News UW Student Finds Free Exchange of Ideas Lacking

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on perceptions of bias in universities, particularly regarding political ideologies, with many participants noting that faculty predominantly hold liberal views. A user expresses frustration over a lack of open debate on conservative ideas, feeling that their perspectives on capitalism and free markets are dismissed in academic settings. The conversation also touches on the implications of political ideas, such as the potential consequences of disbanding the EPA and the complexities of global free trade. Participants argue about the validity of various economic policies and the importance of critical thinking in education. Overall, the thread highlights concerns about ideological indoctrination versus genuine education in higher learning institutions.
t-money
Messages
32
Reaction score
1
Has anyone heard of this title or seen the documentary. Well I was introduced to it by my roommate. I found it very interesting how one sided University's are, the majority of faculty hold very liberal views, I tested this at my own school (University of Washington) and based on my experience i have come to my own conclusion, that my school does not nurture debates from both sides. They almost shun other ideas that are not very liberal. Just the other day I got into a class discussion in a comparative History course where nobody seemed to at the least appreciate what I had to say (essentially capitalism and free markets are good, and socialism is not), this somewhat annoyed me, why do I bother to pay for an education that does not tolerate free exchange of ideas that does not offend or endanger other peoples personal liberties?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
What makes you think the university is indoctrinating people as opposed to simply educating them? Examples of political ideas motivated by stupidity alone:

Pro-life supporters in Colorado want to define fertilized eggs as living people. http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2007/nov/14/colo_ballot_measure_would_define_fertilized_egg_pe/. This would essentially make menstruation a felony since it is very common for eggs to become fertilized but not stick to the uterus. Fertilized egg leaves with the rest of the monthly cleanup, and suddenly a woman is guilty of killing the "living person" who was inside her for a total of 1 day. If you've ever wanted to know why artificial insemination is done with dozens of eggs instead of just 1; the uterus-not-sticking thing is why.

Some people think it's a good idea to disband the EPA. This would essentially remove all environmental standards in the country. Your drinking water would no longer have any assurance that it is safe, and nobody would ever know if it was accidentally (or deliberately) contaminated since the EPA is the only group that actively monitors the quality of most drinking water.

Some people think global free trade is a good idea. What this would do is shut down most food production in first-world nations, since people in Uganda or whever tend to sell things at a much cheaper price. Would you pay $10 for the American corn or $1 for the Mexican corn? There's nothing wrong with Mexico's food, but having to rely on other countries just to have a steady food supply is a horrible idea.



I picked these 3 ideas for a specific reason - they are republican ideas. If you are told at university that these 3 ideas are insanely retarded, try not to mistake it as being liberal propoganda. It's just simple truth. It's easy to think university is a propoganda mill if the ideas they shoot down tend to all be from the same side of the political spectrum.

edit: you won't see anybody at a public university who is anti-socialism. The real cost of university is upwards of $30,000 per year, which is pretty much impossible to pay for at the young age of 18. Everybody there relies on socialism to attend university, so they'll probably do their best to defend it.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
ShawnD said:
Some people think global free trade is a good idea. What this would do is shut down most food production in first-world nations, since people in Uganda or whever tend to sell things at a much cheaper price. Would you pay $10 for the American corn or $1 for the Mexican corn? There's nothing wrong with Mexico's food, but having to rely on other countries just to have a steady food supply is a horrible idea.

<snip>

If you are told at university that these 3 ideas are insanely retarded, try not to mistake it as being liberal propoganda. It's just simple truth.

Did you just declare this by fiat? Great Britain has been reliant on other countries for the majority of its food supply for quite some time (think centuries) and it seems to be doing fine. To call free trade "insanely retarded" is, quite frankly "insanely retarded." There's a reason that ~90% of economists agree that free trade is a "Good Thing" (TM). And it's not because ~90% of economists are idiots.

What's truly "insanely retarded" is subsidizing huge agribusiness corn growers to the detriment of american consumers and tax payers who are forced to pay more at the grocery store just because you're afraid that we're going to go to war with Mexico and suddenly have a famine for lack of sugar. I'm sure you're one of the 3 people outside of Iowa who believe that ethanol subsidies are a great boon to this nation as well.

ShawnD said:
I picked these 3 ideas for a specific reason - they are republican ideas.

No, I'm a Democrat and I believe in free-trade. You may be confusing the term "Republican" with "non-populist."
 
t-money said:
why do I bother to pay for an education that does not tolerate free exchange of ideas that does not offend or endanger other peoples personal liberties?

Indeed. Why do you bother? Feel free to take your (parent's?) tuition money elsewhere.

You've got to love capitalism.
 
t-money said:
I found it very interesting how one sided University's are, the majority of faculty hold very liberal views,

Gee, now I wonder why that would be. Could it be because they tend to be highly educated and more intelligent that the average person? Might we conclude that this combination tends to produce liberals?
 
I agree that all ideas should be able to be debated. If anything, for the educational exercise. To simply disregard them is dangerous. History is full of dumb ideas that were later seen as very profound. Surely, If I'm paying good money for an eductation, the school I attend is going to EARN it. I've come along way by having the balls to challenge ideas. Just as often as I've been proven wrong I've discovered I'm often right or at least have found that my sometimes unconventional ideas have merit. I have a patent to prove it :)

For a teaching establishment to be biased in a particular way is liken to being a religious organization, IMO.
 
ShawnD, I would definitely pay $1 for corn than $10, so long if it is edible and not something that would kill me. Why pay more for something then it is worth, I am a physics student, and work part time at a movie theatre. Believe me the theatre business pay me for what I am worth and why not all I do is serve popcorn and do homework for minimum wage.

The point I was making though is that, professors are not as open minded as we all think. All these young scientists, lawyers, business leaders are getting an education but not learning on how to critically question their everday experiences. Imagine if in science we could not question Newtonian mechanics, my physics professors encourage questioning.
 
Ivan Seeking said:
Gee, now I wonder why that would be. Could it be because they tend to be highly educated and more intelligent that the average person? Might we conclude that this combination tends to produce liberals?[/QUOT]

Hmmm:confused:.

Rich people tend to be more conservative, being able to make money requires a certain level of education, therefore the rich are intelligent and conservative. See how easy that was.

I wanted to point out a lack of open minded discussion, not a question on something as complex on what defines intelligence. So please, let's try to maintain a constructive discussion, that way we all benefit, that is the free market way after all.:smile:
 
huckmank said:
Did you just declare this by fiat? Great Britain has been reliant on other countries for the majority of its food supply for quite some time (think centuries) and it seems to be doing fine. To call free trade "insanely retarded" is, quite frankly "insanely retarded." There's a reason that ~90% of economists agree that free trade is a "Good Thing" (TM). And it's not because ~90% of economists are idiots.
What happens when there's a trade dispute? Do people just go without food? Do people leave the island? Is war declared? If you'll think back to 1973, you'll remember that military action was threatened against the nations of OPEC when there was an oil embargo. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm fairly certain food is just as important as oil. Is it so hard to believe food could be used as a powerful bargaining tool, sort of like oil is?

What's truly "insanely retarded" is subsidizing huge agribusiness corn growers to the detriment of american consumers and tax payers who are forced to pay more at the grocery store just because you're afraid that we're going to go to war with Mexico and suddenly have a famine for lack of sugar. I'm sure you're one of the 3 people outside of Iowa who believe that ethanol subsidies are a great boon to this nation as well.
So what you're saying is that you like the way the US needs foreign oil, and ends up getting involved in the abortion that is the Middle East? It's true that farm subsidies are expensive, but you know what else is expensive? War is expensive. How many trillions of dollars have been spent in the past 5 years just to invade and stabilize Iraq? How much did the 1990 Gulf War cost? How much did the 73 Oil Crisis cost the economy?
Do I think subsidizing ethanol and biodiesel is a good idea, if it means leaving the Middle East forever? Hell yes.



No, I'm a Democrat and I believe in free-trade. You may be confusing the term "Republican" with "non-populist."
Things may have changed in the past few years, but isn't it usually democrats who call for subsidies and protectionism?

Hillary Clinton on Free Trade
"Well, outsourcing is a problem, and it's one that I've dealt with as a senator from New York. I started an organization called New Jobs for New York to try to stand against the tide of outsourcing, particularly from upstate New York and from rural areas. We have to do several things: end the tax breaks that still exist in the tax code for outsourcing jobs, have trade agreements with enforceable labor and environmental standards, help Americans compete, which is something we haven't taken seriously. 65% of kids do not go on to college. What are we doing to help them get prepared for the jobs that we could keep here that wouldn't be outsourced--and find a new source of jobs, clean energy, global warming, would create millions of new jobs for Americans."

Amidst the word salad, you can pick out the pieces where she says she will "help Americans compete". Oh, you mean like give tax incentives or imposing tariffs? Protectionism.

