and go thus equipped to the frontier. There, the first blacksmith, nailsmith, farrier, machinist, or locksmith, who presents himself to do his own business and not mine, I will kill, to teach him how to live." At the moment of starting, M. Prohibant made a few reflections which calmed down his warlike ardour a little. He said to himself, "In the first place, it is not absolutely impossible that the purchasers of iron, my countrymen and enemies, should take the thing ill, and, instead of letting me kill them, should kill me instead; and then, even were I to call out all my servants, we should not be able to defend the passages. In short, this proceeding would cost me very dear; much more so than the result would be worth."

M. Prohibant was on the point of resigning himself to his sad fate, that of being only as free as the rest of the world, when a ray of light darted across his brain. He recollected that at Paris there is a great manufactory of laws. "What is a law?" said he to himself. "It is a measure to which, when once it is decreed, be it good or bad, everybody is bound to conform. For the execution of the same a public force is organized, and to constitute the said public force, men and money are drawn from the nation. If, then, I could only get the great Parisian manufactory to pass a little law, 'Belgian iron is prohibited,' I should obtain the following results: The Government would replace the few valets that I was going to send to the frontier by 20,000 of the sons of those refractory blacksmiths, farmers, artisans, machinists, locksmiths, nailsmiths, and labourers. Then, to keep these 20,000 custom-house officers in health and good humour, it would distribute amongst them 25,000,000 of francs, taken from these blacksmiths, nailsmiths, artisans, and labourers. They would guard the frontier much better; would cost me nothing; I should not be exposed to the brutality of the brokers, should sell the iron at my own price, and have the sweet satisfaction of seeing our great people shamefully mystified. That would teach them to proclaim themselves perpetually the harbingers and promoters of progress in Europe. Oh! it would be a capital joke, and deserves to be tried."

So M. Prohibant went to the law manufactory. Another time, perhaps, I shall relate the story of his underhand dealings, but now I shall merely mention his visible proceedings. He brought the following consideration before the view of the legislating gentlemen:-

"Belgian iron is sold in France at ten francs, which obliges me to sell mine at the same price. I should like to sell at fifteen, but cannot do so on account of this Belgian iron, which I wish was at the bottom of the Red Sea. I beg you will make a law that no more Belgian iron shall enter France. Immediately I raise my price five francs, and these are the consequences: "For every hundred-weight of iron that I shall deliver to the public, I shall receive fifteen francs instead of ten; I shall grow rich more rapidly, extend my traffic, and employ more workmen. My workmen and I shall spend much more freely to the great advantage of our tradesmen for miles around. These latter, having more custom, will furnish more employment to trade, and activity on both sides will increase in the country. This fortunate piece of money, which you will drop into my strong-box, will, like a stone thrown into a lake, give birth to an infinite number of concentric circles."

Charmed with his discourse, delighted to learn that it is so easy to promote, by legislating, the prosperity of a people, the law-makers voted the restriction. "Talk of labour and economy," they said, "what is the use of these painful means of increasing the national wealth, when all that is wanted for this object is a Decree?"

And, in fact, the law produced all the consequences announced by M. Prohibant; the only thing was, it produced others which he had not foreseen. To do him justice, his reasoning was not false, but only incomplete. In endeavouring to obtain a privilege, he had taken cognizance of the effects which are seen, leaving in the background those which are not seen. He had pointed out only two personages, whereas there are three concerned in the affair. It is for us to supply this involuntary or premeditated omission.

It is true, the crown-piece, thus directed by law into M. Prohibant's strong-box, is advantageous to him and to those whose labour it would encourage; and if the Act had caused the crownpiece to descend from the moon, these good effects would not have been counterbalanced by any corresponding evils. Unfortunately, the mysterious piece of money does not come from the moon, but from the pocket of a blacksmith, or a nail-smith, or a cartwright, or a farrier, or a labourer, or a shipwright; in a word, from James B., who gives it now without receiving a grain more of iron than when he was paying ten francs. Thus, we can see at a glance that this very much alters the state of the case; for it is very evident that M. Prohibant's profit is compensated by James B.'s loss, and all that M. Prohibant can do with the crown-piece, for the encouragement of national labour, James B. might have done himself. The stone has only been thrown upon one part of the lake, because the law has prevented it from being thrown upon another.

