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So what are the US PF'ers thoughts on this.
Do you fear for the US's economical future, or do you think it's bs?
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The forum discussion centers on the economic risks facing the United States, particularly regarding its national debt and trade deficits. Participants express a consensus that while the U.S. is unlikely to face outright bankruptcy, the potential for hyperinflation and a declining standard of living is significant. Key points include the government's ability to print money, the implications of trade deficits, and the impact of foreign imports on the domestic economy. The conversation highlights the importance of local production and the long-term sustainability of the U.S. economy amidst growing debt and reliance on foreign goods.
PREREQUISITESThis discussion is beneficial for economists, financial analysts, policymakers, and anyone interested in understanding the complexities of U.S. economic stability and the implications of national debt and trade practices.
1. The metaphorical "house" backing up the debt is not only future production and income, it is what people in the future will believe how much income can be produced in THEIR future. And so on.Galileo said:
So what are the US PF'ers thoughts on this.
Do you fear for the US's economical future, or do you think it's bs?
Or not so last resort!EnumaElish said:it also has the power to print money as a last resort.
mgb_phys said:Look at it from China's point of view - they slave (literally ;-) to produce $20 dvd players and Barbie dolls and America pays them in worthless pieces of green paper.
W3pcq said:My main point is that the more foreign imports and less exports, the less money we are worth as a nation because people who make stuff here will sell less, less tax money, less employment, less currency recirculation etc. It is always better for an economy to buy local whether it be on the county scale or the state or the National scale.
In contrast corporations gain profits buying non local and they siphon off our economic means of stability.
Not necessarily. You buy something in a US store that is made in China, most of the price tag goes to paying US store workers, rent, utilities, advertising - the amount sent to the manufacturer is quite small. You could regard it as the company merely subcontracting the unimportant part of the process to the cheapest bidder.W3pcq said:Well I know that personally I can benefit from buying cheaper in China, but the economy is hurt because my money is not circulated back into our economy right?
Some have surpluses, which pay for others' deficits.t-money said:All nations have a trade defecit
Originally Posted by W3pcq
Well I know that personally I can benefit from buying cheaper in China, but the economy is hurt because my money is not circulated back into our economy right?
I don't really agree with that. If a publicly traded company is making massive profits, why shouldn't the said profits go to the people who are creating it? Better for (the economy) that the money is back in the workforce rather than tied up in the company?Amp1 said:My thought is that our economy is top-heavy which causes much of the instability though other factors are at work.
By top-heavy I mean that the upper-management staff in a lot of firms is paid enormously disproportionately high compensation. I understand that a CEO, CIO, COO, etc, have great responsibilities and should receive fair compensation for their effort.
I draw the line though when their compensation is as obscene is it has become. In all fairness, I think the compensation should be no more than a few thousand times the lowest paid worker. The problem is that recently (the last fifty years or so) it has been a few hundred thousand or million times the lowest paid worker.
That is a major reason the circulation of money doesn't go back into the economy to multiply and stimulate growth. (IMHO) Why? The huge blocks of value the top 5% (in the US) control is placed into investment instruments which are basically static. I understand that these instruments are dynamic in that they grow in value or generate wealth, but they are also static in the sense that if some percentage of the value was distributed to non-management staff you can see that economic multipliers and consumer purchases would work to create economic growth. The value would be spread over a larger base which I’m sure would stabilize rather than hinder growth unlike the top-heavy structure that we have today.
I draw the line though when their compensation is as obscene is it has become. In all fairness, I think the compensation should be no more than a few thousand times the lowest paid worker. The problem is that recently (the last fifty years or so) it has been a few hundred thousand or million times the lowest paid worker.
Anttech said:I don't really agree with that. If a publicly traded company is making massive profits, why shouldn't the said profits go to the people who are creating it? Better for (the economy) that the money is back in the workforce rather than tied up in the company?
Right, so it is..That is standard-issue Communist thought. A corporation's only loyalty is to its shareholders. It pays the workers. It's a simple concept. I pay you, you work for me.
It's as big a problem for US cars today as it was 30 years ago.mgb_phys said:Insisting on buying locally produced can actually have a negative effect on the economy, manufacturers don't have to improve the product, don't have to make efficency gains, don't have to invest in R+D (look at US cars in the 60s or British cars in the 70s ).
The only way to get numbers like that is to mis-analyze a Microstoft-type situation. Just assuming Bill Gates is worth $20 Billion and the lowest paid worker earns $20,000 a year gets a ratio of a million to one. But that overlooks some obvious and important things:Amp1 said:I draw the line though when their compensation is as obscene is it has become. In all fairness, I think the compensation should be no more than a few thousand times the lowest paid worker. The problem is that recently (the last fifty years or so) it has been a few hundred thousand or million times the lowest paid worker.
Anttech said:Right, so it is..Communists are always ensuring through there political policies that, for example, City workers are being paid massive bonus for creating huge amounts of wealth in the finance sector, because commies know that if you dont, then these highly skilled people will leave the company.
The standard of thought on this Forum is very low these days.
The extremely simple "I pay you, you work for me" smacks there much of communism indoctrination.