Then there's "Hillary voted with the bulk of her party against the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA)." Bit of a history lesson here: NAFTA is popular because Mexico and Canada have oil. Free trade with Mexico means cheap (tariff-free) oil from Mexico. Canada has the largest oil reserve in the world, so free trade with Canada means tariff-free oil from Canada. The US wants oil, so free trade on oil is a good idea. Central America doesn't have a hell of a lot, except food, so screw free trade with Central America. CAFTA gets shot down.

"Voted YES on free trade agreement with Oman."
Oman is a middle eastern country with oil.

"Voted YES on establishing free trade between US & Singapore."
That's strange, Singapore doesn't have a lot of oil... Oh wait a minute, they have the fifth biggest oil refinery in the world. Mystery solved.

"Voted YES on establishing free trade between the US and Chile."
This is the only one that seems to have little or nothing to do with oil.


Contrast that with super republican Bush

"Open more markets to keep America competitive"
Open market would mean free trade, but competitive would indicate tariff since Americans expect a lot higher pay than people in poor countries. Lord knows what he actually means.

"Tariffs over free trade, for steel industry"
So that would be protectionism.

"Repeals steel tariffs he imposed in 2002"
Either free trade or indecisiveness. You pick.

"# supports the expansion of NAFTA throughout the Americas
# supports the admission of China and Taiwan to the WTO
strongly supports free trade, saying that the case for it is “not just monetary but moral” and pledging to make the expansion of trade a consistent priority“"
So that would be free trade on all fronts.

"I would be a free trading president, a president that will work tirelessly to open up markets for agricultural products all over the world. I believe our American farmers. can compete so long as the playing field is level. That’s why I am such a strong advocate of free trade and that’s why I reject protectionism and isolation because I think it hurts our American farmers."
So Bush is against protectionism and supports free trade.

"I’ll never forget the contrast between what I learned about the free market at Harvard and what I saw in the closed isolation of China. Every bicycle looked the same. People’s clothes were all the same. a free market frees individuals to make distinct choices and independent decisions. The market gives individuals the opportunity to demand and decide, and entrepreneurs the opportunity to provide."
Bush really really likes free trade.

"In 1999, when a glut of foreign oil drove prices below $12 a barrel, many of my friends in the oil business wanted the government to rescue them through price supports. . . I understand the frustration of people. but I do not support import fees. . . I believe it makes sense to use the tax code to encourage activities that benefit America. But I do not want to put up fees or tariffs or roadblocks to trade."
More free trade. Git R Dun.

"Establish Free Trade Area of the Americas by 2005"
"Add Chile, Brazil, Argentina, & others to NAFTA"
"Fast Track in west; WTO in east"
"Supports Fast Track; WTO; NAFTA; anti-dumping"
Hardcore free trade, it looks like.



So there you have it. The lead democrat is selective about free trade, while the lead republican supports free trade on all fronts with everybody. If some random guy came up to me and started talking about free trade, I would be inclined to think he supports a republican more than he supports a democrat.
 
  • #10
I am not for Republican or Democratic perspective, I consider myself more of a classical Liberal (followers of Hayek, Lazzes faire economics).
 
  • #11
Ivan Seeking said:
Gee, now I wonder why that would be. Could it be because they tend to be highly educated and more intelligent that the average person? Might we conclude that this combination tends to produce liberals?
As long as we're taking cheap shots...

Nah, we just conclude the liberals are simply the ones who couldn't succeed outside of academia. :wink:
 
  • #12
Ivan Seeking said:
Gee, now I wonder why that would be. Could it be because they tend to be highly educated and more intelligent that the average person? Might we conclude that this combination tends to produce liberals?
Either that or it is the isolation and unnecessary-ness of realism. Who needs reality, when everything is just a discussion in a classroom?

For the OP: Not all schools have a liberal tilt to them. It isn't really the reason they call it that, but you'll find "liberal arts" really is liberal education. Engineers and engineering schools, however, tend to lean more to the right. That kind of implies that what Ivan says is almost true - just backwards. The brains of a school is found in the engineering department (pure sciences too, but they tend to be smaller) not in the English or poly sci department - the students in liberal arts are more receptive to lofty-sounding, idealistic views that don't really work.

I was told that my school, Drexel University, which has evolved but used to be a strictly science/technical school, actually had a pro- Vietnam War demonstration back in the 60s.
 
Last edited:
  • #13
russ_watters said:
The brains of a school is found in the engineering department not in the English or poly sci department -

I was told that my school, Drexel University, which has evolved but used to be a strictly science/technical school, actually had a pro- Vietnam War demonstration back in the 60s.
Doesn't that rather defeat your own argument :biggrin:
 
  • #14
Don't let it get to you. Since the beginning, universities have been sympathetic to the unconventional and to revolutionaries. What they don't tolerate well is unconventional revolutionaries.
 
  • #15
I haven't had a chance to read all the replies (which I intend to do later), but I agree with the original poster. And it irritates me when people say that "This must be because intellectuals are more educated, and if you're smart you have to have liberal idea. Everybody knows that you are a dumb ass if you're not a liberal." I hear that elitist attitude all the time and I don't buy it. If academics really care about exchanges of ideas and intellectual diversity, then why are many classes one sided?

Not to mention that you hear many of these ideas expressed from people who teach classes unrelated to the topic they are talking about. Why should a grad student who teaches french be any sort of credible expert on politics, law, or economics?

It's funny because I lost count of the number of times that one of my teachers or grad students has said something, that economists have disproved. Going off about how two parent households are a result of worsening economic conditions, and how today it requires 2 members of a household to provide the same standard of living that one worker could provide in the 1960's. Complete rubbish.
 
  • #16
ShawnD said:
Some people think global free trade is a good idea. What this would do is shut down most food production in first-world nations, since people in Uganda or whever tend to sell things at a much cheaper price. Would you pay $10 for the American corn or $1 for the Mexican corn? There's nothing wrong with Mexico's food, but having to rely on other countries just to have a steady food supply is a horrible idea.

I picked these 3 ideas for a specific reason - they are republican ideas.

You clearly don't know what you're talking about with this one. First of all, free-trade is not mainly a republican idea, although it is mainly an economist idea. I read recently that a large number of self-reported republicans are fearful of free-trade (I think it was like 1/3, you can read about it on Greg Mankiw's blog).

The average economist is a democrat (aka a liberal) even though something like 99% of economists think that free-trade is a good idea. Your argument about, American farmers not being able to compete, and the troubles of relying on one nation for all are food has no solid backing. Why are pretty much no economists worried about this? Besides, you (and me) rely on other people for all kinds of things in our life. I doubt you know how to build a car or a computer. I doubt you know how to sew your own clothes or get oil. I also doubt you know how to farm. If it's so worrisome to rely on other nations for your food support, then why isn't it generally worrisome to rely on other people for your food support. And if you think it is, then I hope you're out there wasting your time learning how to farm.
 
  • #17
huckmank said:
What's truly "insanely retarded" is subsidizing huge agribusiness corn growers to the detriment of american consumers and tax payers who are forced to pay more at the grocery store just because you're afraid that we're going to go to war with Mexico and suddenly have a famine for lack of sugar.

You hit the nail on the head that it is "insanely retarded to subsidize huge agribusiness corn growers to the detriment of american consumers. I hope you also realize that this is not "really" done because politicians, citizens, and farmers are worried that we'll have a famine if we go to war with Mexico. The reason these policies get promoted is because farmers know damn well that buy reducing their competition, they will make a lot more money, and that the consumers can pay more for their produce (which the farmers could care less about). The reason that politicians cater to this, is because farmers band together, act like a lobbying group and push for these policies (so it's in the politicians best interest to grant this favor). Then the politicians try to scare citizens by using sorry retoric. Basically, the farmers "steal" a small amount of money from many American's (probably an average of $20 - $30 a year in higher prices because of these trade restrictions). And since there are a large number of consumers in relation to farmers, each farmer get's a hefty reward (probably an increase in salary in the way of $100,000). It's called rational ignorance for the consumers to not band together and make a big deal over this small amount of money (especially considering how much time and energy it would take only to gain $20). If you don't believe that this happens then you should check out James Buchannans work on Public Choice Theory. Basically, he won the Nobel Prize in Economics for showing why when 10,000 people want one thing, and 100 want another, the 100 will usually get their way in a democracy.
 
  • #18
Economist, before I even reply to your post, let me inspire you. http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20071012.FOOD12/TPStory/?pageRequested=all . Let's see if I can bold a few sentences to summarize the entire thing.
A record harvest, a massive surplus of the staple crop, would be good news anywhere in the developing world. But it's particularly gratifying in Malawi, a country that has been plagued with critical food shortages several times in the past decade. In 2002, an estimated 1,500 people starved to death in the worst food shortage since independence. In 2005, the United Nations World Food Program scrambled to supply emergency rations to more than five million people, nearly half the country.