Therefore, that which is not seen supersedes that which is seen, and at this point there remains, as the residue of the operation, a piece of injustice, and, sad to say, a piece of injustice perpetrated by the law!

This is not all. I have said that there is always a third person left in the back-ground. I must now bring him forward, that he may reveal to us a second loss of five francs. Then we shall have the entire results of the transaction.

James B. is the possessor of fifteen francs, the fruit of his labour. He is now free. What does he do with his fifteen francs? He purchases some article of fashion for ten francs, and with it he pays (or the intermediate pay for him) for the hundred-weight of Belgian iron. After this he has five francs left. He does not throw them into the river, but (and this is what is not seen) he gives them to some tradesman in exchange for some enjoyment; to a bookseller, for instance, for Bossuet's "Discourse on Universal History."

Thus, as far as national labour is concerned, it is encouraged to the amount of fifteen francs, viz.: -ten francs for the Paris article; five francs to the bookselling trade.

As to James B., he obtains for his fifteen francs two gratifications, viz.:

1st. A hundred-weight of iron.
2nd. A book.

The Decree is put in force. How does it affect the condition of James B.? How does it affect the national labour?

James B. pays every centime of his five francs to M. Prohibant, and therefore is deprived of the pleasure of a book, or of some other thing of equal value. He loses five francs. This must be admitted; it cannot fail to be admitted, that when the restriction raises the price of things, the consumer loses the difference.

But, then, it is said, national labour is the gainer.

No, it is not the gainer; for, since the Act, it is no more encouraged than it was before, to the amount of fifteen francs.

The only thing is that, since the Act, the fifteen francs of James B. go to the metal trade, while, before it was put in force, they were divided between the milliner and the bookseller.

The violence used by M. Prohibant on the frontier, or that which he causes to be used by the law, may be judged very differently in a moral point of view. Some persons consider that plunder is perfectly justifiable, if only sanctioned by law. But, for myself, I cannot imagine anything more aggravating. However it may be, the economical results are the same in both cases.

Look at the thing as you will; but if you are impartial, you will see that no good can come of legal or illegal plunder. We do not deny that it affords M. Prohibant, or his trade, or, if you will, national industry, a profit of five francs. But we affirm that it causes two losses, one to James B., who pays fifteen francs where he otherwise would have paid ten; the other to national industry, which does not receive the difference. Take your choice of these two losses, and compensate with it the profit which we allow. The other will prove not the less a dead loss. Here is the moral: To take by violence is not to produce, but to destroy. Truly, if taking by violence was producing, this country of ours would be a little richer than she is.


http://www.freedomsnest.com/bastiat.html
 
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  • #32
Kerrie said:
this is why i love america, because of the opportunity we have to sustain a higher standard of living then most of the world.

And so other countries shouldn't have that opportunity as well, when they are willing to work harder and for less pay than we are, because we are so addicted to corporate welfare/government education/healthcare?

Kerrie said:
as for 3rd world countries go, don't preach on your soap box unless you have served time in the peace corps...

Well, then by that reasoning, don't express views about the president, any representatives, or any senators until you have been one yourself.
 
  • #33
aeroegnr said:
And so other countries shouldn't have that opportunity as well, when they are willing to work harder and for less pay than we are, because we are so addicted to corporate welfare/government education/healthcare?