This year, Malawi is itself supplying the WFP, selling 400,000 tonnes of maize for use in emergency operations in neighbouring Zimbabwe.

The key question is, What happened? How did Malawi go from famine-plagued to food exporter?

While steady rains have undoubtedly helped, that's not the whole answer. Over the past couple of years, Malawi has broken with an orthodoxy long advocated by Canada and other Western donor nations: The impoverished country has gone back to subsidizing poor farmers. Condemned by donors as an impediment to the development of a sustainable agricultural sector, the subsidies have been a raging success.

"What is different [this year] is the access to inputs," explained Patrick Kabambe, permanent secretary in the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security. "People are so poor they use recycled seed and no fertilizer. They can't meet their needs that way and they grow no surplus. People sink deeper and deeper into poverty. It's a vicious cycle. We had to do something."

Starting in 2006, and on a larger scale this year, the government distributed coupons to low-income farmers to allow them to purchase 50-kilogram sacks of fertilizer for 950 kwacha($7) rather than the market price of 4,500 kwacha. As a result, the average farmer's yield jumped to two tonnes a hectare from 800 kilograms.

The fertilizer subsidy cost the government $62-million - 6.5 per cent of the total government budget, a "whack of cash" in the words of one top economist - but that pales in comparison to the $120-million the government spent importing food aid in the 2005 famine. And the sale of maize to Zimbabwe and other countries will inject an additional $120-million into the national economy, a sizable figure here.
Well I'll be damned, subsidies worked where free trade failed. They spent $60m in order to save $120m, and thousands of lives were saved in the process. I guess developing industry within your own country is a good idea. I should be an economist or something.

Let's see what wikipedia has to say about protectionism.

Protectionists fault the free trade model as being reverse protectionism in disguise, that of using tax policy to protect foreign manufacturers from domestic competition. By ruling out revenue tariffs on foreign products, government must fully rely on domestic taxation to provide its revenue, which falls heavily disproportionately on domestic manufacturing. As Paul Craig Roberts notes: "[Foreign discrimination of US products] is reinforced by the US tax system, which imposes no appreciable tax burden on foreign goods and services sold in the US but imposes a heavy tax burden on US producers of goods and services regardless of whether they are sold within the US or exported to other countries."
So basically a lack of tariffs forces the US to raise the taxes on domestic goods. That's like one giant tax incentive to not buy American.

To play fair, I'll even include the part that favors free trade.
Protectionist quotas can cause foreign producers to become more profitable, mitigating their desired effect. This happens because quotas artificially restrict supply, so it is unable to meet demand; as a result the foreign producer can command a premium price for its products. These increased profits are known as quota rents.

For example, in the United States (1981-1994), Japanese automobile companies were held to voluntary export quotas. These quotas limited the supply of Japanese automobiles desired by consumers in the United States (1.68 million, raised to 1.85 million in 1984, and raised again to 2.30 million in 1985), increasing the profit margin on each automobile more than enough (14% or about $1200 in 1983 dollars, about $2300 in 2005 dollars) to cover the reduction in the number of automobiles that they sold, leading to greater overall profits for Japanese automobile manufacturers in the United States export market, and higher prices for consumers.
So basically foreign companies made more money because Americans were willing to pay top dollar for cars they felt were worth the extra cost. This means protectionism caused Americans to get ripped off when buying Japanese cars. Terrible! Something must be done! And something was done about it, but not what you, Economist, would expect.

COMPANY BRIEFS; Toyota's [first] U.S. Plant
REUTERS
Published: May 27, 1988 (notice the date)

The Toyota Motor Company, the world's third-largest auto maker, opened its first United States assembly plant, with production of a white 1989 Camry sedan. The 3.7-million-square-foot plant, situated on Kentucky farmland about 20 miles north of Lexington, is the fourth United States assembly plant built by a Japanese auto maker. The factory is the largest auto plant in the United States. Toyota and the General Motors Corporation jointly operate a plant at Fremont, Calif., under the name New United Motor Manufacturing Corporation.
So rather than abandon the US, or put up with quotas, Toyota decided to build a plant in the US. They hired Americans to build these cars that Americans wanted, and that's how they got around quotas and tariffs. If there was free trade on Japanese cars, you can be pretty sure they would still be built in Japan or wherever they were built before this. I bolded the part where it says Toyota is #3 in the world because Toyota is now the #1 auto maker, and I think integrated itself into the US is a big part of why that happened. Having the cars made in the US and Canada certainly get around that problem of feeling like a traitor whenever you buy a Japanese car. I think somebody forgot to tell GM, Ford, and Chrysler about this, since they still ***** about "foreign" cars, imported all the way from Ohio and Kentucky. Somebody should start a petition to annex Kentucky and make it part of the US. Ohio too, those bastards.

More from wikipedia
However, academic economists are generally supporters of free trade[citation needed]. Economic theory, under the principle of comparative advantage, suggests that the gains from free trade outweigh any losses; as free trade creates more jobs than it destroys because it allows countries to specialize in the production of goods and services in which they have a comparative advantage.
In other words, Toyota would stay in Japan, GM would stay in Mexico, drug companies would stay in India (most generics are from India), and textiles would be in UK. US would be the exporter of... what exactly? Steel? Probably not since US steel is very expensive, and there are heavy tariffs on steel in order to protect the US steel industry. Timber? Nope, Canada has cheaper timber. Oil? USA uses more oil than it has, so that's a no. Um... how about food? Again that would be a no since poor nations make cheap food, which is why food is heavily subsidized in the US. What else is left? Electronics are made in Asia, and clothes are made in Asia and South America. Feel free to name one thing you think the US could competitively export under free trade.

Economist said:
Why are pretty much no economists worried about this?
Because economists are not part of industry, so they have nothing to lose. People like myself are in the real world where cheating is a great strategy for getting ahead. Do you think I want to compete with chemists from India or China? They can probably do exactly what I do, but for 1/10th the salary. Free trade with them is in somebody's best interest, but that somebody is not me. Same things with GM vehicles. They are made in Canada, US, and now Mexico. Literally hundreds of thousands of American workers were fired, and the GM plants were moved to Mexico. Good for somebody, but not if you're one of those people who got fired. Obviously this happens regardless of free trade, but free trade pushes the idea along much faster.

Groups like the CATO Institute say that free trade encourages investment because it's easier to ship things back and forth once the infrastructure has been established, which is true, but they don't mention why you would want to build that infrastructure in the first place. Why build a factory in the US if you already have a perfectly good factory in Mexico? The whole reason for building it in Mexico is that the labor is much cheaper and there are fewer environmental laws to follow. With free trade on top of that, there is literally no reason to build a factory in the US.

What free trade does is make an even playing field for the world to trade on. Sounds nice, in theory. In reality, you and I happen to live in the richest countries in the world. Countries like the US, UK, France, Germany, and Canada are well above the world average when it comes to wealth. A push towards averaging with the rest of world essentially breaks down into a push towards lowering our incomes.
Besides, you (and me) rely on other people for all kinds of things in our life. I doubt you know how to build a car or a computer. I doubt you know how to sew your own clothes or get oil. I also doubt you know how to farm. If it's so worrisome to rely on other nations for your food support, then why isn't it generally worrisome to rely on other people for your food support. And if you think it is, then I hope you're out there wasting your time learning how to farm.
In the event of complete trade block with the rest of the world...

Cars are built in Canada and the US, so neither of our countries relies on another country to make cars for us
Computers are not an essential service, so they're not a very good bargaining tool. You may be able to hold an economy hostage with oil, but you can't really do that with computers. Worst case scenario: somebody would build a plant to fill the demand.
Both of our countries are more than capable of creating our own clothes, so clothing is a horrible bargaining tool. One of the biggest industries in early America was cotton.
You're right that your country needs oil, but not mine. My country produces more oil than it uses, so other countries don't really have a bargaining chip with this one.
Farming/food could be a good bargaining tool, but right now both of our countries are self sufficient when it comes to food. I'm not at all worried about other countries and their food markets, mainly because protectionism is in place to make sure they don't have that power to begin with. We wouldn't donate huge amounts of food as foreign aid unless we had a surplus, true?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #19
ShawnD said:
Because economists are not part of industry, so they have nothing to lose. People like myself are in the real world where cheating is a great strategy for getting ahead. Do you think I want to compete with chemists from India or China? They can probably do exactly what I do, but for 1/10th the salary. Free trade with them is in somebody's best interest, but that somebody is not me.

Your whole entire post is filled with ignorance, but I'd just like to respond to this piece in particular.

American economists actually have a lot to lose from free trade. You probably don't know this, but the number of international students competeing for PhDs is very high. In fact, most PhD programs in the US have less than 50% American students. If I could keep out foreigh competitors I would probably be going to a lot better school. Furthermore, it'd be a lot easier to land solid jobs if I could keep out foreign competitors. By why should we? It's certainly not in the foreign students best interest, and it's also not in the future students best interest.