Well, then by that reasoning, don't express views about the president, any representatives, or any senators until you have been one yourself.

those countries that hold themselves back from developing to what america has become must do it on their own. take china for example-a thriving economy today, a 3rd world communist country merely 30 years ago. i should also mention we are giving them a big helping hand with it by allowing all of our manufacturing jobs to go there. take a look around your home, how many things do you buy are made overseas? worse yet, how much produce do you buy that actually is being grown in the states? it's very scary when you start seeing how many apples come from south america when washington state's production has gone completely down the tubes. sorry, how can i advocate helping a third world country when i see this happening both within my company and as a consumer?

and yes, i can express my views of the president because since he has been in office, my company has laid off a 1/3 of the manufacturing jobs just to stay open and keep the rest of the 2/3 employed. stop picking apart my words because you can't present a real point. the point here in this thread is not that the Bush Administation entirely responsible for a recession, but what is willing to do about it? not much, terroism in a third world country is much more of a priority right now.
 
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  • #34
Ivan Seeking said:
I can name companies like Tyson Foods, Frito Lay, Boeing, FMC, and many more in which life long time employees now fear the loss of their jobs. Boeing has layed off 30 year employees! This has never been seen before.

Actually, I have seen that before. In the mid-90s, this was quite common among the pharmaceutical and chemical manufacturing industries, at least in NJ where I was at the time. There were a lot of people who worked for those companies for a long time and were finding themselves laid off. Worse, they truly took advantage of the young employees, the ones they wanted to keep around but couldn't afford. They laid them off, then hired them back as temporary employees. This meant they did the same job for a lower salary and no benefits. They were glad to have any employment at all!

I sort of teeter between both party lines on this issue. When we are trying to recover from a recession, I hate seeing jobs outsourced to other countries. I don't think raising minimum wage has ever solved anything other than for a very short term, until the increased costs of labor have trickled through the economy to raise prices on everything and make the minimum wage once again a poverty level wage. I do think any job is better than no job. Sometimes you must swallow your pride and bring home a paycheck to put food on the table rather than wallowing around whining you can't get the job you want. On the other hand, I find it difficult to accept that someone should be allowed to starve to death because they can't earn enough to support their family when they had their children during a time when they thought they had job security and anticipated moving up, not down, in earnings levels.

One of our countries successes is also one of our problems. We have been doing a better and better job of getting higher education. People who never thought they could afford college have gotten to college. However, on the flip side, we now have a very highly skilled, highly qualified work force, and not nearly enough jobs requiring that level of qualification. You can't hire everyone on as bosses. Higher education does not guarantee higher employment. One can hope for a job in their field of study, but should never expect it. There seem to be a lot of people who think earning a diploma is supposed to automatically guarantee employment. It doesn't if everyone else with a diploma in the same field is competing for the same jobs and they are better qualified. Maybe I just have this attitude because I'm in academics, where we all are trained with the knowledge that more-or-less, someone has to die to create a job opening, and then the competition is fierce. When I was a grad student, we all practiced the phrase, "Do you want fries with that?" whenever someone mentioned jobs after graduation.
 
  • #35
One can hope for a job in their field of study, but should never expect it. There seem to be a lot of people who think earning a diploma is supposed to automatically guarantee employment.

Moonbear, i simply couldn't agree with you more. Along with these "white collar" jobs though, the manufacturing jobs are also going. Interesting to note, I have no college degree, have completed maybe 2 years tops and earn 10K a year more then a gal I know with a bachelor's of animal science who works as a customer service rep rather then in the veterinarian field. My conclusion: A little determination, an eye for opportunity and never expecting a job to be handed to you will pay off in the long run. I think many americans forget that America truly is a land of opportunity, but you do have to put some effort into getting there.
 
  • #36
Moonbear said:
Actually, I have seen that before. In the mid-90s, this was quite common among the pharmaceutical and chemical manufacturing industries, at least in NJ where I was at the time.

Yes those industries were hit first. I meant that this has never happened at the companies mentioned and many other that I have worked with. In fact I have heard the same story dozens of times, all over the country, and I don't see any quality jobs coming along to replace those lost. I believe in free trade, but not reckless abandon. We are becoming a country of Walmart workers, temporary or underemployed, non-benefited workers. Anyone who thinks this is good for America clearly hasn't a clue what's happening out there. There are no quality jobs to replace those lost.

Bush won't even recognize that the problem exists!
 
  • #38
Ivan Seeking said:
Yes those industries were hit first...
Great, so you're saying that this is a problem that has been growing for at least the past 15 years? Show me the data. I provided both unemployment stats and income stats that both show your assertions are simply false. Unemployment is relatively low and incomes continue to rise. Your opinion appears to me to be based on the classic fallacy of anecdotal evidence: you saw something happen somewhere so it must be happening everywhere. It isn't.
Moonbear said:
However, on the flip side, we now have a very highly skilled, highly qualified work force, and not nearly enough jobs requiring that level of qualification. You can't hire everyone on as bosses. Higher education does not guarantee higher employment. One can hope for a job in their field of study, but should never expect it. There seem to be a lot of people who think earning a diploma is supposed to automatically guarantee employment. It doesn't if everyone else with a diploma in the same field is competing for the same jobs and they are better qualified.
Kerrie said:
I have no college degree, have completed maybe 2 years tops and earn 10K a year more then a gal I know with a bachelor's of animal science who works as a customer service rep rather then in the veterinarian field. My conclusion: A little determination, an eye for opportunity and never expecting a job to be handed to you will pay off in the long run. I think many americans forget that America truly is a land of opportunity, but you do have to put some effort into getting there.
Well, that's just it - people today go to college because that's what they are expected to do. And with that comes the expectation of a certain life once they get their ticket punched. But this isn't the land of expectations, its the land of opportunity. If you don't sieze the opportunity, you won't get the life you expect. For you and me, that meant, first and foremost picking the right field. I guarantee you'll find more psychology grads than engineering grads tending bar. And you really are better off not even having a degree than having one that is useless.

From my perspective, (and this is the primary reason why I'm not a democrat), many people are looking at "the American dream" backwards. They misunderstand the meaning of the term "opportunity."
 
  • #39
Now this I just love:
aeroegnr said:
And so other countries shouldn't have that opportunity as well, when they are willing to work harder and for less pay than we are, because we are so addicted to corporate welfare/government education/healthcare?
Combining the various democratic ideas expressed here and you get: job outsourcing is bad for the US because valuable jobs leave here to go overseas, but job outsourcing is also bad for the countries that get the jobs because they are bad (low paying) jobs. Set aside for a moment all the data, history, and economic theory that says this is horse manure and marvel at the beauty of the doublethink. This is the second reason why I'm not a democrat.
 
  • #40
russ_watters said:
Well, that's just it - people today go to college because that's what they are expected to do. And with that comes the expectation of a certain life once they get their ticket punched. But this isn't the land of expectations, its the land of opportunity. If you don't sieze the opportunity, you won't get the life you expect. For you and me, that meant, first and foremost picking the right field. I guarantee you'll find more psychology grads than engineering grads tending bar. And you really are better off not even having a degree than having one that is useless.

From my perspective, (and this is the primary reason why I'm not a democrat), many people are looking at "the American dream" backwards. They misunderstand the meaning of the term "opportunity."

So, given those views, what did you think of Bush's answers in last night's debate that the solution to unemployment is more education? Now, job training I can understand, if you lose your job and need to switch fields, you might need some assistance getting the qualifications to fill an opening in some area you haven't been working in for the past 20 years, but he made it sound like he was going to send everyone to college to solve unemployment. Now, if you're going to require a college education to dig a ditch, that might help, but it just seems to be devaluing a college education to say everyone can get one. Of course, as a professor, I'm very supportive of people getting college educations and expanding their knowledge, even if it's just for fun and not to get a job, but I'm also realistic that it isn't for everyone. Besides, spending 4 years in college isn't going to put food on the table for your family. I thought he was way off base on that one.
 