You are right, that competing with chemists from India and China is not in YOUR best interest. However, it is in the workers from India or China's best interest, as well as it is in your employer's best interest, and also in the consumers' best interest. Therefore, you are stopping many people from benefitting because you're not as good at your job. Sorry if they can do it better, but you have no right to limit my choice to hire and trade with them, just so you can overcharge and be comfortable. This is a huge problem (as many economists have pointed out) across the globe.
 
  • #20
Economist said:
Your whole entire post is filled with ignorance, but I'd just like to respond to this piece in particular.
Feel free to point out any specific errors rather than saying the entire thing is wrong and not give any theoretical or real world examples.

American economists actually have a lot to lose from free trade. You probably don't know this, but the number of international students competeing for PhDs is very high. In fact, most PhD programs in the US have less than 50% American students. If I could keep out foreigh competitors I would probably be going to a lot better school. Furthermore, it'd be a lot easier to land solid jobs if I could keep out foreign competitors.
There is a critical flaw in your argument. Student visas and PhD programs don't apply to economists because they already have PhDs. It's easy for any jackass to graduate under one set of rules then announce that the rules should be changed in such a way that they know they would not support if they had to abide by those rules themselves.

By why should we? It's certainly not in the foreign students best interest, and it's also not in the future students best interest.
So you're saying you should "take one for the team" and sacrifice yourself in order to save somebody you don't know?

You are right, that competing with chemists from India and China is not in YOUR best interest. However, it is in the workers from India or China's best interest, as well as it is in your employer's best interest, and also in the consumers' best interest.
How do you think free trade would benefit my employer? He can't possibly sell a product for less than what a company in India would sell it for, so he would go bankrupt, and everybody he employs would be fired. The same thing would happen with basically all manufactured goods. Why pay an American $20 when you can pay a Mexican $1. The only jobs that are not replaceable by foreign competition are service jobs and resource gathering. As every teenager already knows, service jobs are not real careers, so that's out. As for resource gathering, those would have terrible pay as well if the resources you collect are in direct competition with ones that were collected at virtually no cost. If a guy in China can mine copper for a 1 bowl of rice, that's what your company back in the US has to pay you just to stay competitive. I don't know about you, but it seems like a very bad idea to put the entire US population on the same level as the rest of the world. You may not realize it, but the "average" human is extremely poor, works very long hours, and never has a vacation, ever. I hope I never see the US sink to that level.

Therefore, you are stopping many people from benefitting because you're not as good at your job. Sorry if they can do it better, but you have no right to limit my choice to hire and trade with them, just so you can overcharge and be comfortable. This is a huge problem (as many economists have pointed out) across the globe.
Oh but that's where you're wrong. The constitution states that I do have that power. I have the freedom to vote for whomever I want, and I have the right to form a union.
Look at your own country's history to see how many times democracy has beaten the free market when the two have fought against each other.

http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761567354/Civil_War.html (the short version)
The chief and immediate cause of the war was slavery. Southern states, including the 11 states that formed the Confederacy, depended on slavery to support their economy. Southerners used slave labor to produce crops, especially cotton. Although slavery was illegal in the Northern states, only a small proportion of Northerners actively opposed it. The main debate between the North and the South on the eve of the war was whether slavery should be permitted in the Western territories recently acquired during the Mexican War (1846-1848), including New Mexico, part of California, and Utah. Opponents of slavery were concerned about its expansion, in part because they did not want to compete against slave labor.
Read that over once more. The bulk of the US population was located in the north east. A good portion of the economy, controlled by a relatively small population, was in the south east. The south relied on cheap labor (slaves) to keep their prices down, which made the south very competitive. Working class white people in the north were afraid that slavery would spread and cause lower wages. Rather than let the free market control the situation, people in the north pushed to outlaw slavery and eliminate the competition. The south didn't like this, so they separated. War.
The free market pushed for slavery in the south and slave-like wages in the north. Democracy pushed to eliminate slavery and keep wages artificially high, which would benefit the majority of people. Democracy won.

Feel free to also read about the history of labor unions, OSHA, and labor laws. I'll repeat it once more: yes I do have the power to eliminate competition. We all do. We've used this power in the past, and we'll use it in the future.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #21
ShawnD said:
Feel free to point out any specific errors rather than saying the entire thing is wrong and not give any theoretical or real world examples.

You're right, and that is a good point. However, I don't have enough time and I'm not the best person for the job. If you really want to understand why so many things you've said in regards to trade are flawed, I would refer you to many experts much more intelligent than myself. Maybe start with David Ricardo, Frederick Bastiat, and Jagdish Bhagwati.

I've heard this book by Jagdish is pretty good:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/0195330935/?tag=pfamazon01-20

ShawnD said:
There is a critical flaw in your argument. Student visas and PhD programs don't apply to economists because they already have PhDs. It's easy for any jackass to graduate under one set of rules then announce that the rules should be changed in such a way that they know they would not support if they had to abide by those rules themselves..

I don't understand exactly what you're saying here. First of all, people do change the rules all the time in this way in order to keep out competition, by raising the standards after they are already in the profession (the AMA does this for doctors all the time). And my point, was that the next generation of American born economists (like myself) would do much better if we could keep out international students. That would benefit me as an economist, but at the expense of many more people. You should at least have the courage to admit that the policies you advocate benefit small groups of people at the expense of much larger groups of people.

ShawnD said:
So you're saying you should "take one for the team" and sacrifice yourself in order to save somebody you don't know?.

No that's not what I'm saying at all. What I'm saying is don't take away my individual liberty by making it illegal for me to enter in VOLUNTARY EXCHANGE with others. That would be to sacrifice the many and FORCE them to "take one for you."


ShawnD said:
How do you think free trade would benefit my employer? He can't possibly sell a product for less than what a company in India would sell it for, so he would go bankrupt, and everybody he employs would be fired.

Well, if your employer can't compete, then he should get out of the business. Joseph Schumpeter (another great economist) coined the term "Creative Destruction" which applies here. In order for progress to happen, the competitive processes need to destroy the jobs and industries that are now inefficient.

Do you realize that something like 90% of American's used to be farmers? And that technological progress put them out of business? And that it's a great thing? It used to take 90% to farm, now it only takes something like 1% - 3%. This is now more efficient and frees up many other people to get new jobs. Can you imagine all the things that would never have been invented had 90% of Americans continued to be farmers? Most of us would not be able to go to college, if 90% of us still had to farm.

Furthermore, technology puts many more people out of business than free-trade does. Are you also advocating that we should be allowed to stop technological progress because some people will be displaced and lose their jobs?

ShawnD said:
Oh but that's where you're wrong. The constitution states that I do have that power. I have the freedom to vote for whomever I want, and I have the right to form a union. Look at your own country's history to see how many times democracy has beaten the free market when the two have fought against each other.

I agree that democracy often beats the free market. In my opinion, this perfectly demonstrates the drawbacks of democracy. Majority rule can (and often does) vote for bad policies. In his book "On Liberty" John Stuart Mill talks about how democracy allow "the tyranny of the majority." Do you really want to defend all the legislation that has been formed under democracies?

If you don't think that democracies vote for bad policies, then again I refer you to James Buchannan (Public Choice Theory) and Fredrick Bastiat. Here's also a really good book on the topic by Bryan Caplan:

https://www.amazon.com/dp/0691129428/?tag=pfamazon01-20

Since a book takes a long time to read, I also posted this podcast where he discusses his book (it's only an hour and 20 minutes).

http://www.econtalk.org/archives/2007/06/caplan_on_the_m.html

ShawnD said:
The south relied on cheap labor (slaves) to keep their prices down, which made the south very competitive. Working class white people in the north were afraid that slavery would spread and cause lower wages. Rather than let the free market control the situation, people in the north pushed to outlaw slavery and eliminate the competition.

Since when is slavery consistent with the free market? One of the fundamental ideas of capitalism is that individuals have property rights, and own their own labor, and therefore can sell it to whom they want for what price they want. Listen carefully: SLAVERY IS NOT AN EXAMPLE OF THE FREE MARKET.

ShawnD said:
Feel free to also read about the history of labor unions, OSHA, and labor laws. I'll repeat it once more: yes I do have the power to eliminate competition. We all do. We've used this power in the past, and we'll use it in the future.

Yes, you (we) do have the "power" to eliminate competition. The key word here being "power." But should we have the "right"? The same white south you referred to earlier had the "power" to enforce slavery, and later had the "power" to make an enforce Jim Crows laws and other forms of racist and discriminatory legislation. But did they have the "right"?

I guess according to your quote above, "We all have the "power" to use the democratic system even in the most disgusting and harmful ways. We've used this "power" in the past, and we'll use it in the future!"
 
  • #22
Economist said:
Your whole entire post is filled with ignorance, but I'd just like to respond to this piece in particular.

American economists actually have a lot to lose from free trade. You probably don't know this, but the number of international students competeing for PhDs is very high. In fact, most PhD programs in the US have less than 50% American students. If I could keep out foreigh competitors I would probably be going to a lot better school. Furthermore, it'd be a lot easier to land solid jobs if I could keep out foreign competitors. By why should we? It's certainly not in the foreign students best interest, and it's also not in the future students best interest.

You are right, that competing with chemists from India and China is not in YOUR best interest. However, it is in the workers from India or China's best interest, as well as it is in your employer's best interest, and also in the consumers' best interest. Therefore, you are stopping many people from benefitting because you're not as good at your job. Sorry if they can do it better, but you have no right to limit my choice to hire and trade with them, just so you can overcharge and be comfortable. This is a huge problem (as many economists have pointed out) across the globe.

You are absolutely ignorant, for a self-proclaimed economist, to bring in labour economics for this argument. By all means, even the most mainstream economists consider labour as one of those "special" areas of the markets. Humans can't simply be treated the way widgets can.

And by the way, while slavery may not have an affinity with capitalism, child labour does. As well as the abolishment of the minimum wage among many other things, else we suffer from "market inefficiency". I have seen economic textbooks defend for child labour beside their claim on how unemployment is created by minimum wages.
 
  • #23
opus said:
You are absolutely ignorant, for a self-proclaimed economist, to bring in labour economics for this argument. By all means, even the most mainstream economists consider labour as one of those "special" areas of the markets. Humans can't simply be treated the way widgets can.

What exactly are you saying here? That labor is a "special" area of the market, and therefore "protectionism" is ok? And are you also saying that most "mainstream" economists would agree with you on this point?

opus said:
And by the way, while slavery may not have an affinity with capitalism, child labour does. As well as the abolishment of the minimum wage among many other things, else we suffer from "market inefficiency". I have seen economic textbooks defend for child labour beside their claim on how unemployment is created by minimum wages.

Capitalism doesn't necessarily look for child labor as it depends on the situation. Do you really think that if the US abolished child labor laws, many young children would drop out of school and get a job? Do you really think Microsoft will fire all their employees in favor of "cheap child labor"? Furthermore, do you really think that child labor laws always help people and countries? Do you really doubt that in some third world nations, parents would rather have their children in school, but since they are so poor it takes the whole family working to put food on the table? And do you really think that something like child labor laws will rescue them from this kind of poverty?

Do you also disagree that minimum wage laws increases unemployment? Do you also disagree that minimum wage laws make it more difficult for low skilled workers to invest in human capital through job training?
 
  • #24
Economist said:
What exactly are you saying here? That labor is a "special" area of the market, and therefore "protectionism" is ok? And are you also saying that most "mainstream" economists would agree with you on this point?

Capitalism doesn't necessarily look for child labor as it depends on the situation. Do you really think that if the US abolished child labor laws, many young children would drop out of school and get a job? Do you really think Microsoft will fire all their employees in favor of "cheap child labor"? Furthermore, do you really think that child labor laws always help people and countries? Do you really doubt that in some third world nations, parents would rather have their children in school, but since they are so poor it takes the whole family working to put food on the table? And do you really think that something like child labor laws will rescue them from this kind of poverty?

Do you also disagree that minimum wage laws increases unemployment? Do you also disagree that minimum wage laws make it more difficult for low skilled workers to invest in human capital through job training?

For all of your questions, my answer is generally yes. You can bet that there will be unemployment even if the minimum wage is abolished. And you can bet that there will be a "market correction" and many people will be paid much less than the minimum wage. The US can't be used as an example of child laborr because the US is a service economy and the income is disproportionate to any third world manufacturing country that does have child labour. If Americans own the means of production, why would they need to have child labour? The only capitalism discriminates by is price, and price alone. It doesn't matter if the worker is 9 years old or 90 years old, as long as they get the work done and efficiently. Which is why young females are preferred in developing countries. They don't dare threaten management (patriarchal societies), and they work hard.
 
  • #25
opus said:
You can bet that there will be unemployment even if the minimum wage is abolished.

Obviously there will be unemployement even without a minimum wage. The real question is whether a minimum increases unemployement or not. And if it does increase unemployement, who does it generally make worse off. For example, if Joe can only produce $5 per hour then a minimum wage of $7 per hour may well get him fired. And since Joe only produces $5 an hour, he probably is a low-skilled worker. And not being able to find a job will probably be very detrimental to Joe, because now he can't learn skills through on the job training, which will make him increasing less employable through time. If minimum wage is such a great poverty fighting tool, than all we have to do is raise the minimum wage in third world nations and they can become rich like the US. Also, if a minimum wage of $8 an hour is good for the US, then wouldn't a minimum wage of $15 an hour be better? Or maybe even a minimum wage of $50 an hour?

opus said:
And you can bet that there will be a "market correction" and many people will be paid much less than the minimum wage.

What you mean to say is that "some" people will be paid less than minimum wage. If you look at the facts, very few people in the US actually earn the minimum wage, in other words, most people are paid more than the minimum wage. And the people who tend to earn the minimum wage are young people. Even if some people make less than the minimum wage, that's not necessarily bad. Especially considering that some low skilled workers would have an easier time finding work.

opus said:
The US can't be used as an example of child laborr because the US is a service economy and the income is disproportionate to any third world manufacturing country that does have child labour.

Obviously third world countries are the ones with child labor given that they are in a worse economic situation. Most parents (even in third world nations) would rather have their kid going to school, but the family is in a desperate situation. Don't forget that the US and Europe have had child labor in the past. Maybe part of the reason that we are now successful and a service economy, is due to the fact that past generations busted their ass which allowed their children to attend school.

My grandfather grew up in France. He dropped out of school at age 12 to become an apprentice to a baker. He worked Monday - Saturday, and he worked very long days (at least 12 hours per day). He received a very small amount of money for this work. Let's ask ourselves why someone would go through this? Well first off, his family was poor and they needed the kids working in order to survive. Second, he realized that he would be learning a trade, so that later he could have a little bit better life than his parents. Do you really think that child labor laws would have helped my grandfather?

opus said:
It doesn't matter if the worker is 9 years old or 90 years old, as long as they get the work done and efficiently. Which is why young females are preferred in developing countries. They don't dare threaten management (patriarchal societies), and they work hard.

First of all, employers do care about age because age and productivity are strongly correlated. Second, if two individuals have equal productivity but only differ in age, should the company discriminate based on age? If someone is 90 years old and wants a job, why should you or I be allowed to vote for laws which make this illegal? If a parent wants to allow their child to work at age 10, why should you or I be allowed to vote for laws which make this illegal? Essentially, I am a realist and therefore I realize that the poverty experienced in other countries is far worse than poverty experienced in the US. I also realize that this may make some families best option having children work. Don't forget that the US has a long history of child labor, both in and out of the work force. For example, a couple hundred years ago the majority of the US population were farmers. Do you doubt that the children growing up on these farms put in long back breaking hours?
 
  • #26
Economist said:
Also, if a minimum wage of $8 an hour is good for the US, then wouldn't a minimum wage of $15 an hour be better? Or maybe even a minimum wage of $50 an hour?
Because in a non-free-market economy, the government would go bankrupt right away (or fund such increases by higher "redistribution" from other tax sources and likely cause a rebellion). In a free-market economy, there'd be 100% unemployment if the minimum wage was like 200 dollars or something.

What I am saying is that in a free-market economy, the minimum wage should be a protection against the inhumanness of "competition" to drive down prices. Yes, it is protectionism, but I think having 3 well-paid workers and 1 unemployed is better than having 4 underpaid workers especially if there is safety net in place. This is the essence of Keynes - to protect against the ups and downs of the economy. In my opinion this is better than an unregulated market where you have overpaid workers when the economy is "good" and underpaid workers when the economy is "bad". There is no stability whatsoever.
What you mean to say is that "some" people will be paid less than minimum wage. If you look at the facts, very few people in the US actually earn the minimum wage, in other words, most people are paid more than the minimum wage. And the people who tend to earn the minimum wage are young people. Even if some people make less than the minimum wage, that's not necessarily bad. Especially considering that some low skilled workers would have an easier time finding work.
You're saying that it's good that some people make less than the minimum wage? Wow you really are a neoliberal economist. Get off your high horse. Going to a good university studying economics will make you better off than many people in the country, and the way you see it, their lives are better because they are going to earn less than 5$/hr? It's among the lowest minimum wages in the industrialized world, and you're trying to justify it for the sake of "efficiency". I really hope you'll ever know what it feels like to flip burgers while feeding 2 kids at home over formulating your "closed models" to explain an economy that affects people very directly.
Don't forget that the US and Europe have had child labor in the past. Maybe part of the reason that we are now successful and a service economy, is due to the fact that past generations busted their ass which allowed their children to attend school.
You're foolish to think that child labour is warranted because it's part of "modernization". Japan became industrialized - did they resort to child labour in the 1940's? I don't think so. Your appeal to history is completely incorrect.