  • #41
Moonbear said:
Besides, spending 4 years in college isn't going to put food on the table for your family. I thought he was way off base on that one.

How about Kerry's plan to keep public schools open until 6pm? If anything we need less indoctrin... *ahem* schooling.

Students are spending 13 years of their lives locked up in a system and at the end of it, they can't read, write, or do simple math very well. That, and there is no other optional system, everyone is forced into that one.

If you add up all the time that students spend in school if they go to college, and assume that the first 5 years of no school are worthless for job making, and also assume an average lifespan of 75 years, people spend almost 1/3 of their life locked out of society. That's a lot of mind/muscle/fresh ideas to keep out of the world.
 
  • #42
russ_watters said:
Combining the various democratic ideas expressed here and you get:

Are you sure you aren't referring to the post he was reacting to? Because I did not interpret Arg's post the way you did at all; quite the opposite. I'm misunderstanding something.
 
  • #43
russ_watters said:
Well, that's just it - people today go to college because that's what they are expected to do. And with that comes the expectation of a certain life once they get their ticket punched. But this isn't the land of expectations, its the land of opportunity. If you don't sieze the opportunity, you won't get the life you expect. For you and me, that meant, first and foremost picking the right field. I guarantee you'll find more psychology grads than engineering grads tending bar. And you really are better off not even having a degree than having one that is useless.

From my perspective, (and this is the primary reason why I'm not a democrat), many people are looking at "the American dream" backwards. They misunderstand the meaning of the term "opportunity."

Thank you Russ. American's in general are spoiled. Many believe they deserve that great job because they put in their time in college. Instead, they forget college gives them an edge (especially with technical education) in finding the job they think they will be most happy at. I don't think your comment insinuating this is a democratic view is accurate. I am a total democrat, but also understand how competitive it is today in this country when it comes to jobs. I think the main concern here though for those expressing their concern that jobs are going overseas is that opportunity is fading away. We are at a time now that we need to stop expecting higher wages and work from the bottom up-not expect to start on top.
 
  • #44
russ_watters said:
Great, so you're saying that this is a problem that has been growing for at least the past 15 years? Show me the data. I provided both unemployment stats and income stats that both show your assertions are simply false"


Again you have failed to understand the most elemental aspects of what has been said. I cited the jobs you and Bush consider employment: Taxi Drivers, Donut salesmen, waitress, photolab operator at Bi-Rite... Maybe you consider these good opportunities for college grads, but no reasonable person would agree.
 
  • #45
And don't forget that unemployment was redefined a dozen or so years ago to eliminate people who have given up and stopped searching for jobs. The numbers for previous years included those people so the unemployment rates from then and today are not directly comparable.
 
  • #46
selfAdjoint said:
And don't forget that unemployment was redefined a dozen or so years ago to eliminate people who have given up and stopped searching for jobs. The numbers for previous years included those people so the unemployment rates from then and today are not directly comparable.

I wasn't aware of this! Wow, that probably changes a lot of the interpretation of the numbers. Is there any way to pull those numbers out of old data to make them more directly comparable to current numbers?
 
  • #47
Moonbear said:
I wasn't aware of this! Wow, that probably changes a lot of the interpretation of the numbers. Is there any way to pull those numbers out of old data to make them more directly comparable to current numbers?

I believe the Bureau of Labor refers to these folks under the category of "Persons not in the labor force". There are specific statistics for people that are not actively seeking work because of discouragement over job prospects. I'm not sure what the numbers are over the last 4 years. But over the last one year, the number of discouraged persons has increased from 388,000 to 412,000 or an increase of a little over 6%.

http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.t13.htm
http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.nr0.htm
 
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  • #48
Gokul43201 said:
I believe the Bureau of Labor refers to these folks under the category of "Persons not in the labor force". There are specific statistics for people that are not actively seeking work because of discouragement over job prospects. I'm not sure what the numbers are over the last 4 years. But over the last one year, the number of discouraged persons has increased from 388,000 to 412,000 or an increase of a little over 6%.

Not actively seeking jobs because they are discouraged? We used to call them lazy good-for-nothings! I don't care how bad the prospects look, you keep pounding the pavement until you find something. I don't feel sorry for that group and don't want my taxes paying for them to sit around loafing all day.

When a single parent is working 3 jobs and still can't make ends meet to feed their kids and pay for child care, then I feel more generous with my tax money, and would bend over backward to help such a person.
 
  • #49
I think a good number of these people are pretty close to retirement, when they get laid off. So they look around, give up, and call it a day.
 
  • #50
A reflection of the times, in the words of de Tocqueville, who am I currently reading:

Starting page 491 of de Tocqueville's Democracy in America

"...During the campaigns of the Revolution the French introduced a new system of tactics into the art of war, which perplexed the oldest generals, and nearly destroyed the most ancient monarchies in Europe. They undertook (what had never before been attempted) to make shift without a number of things which have always been held to be indispensable in warfare; they required novel exertions on the part of their troops which no civilized nations had ever thought of; they achieved great actions in an incredibly short space of time; and they risked human life without hesitation to obtain the object in view. The French sources were infinitely inferior; nevertheless they were constantly victorious, until their adversaries chose to imitate their example.

The Americans have introduced a similar system into the commercial speculations; and they do for cheapness what the French did for conquest. The European sailor navigates with prudence; he only sets sail when the weather is favorable; if an unforeseen accident befalls him, he puts into port; at night he furls a portion of his canvas; and when the whitening billows intimate the vicinity of land, he checks his way, and takes an observation of the sun. But the American neglects these precautions and braves these dangers. He weighs anchor in the midst of tempestuous gales; by night and by day he spreads his sheets to the wind; he repairs as he goes along such damage as his vessel may have sustained from the storm; and when he at last approaches the term of his voyage, he darts onward to the shore as if he already descried a port. The Americans are often shipwrecked, but no trader crosses the seas so rapidly. And as they perform the same distance in a shorter time, they can perform it at a cheaper rate.

The European touches several times at different ports in the course of a long voyage; he loses a good deal of precious time in making the harbor, or in waiting for a favorable wind to leave it; and he pays daily dues to be allowed to remain there. The American starts from Boston to go to purchase tea in China; he arrives at Canton, stays there a few days, and then returns. In less than two years he has sailed as far as the entire circumference of the globe, and he has seen land but once. It is true that during a voyage of eight or ten months he has drunk brackish water and lived upon salt meat; that he has been in a continual contest with the sea, with disease, and with a tedious existence; but upon his return he can sell a pound of his tea for a half-penny less than the English merchant, and his purpose is accomplished...

...Nothing tends to materialize man, and to deprive his work of the faintest trace of mind, more than extreme division of labor. In a country like America, where men devoted to special occupations are rare, a long apprenticeship cannot be required from anyone who embraces a profession. The Americans, therefore, change their means of gaining a livelihood very readily; and they suit their occupations to the exigencies of the moment, in the manner most profitable to themselves. Men are to be met with who have successively been barristers, farmers, merchants, ministers of the gospel, and physicians. If the American be less perfect in each craft than the European, at least there is scarcely any trade with which he is utterly unacquainted. His capacity is more general, and the circle of his intelligence is enlarged.

The inhabitants of the United States are never fettered by the axioms of their profession; they escape from all the prejudices of their present station; they are not more attached to one line of operation than to another; they are not more prone to employ an old method than a new one; they have no rooted habits, and they easily shake off the influence which the habits of other nations might exercise upon their minds from a conviction that their country is unlike any other, and that its situation is without a precedent in the world...

...As Long as the sailors of the United States retain these inspiriting advantages, and the practical superiority which they derive from them, they will not only continue to supply the wants of the producers and consumers of their own country, but they will tend more and more to become, like the English, the factors of all other peoples."

How does this reflect upon outsourcing today?
 

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