Our economy did not grow because people "busted" their ass off to get their children educated. People "bust" their ass off everyday and everywhere. To think that America industrialized while Africa did not because Americans "busted their ass" to send their kids to school is so completely narrow-sighted and narrow-minded. All parents want to send their child to school - but in many places, especially in the third-world, even school has become too expensive for their income. And your solution for this is for them to "bust their ass off"? This is sickening.
My grandfather grew up in France. He dropped out of school at age 12 to become an apprentice to a baker. He worked Monday - Saturday, and he worked very long days (at least 12 hours per day). He received a very small amount of money for this work. Let's ask ourselves why someone would go through this? Well first off, his family was poor and they needed the kids working in order to survive. Second, he realized that he would be learning a trade, so that later he could have a little bit better life than his parents. Do you really think that child labor laws would have helped my grandfather?
Yay for anecdoctal evidence. Guess what, given if France had a good strong economy with many jobs, your grandfather would have gone to school instead of worked and gotten an even better job to survive. Your question revolves around "how do we solve poverty", and your answer to that is "let the children work and earn money" instead of "let them have a social safety net and higher wages at the cost of increasing taxes for the upper class". I'll have you know this is exactly what France did. Most Western countries had absurd inequality in the 19th-20th century, where the "merchant class" had the profits while the "working class" scraped by. It took France four republics to figure that out, thank you very much.
First of all, employers do care about age because age and productivity are strongly correlated.
I agree, I was just using discrimination as an example. It's a bad one, but replace age with any other factor that won't translate into "work". I however, do not support ageism. You're saying that everybody should be able to discriminate against the aged and that younger people should be working exclusively, by means of prejudice and discrimination. When you grow old, I hope you lose your job to a young'un and not be able to get hired anywhere because they feel that you're "too old" and will be unproductive - because the studies said so.
Second, if two individuals have equal productivity but only differ in age, should the company discriminate based on age? If someone is 90 years old and wants a job, why should you or I be allowed to vote for laws which make this illegal? If a parent wants to allow their child to work at age 10, why should you or I be allowed to vote for laws which make this illegal? Essentially, I am a realist and therefore I realize that the poverty experienced in other countries is far worse than poverty experienced in the US. I also realize that this may make some families best option having children work. Don't forget that the US has a long history of child labor, both in and out of the work force. For example, a couple hundred years ago the majority of the US population were farmers. Do you doubt that the children growing up on these farms put in long back breaking hours?
The US also has a long history of slave labor. The backs of the African-Americans were used to drive the cotton industry in the south. Does that mean it's okay, as long as the economy improves in the general? This neoliberal argument is unethical and I can't believe you just supported child labour because you don't want to put your hands in public policy and enact protectionist laws.
 
  • #27
opus said:
Because in a non-free-market economy, the government would go bankrupt right away (or fund such increases by higher "redistribution" from other tax sources and likely cause a rebellion). In a free-market economy, there'd be 100% unemployment if the minimum wage was like 200 dollars or something.

I have no idea what argument you are making here as it makes no sense.

opus said:
Yes, it is protectionism, but I think having 3 well-paid workers and 1 unemployed is better than having 4 underpaid workers especially if there is safety net in place. .

Why can't the individuals involved make this decision? You want to call me names, well here's one for you: Social Engineer. You think you can make better decisions for other people than they can for themselves. If someone is unemployed and goes to an employer wanting to work for less than minimum wage, how arrogant do you have to be to stop him? On a factual note there is also no evidence that minimum wage legislation leads to 3 well paid workers and 1 unemployed.

opus said:
This is the essence of Keynes - to protect against the ups and downs of the economy.

Wrong. Keynes mostly felt the market did a good job, he just thought that government could use fiscal policy to improve conditions during certain times. There is still much debate over whether he was correct. In case you don't know, Keynes also felt that Marx made no contribution to economics.

opus said:
In my opinion this is better than an unregulated market where you have overpaid workers when the economy is "good" and underpaid workers when the economy is "bad". There is no stability whatsoever.

What evidence do you have that people are over paid and under paid? Most economic literature shows that people are paid fairly closely to their productivity. People flip burgers at McDonalds instead of working on Wall Street because they have very differenct abilities, not because one is over paid or another is under paid.

opus said:
You're saying that it's good that some people make less than the minimum wage? Wow you really are a neoliberal economist. Get off your high horse. Going to a good university studying economics will make you better off than many people in the country, and the way you see it, their lives are better because they are going to earn less than 5$/hr? It's among the lowest minimum wages in the industrialized world, and you're trying to justify it for the sake of "efficiency". I really hope you'll ever know what it feels like to flip burgers while feeding 2 kids at home over formulating your "closed models" to explain an economy that affects people very directly.

I'm saying that people make minimum wage or less for very practical reasons, because they're not that productive. Furthermore, it must be there best job opportunity which is why they are working for it (instead of at a higher paying job). And there is nothing you can do about it. Especially using minimum wage legislation which is regarded as a very poor anti-poverty tool.

I need to get off of my high horse? You need to look in the mirror pal, as you're the one who thinks he posses the knowledge to make better decisions for individuals than they can for themselves. At least I understand that they are in the best place to make decisions for themselves.

And quit putting all kinds of silly words in my mouth. I am (obviously) not saying that they're life is better than mine because they make $5. What I am saying is that they're doing the best they can, and your feel good views and inneffective policies will not make they're lives better.

opus said:
You're foolish to think that child labour is warranted because it's part of "modernization". Japan became industrialized - did they resort to child labour in the 1940's? I don't think so. Your appeal to history is completely incorrect.

I'm not saying that child labor will necessarily raise someone from poverty. What I am saying is that countries have child labor for very specific and depressing reasons. And you're foolish to think that child labor laws (or minimum wages, tariffs, etc) will address these root causes of their poverty.

It's funny you bring up Japan, because many have noted that Japan generally modeled their economic system after ours (which relatively speaking is fairly capitalistic and free market). It's worked out pretty well.

opus said:
Our economy did not grow because people "busted" their ass off to get their children educated. People "bust" their ass off everyday and everywhere. To think that America industrialized while Africa did not because Americans "busted their ass" to send their kids to school is so completely narrow-sighted and narrow-minded. All parents want to send their child to school - but in many places, especially in the third-world, even school has become too expensive for their income. And your solution for this is for them to "bust their ass off"? This is sickening.

Again, you are putting words in my mouth. What I am saying is in order for a country to advance economically, they need to gain various levels of prosperity first. America's increased standard of living over the years is what has lead to the current economic situation. It's hard for people to get educated when they are struggling just to survive and put food on the table.

opus said:
Yay for anecdoctal evidence. Guess what, given if France had a good strong economy with many jobs, your grandfather would have gone to school instead of worked and gotten an even better job to survive. Your question revolves around "how do we solve poverty", and your answer to that is "let the children work and earn money" instead of "let them have a social safety net and higher wages at the cost of increasing taxes for the upper class".

I was originally asking you a question. Would your feel good policies actually benefit my grandfather back then? I say no, for the exact reasons you point out here. If he had better opportunities he would have taken advantage of them, so instead he optimized given the situation (look at that, I guess people do act fairly rational after all). And no, my question does not revolve around "how to solve poverty" given that poverty is not something you solve (unless of course you are one of those social engineer types). First off poverty is such a relative term. The "poor" in the US have a better standard of living than the rich in many other countries, as well as the richest people in the world hundreds of years ago. Second, I am not trying to solve poverty because people left to their own devices tend to pursue their interests, and markets form on their own, and this is how people escape the traps of poverty. Humans have been poor for a long time, and wealth is definitely the exception to the rule. However, when you look at the socities who escaped this poverty, they've generally done so through a system which realies mostly on capitalism.

opus said:
I agree, I was just using discrimination as an example. It's a bad one, but replace age with any other factor that won't translate into "work". I however, do not support ageism. You're saying that everybody should be able to discriminate against the aged and that younger people should be working exclusively, by means of prejudice and discrimination. When you grow old, I hope you lose your job to a young'un and not be able to get hired anywhere because they feel that you're "too old" and will be unproductive - because the studies said so.

What is your point? Are you saying that companies shouldn't have the right to fire people because they are less productive (whether because of age, education, or "society")? So you should not be allowed to fire your doctor, dentist, landlord, or teacher if they are doing a bad job? Or should you not be allowed to choose one product over another on the basis of it having lower prices?

opus said:
The US also has a long history of slave labor. The backs of the African-Americans were used to drive the cotton industry in the south. Does that mean it's okay, as long as the economy improves in the general?

Slave labor is not at all consistent with capitalism. In capitalism, individuals have property rights, and therefore, individuals own the fruits of their labor.

opus said:
This neoliberal argument is unethical and I can't believe you just supported child labour because you don't want to put your hands in public policy and enact protectionist laws.

Actually, it's not about being afraid of getting my hands dirty. Rather, it's about realizing that I don't have the proper knowledge or incentives to over ride other individuals decisions about their own life. If someone wants to work 100 hours a week, who am I to stop him? If someone wants to work for $3 an hour, who am I to stop him? If someone wants to buy his goods from China because they are just as good as mine yet less expensive, than who am I to stop him? Furthermore, it's also about seeing all of the harm and unintended consequences that such policies have caused.

It's like socialism you know. Once you see it in action, you realize that the idea and the reality are completely different things.
 
  • #28
Economist said:
Why can't the individuals involved make this decision? You want to call me names, well here's one for you: Social Engineer. You think you can make better decisions for other people than they can for themselves. If someone is unemployed and goes to an employer wanting to work for less than minimum wage, how arrogant do you have to be to stop him? On a factual note there is also no evidence that minimum wage legislation leads to 3 well paid workers and 1 unemployed.
Because individuals aren't making the decision, individuals are being subjugated by the "market" - corporations determining what their wages are. In a democratic socialist society, people vote for what the minimum wage should be. You speak as if people "want" to work for less than minimum wage under the coercion of the market. Your whole argument is still predicated on corporations and businesses knowing what's best - that the market can determine everything.
Wrong. Keynes mostly felt the market did a good job, he just thought that government could use fiscal policy to improve conditions during certain times. There is still much debate over whether he was correct. In case you don't know, Keynes also felt that Marx made no contribution to economics.
You're right, Marx made no contribution to economics. The market is good for efficiency, but it is horrible for inequality. Keynes saw government policy and a measure that compliments the market. But neoclassical economists like yourself want to remove all regulations completely (save things like antitrust and contract enforcement) for the sake of efficiency.
What evidence do you have that people are over paid and under paid? Most economic literature shows that people are paid fairly closely to their productivity. People flip burgers at McDonalds instead of working on Wall Street because they have very differenct abilities, not because one is over paid or another is under paid.
So you're saying that a CEO of a Fortune 500 is more 1000x "productive" than the wage-labourer? That is essentially what the income disparity is, and you saying "if you work more, that means you are more productive". But guess what, a lot of people making lots of money aren't productive at all! They just own the stocks and shares, or the means of production to society. This is capitalism, not meritocracy.
I'm saying that people make minimum wage or less for very practical reasons, because they're not that productive. Furthermore, it must be there best job opportunity which is why they are working for it (instead of at a higher paying job). And there is nothing you can do about it. Especially using minimum wage legislation which is regarded as a very poor anti-poverty tool.
Oh, so poverty is something that we can't work towards? We should just leave the Africans to starve to death because poverty is their own fault and only the market can fix it? That is essentially what you're saying.
I need to get off of my high horse? You need to look in the mirror pal, as you're the one who thinks he posses the knowledge to make better decisions for individuals than they can for themselves. At least I understand that they are in the best place to make decisions for themselves.
You think that a free market is where individuals make decisions for themselves? Yes, absolute freedom for Iraqis is being able to choose between Pepsi and Cola when they can't even get electricity or running water. Guess we'll have to privatize those utilities as well, so they can pay for it with their own wages, as it will stimulate "innovation" for competing corporations to drive down the cost of electricity and water. Flawless idea, except Iraq has been a disaster in capitalism and democracy.
And quit putting all kinds of silly words in my mouth. I am (obviously) not saying that they're life is better than mine because they make $5. What I am saying is that they're doing the best they can, and your feel good views and inneffective policies will not make they're lives better.
Yes, my views are simply "feel good" and my policies are ineffective because they aren't consistent with neoliberal policies like yours? You're saying then that the easiest way out of poverty is not by policy. I agree with that. However, that's not the end of the story. Poverty has a whole other dimension to it - the dimension of exploitation, and corporate domination. In your world, worker unions would not exist, and workers would have no rights. Because they are doing "the best they can", and have no role in saying what is and what is not, because it is a society dominated by the market. You're advocating for libertarian capitalist society where the government's only role is: security, contract enforcement, and antitrust legislation. Let the market decide everything else, because minimum wage legislation would only increase poverty at the cost of corporate "freedom" in the marketplace.
I'm not saying that child labor will necessarily raise someone from poverty. What I am saying is that countries have child labor for very specific and depressing reasons. And you're foolish to think that child labor laws (or minimum wages, tariffs, etc) will address these root causes of their poverty.
Countries have child labour because their government cannot afford social services to put children in school. Why is that? Why is it that they instead can work for multinational corporations where they can be paid monthly less than the cost of 1 share?
It's funny you bring up Japan, because many have noted that Japan generally modeled their economic system after ours (which relatively speaking is fairly capitalistic and free market). It's worked out pretty well.
They didn't use child labour. The rest is besides the point, thanks.
Again, you are putting words in my mouth. What I am saying is in order for a country to advance economically, they need to gain various levels of prosperity first. America's increased standard of living over the years is what has lead to the current economic situation. It's hard for people to get educated when they are struggling just to survive and put food on the table.
Why can't they put food on the table? Is it because they can't work hard enough?
I was originally asking you a question. Would your feel good policies actually benefit my grandfather back then? I say no, for the exact reasons you point out here. If he had better opportunities he would have taken advantage of them, so instead he optimized given the situation (look at that, I guess people do act fairly rational after all). And no, my question does not revolve around "how to solve poverty" given that poverty is not something you solve (unless of course you are one of those social engineer types). First off poverty is such a relative term. The "poor" in the US have a better standard of living than the rich in many other countries, as well as the richest people in the world hundreds of years ago. Second, I am not trying to solve poverty because people left to their own devices tend to pursue their interests, and markets form on their own, and this is how people escape the traps of poverty. Humans have been poor for a long time, and wealth is definitely the exception to the rule. However, when you look at the socities who escaped this poverty, they've generally done so through a system which realies mostly on capitalism.
If you looked at Nicaragua after their revolution, you can see that they made enormous progress in terms of land redistribution, income, infant mortality, and among other things under their socialist government. This is obviously an exception because most governments under so-called "revolutionary socialism" end up as dictatorships.

You speak as though the only way to development is through capitalism. This is clearly indicative of modernization theory, as opposed to dependency theory (yes you can read up on these political science 101 terms) and is hugely flawed. You somehow think that development is impossible unless you have a capitalist free-market system. Latin America tried exactly this and it was an astronomical failure. Economists like yourself again, ignore this, and bring up stories about the Industrial Revolution, etc.
What is your point? Are you saying that companies shouldn't have the right to fire people because they are less productive (whether because of age, education, or "society")? So you should not be allowed to fire your doctor, dentist, landlord, or teacher if they are doing a bad job? Or should you not be allowed to choose one product over another on the basis of it having lower prices?
Don't twist my words. Companies can fire whoever they want, but they should not discriminate on age. Discrimination on productivity is fine, but to say "sorry, you're too old to work here" is blatant prejudice. You can measure productivity, thankfully, but your rhetoric here is based again on a straw man. I never said anything about prohibiting who corporations can fire, I said we should prohibit discrimination on the grounds of age. They can discriminate all they want from worker reports and evaluations.
Slave labor is not at all consistent with capitalism. In capitalism, individuals have property rights, and therefore, individuals own the fruits of their labor.
Well the exact argument used back then was that blacks weren't human, or that blacks were property. Thankfully we see this is blatant racism.
Actually, it's not about being afraid of getting my hands dirty. Rather, it's about realizing that I don't have the proper knowledge or incentives to over ride other individuals decisions about their own life. If someone wants to work 100 hours a week, who am I to stop him? If someone wants to work for $3 an hour, who am I to stop him? If someone wants to buy his goods from China because they are just as good as mine yet less expensive, than who am I to stop him? Furthermore, it's also about seeing all of the harm and unintended consequences that such policies have caused.
See you're saying that people want to work for $3 an hour as part of their "rational self-interest". But I can tell you that they would rather work for the minimum wage than work for $3 an hour for the same job. But I can also tell you that the corporations would rather pay $3 an hour than the minimum wage. This is not an issue of efficiency or marketplace freedom, it's an issue of corporate domination. Yes, raising the minimum wage here causes corporations to go offshore - but guess who they exploit now? Instead of exploiting American workers, they exploit workers from the Phillipines, Myanmar, and every other place that manufacturers your wardrobe. So your solution is that we should match these third world country wages and bring competition back, so that Americans can have an industrial economy again? Yes, Americans too can work for 100 dollars a month to match workers from the Phillipines, because that is true economic freedom.
It's like socialism you know. Once you see it in action, you realize that the idea and the reality are completely different things.
We've never had socialism. The USSR was not socialism, it was a collectivist oligarchy, thank you very much. The closest to socialism is in the Nordic countries, where democratic socialism (though more capitalist than socialist, but much more socialist than any other place in the world) is. And guess what? Norway, Finland, Sweden, Denmark, and Iceland all top off the US in most humanitarian rankings.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #29
Opus, you are attacking economist and you don't even have a defined point.

There is the world as it is, and then there is the world Opus wants. That's about the jist of this conversation.
 
  • #30
Economist said:
Slave labor is not at all consistent with capitalism. In capitalism, individuals have property rights, and therefore, individuals own the fruits of their labor.
I don't quite understand how you've come to this conclusion. Are you saying America was not a capitalist country until 1863? What system did America have in that brief period between 1776 and 1863?
 
  • #31
ShawnD said:
I don't quite understand how you've come to this conclusion. Are you saying America was not a capitalist country until 1863? What system did America have in that brief period between 1776 and 1863?

My point is that when people say that slavery is a part of or consistent with capitalism, I have to disagree. Yes, the US was still fairly capitalistic during that time period, but slavery is not an example of this capitalism. Capitalism is founded on individuals rights, liberty, and property rights. Slaves did not have these rights and liberties.
 
  • #32
drankin said:
There is the world as it is, and then there is the world Opus wants. That's about the jist of this conversation.
"Economics is harder than physics; luckily it is not quite as hard as sociology." - Krugman
 
  • #33
Economist said:
My point is that when people say that slavery is a part of or consistent with capitalism, I have to disagree. Yes, the US was still fairly capitalistic during that time period, but slavery is not an example of this capitalism. Capitalism is founded on individuals rights, liberty, and property rights. Slaves did not have these rights and liberties.

I think you're taking this the wrong way. Slavery was certainly capitalistic for whites; they had individual rights to buy, sell, and own other human beings. It was a free market for everyone, except blacks. This does not imply that capitalism inherently brings about slavery or even that capitalism is evil, which is why I think you're being offended.
 
  • #34
Contrapositive said:
Slavery was certainly capitalistic for whites; they had individual rights to buy, sell, and own other human beings. It was a free market for everyone, except blacks.

I agree (and just for the record I was not getting offended). I am just saying that it's only capitalism for one group, which isn't the best example of capitalism.
 
  • #35
opus said:
"Economics is harder than physics; luckily it is not quite as hard as sociology." - Krugman

George Stigler was once quoted as telling some of his graduate students, "There is only one social science. And we are it's sole practitioners'." Anyway, what does throwing out some dumb quote prove. I mean, I don't even buy Stiglers quote (although economists are probably better trained in mathematics and statistics).

It's funny that you critized me for quoting Don Boudreaux and then you go and quote Paul Krugman. Most liberal economists don't even trust or believe anything Paul Krugman says these days.
 
  • #36
opus said:
Because individuals aren't making the decision, individuals are being subjugated by the "market" - corporations determining what their wages are. In a democratic socialist society, people vote for what the minimum wage should be. You speak as if people "want" to work for less than minimum wage under the coercion of the market. Your whole argument is still predicated on corporations and businesses knowing what's best - that the market can determine everything.

Corporations don't control what peoples wages are any more than you control how much steaks costs. I thought you said that you took intro economics? Then how come you don't understand the simplest applications of supply and demand? As Alfred Marshall stated, "We might as well reasonably dispute whether it is the upper or under blade of a pair of scissors that cuts a piece of paper, as whether value is governed by [demand] or [supply]."

Again, answer me this. If I want to work for $1 an hour (and I find an employer who will take me at this wage). Why (because of some legislation that you voted for) should it be illegal for me to enter in this voluntary contract with an employer for $1 and hour?

And I definitely don't think that corporations know what's best for me. But I also don't think that you or some politician know what's best for me. Corporations only get rich off me, if I choose to buy their product. I only work for a corporation if I choose to. However, when it comes to government officials, you must pay (assuming you're a tax payer) even if you did not vote for them. What you're not realizing is that markets do not work best because corporations decide everything. Rather markets work best because they're based on allowing many individuals to pursue their own interests. As Milton Friedman said, "If I want a blue tie, I get a blue tie. If you want a green tie, you get a green tie."

Low wages are not determined through the coercion of the market. If this was the case then most people would earn the minimum wage. In fact, only about 2% of the population over age 25 works for the minimum wage. Low wages usually happen to employees who have low skills, low education, low work experience, etc. Once again, answer my question: If a minimum wage of $8 an hour is desirable, than why isn't a minimum wage of $20 an hour even better?

Also, you said something about me being against unions. Actually this is not true, I have no problem with unions, as long as they do not have legislation to protect them. Such as legislation that says that businesses must hire from unions, and the like.

opus said:
So you're saying that a CEO of a Fortune 500 is more 1000x "productive" than the wage-labourer? That is essentially what the income disparity is, and you saying "if you work more, that means you are more productive". But guess what, a lot of people making lots of money aren't productive at all! They just own the stocks and shares, or the means of production to society. This is capitalism, not meritocracy.

Actually this has more to do with the economics of tournaments. If you really want to inform yourself you should read some stuff about this. It's the same reason that an athlete might be slightly better than another athlete but make triple. In sports, essentially people care about watching the best of the best, so consumers are willing to pay much more for slight increases in talent. Same thing can happen with CEOs, as sometimes it's imporant to have someone that is slightly more productive. Furthermore, these are not the norms in the economy (but more like the exception to the rule). So for most practicle purposes, people get paid what they produce.

And for the people who got rich off stock, they are either incredibly lucky or incredibly smart, because stocks can sometimes be a risky game. They choose to invest their money in a company that needed funds, and if worked out for them. The flip side is that if they chose wrong, they would have lost that money. They were willing to take a risk with their own money and it paid off.

opus said:
You think that a free market is where individuals make decisions for themselves? Yes, absolute freedom for Iraqis is being able to choose between Pepsi and Cola when they can't even get electricity or running water.

Nope. But freedom to choose Pepsi and Coke is usually related to freedom to make many more decisions. Furthemore, people in capitalistic societies tend to live longer healthier lives, be more educated, have more liesure time, more freedom in who they work for, etc, which I think you would agree are much more important than choosing between drinking Pepsi or Coke.

opus said:
Countries have child labour because their government cannot afford social services to put children in school. Why is that?

Why can't their government afford to put children in schools. Because government creates absolutely no wealth. Individuals on the other hand are able to create wealth. When someone takes some plastic and some electronic equipment that is worth $100 and turns it into a computer that costs $250, they have created wealth ($150 to be exact). They took resources and found a more efficient use for them. People used to only value those resources at $100 but now they value it at $250. Governments on the other hand just tax the wealth that others create. Economics is not a zero sum game. Bill Gates is not rich at the expense of other people being poor. Rather Bill Gates has created wealth. Similarly, when people go to work, they create wealth. When multinational corporations stay in business, it's because they are creating wealth. If they fail to produce wealth they will go out of business. For example, if I took those $100 of resources and made something you'd only pay $75 for, than I lost money, and I wouldn't continue for very long. Essentially the market works as feedback to tell others whether they actually produced something of value or not. Socialism fails to produce quality goods and services because it lacks this important decentralised feedback.

And you're asking me why people work for a wage less than 1 share? Generally because they are uneducated and live in horrible poverty and that job is the highest paying job they can get (which is why they are doing it). Education is very important from an economic point of view, precisely because it is highly correlated with productivity. Essentially, these people are working for a low wage because they have no better alternatives. It also seems like government is the likely cause of many of these countries poverty. And various policies which attempt to address this poverty, usually don't work (in fact, they can often make it worse). So why would you want to take away their highest paying job opportunity? You're sick. Implementing minimum wages doesn't work in this case. The company may fire some people, or other higher skilled workers in the area will now compete for these jobs (an in fact will likely get them). So even if the employment stays the same, it might be completely different people, and those who originally worked there are back to a lower paying job opportunity. I wish it wasn't the case, and I wish your feel good policies actually could help and make a difference, but in reality they don't. I'm not saying that it's perfect. What I am saying is that it's optimal. On another note, job experience generally increases productivity. When countries are becoming industrialised, they may start off making cheap toys or clothes, but generally as people start accumulating more skills and wealth, they are able to move into better paying higher skilled jobs. After generations of this, it can actually make a pretty big difference. How do you think countries have growth rates year after year?

opus said:
Why can't they put food on the table? Is it because they can't work hard enough?

No, it's not about working hard. Effort doesn't necessarily matter. Like the phrase says, "work smarter not harder." The reason people have high paying jobs in the US, is because they're generally productive and highly skilled. Why make toys, when you can develop computer programs? Per hour of work, people in the US are more productive, not because of hard work but rather because of human capital. Just like the reason college graduates get paid more than high school drop outs is not because they work harder, but rather because they have greater human capital. And if someone doesn't currently have the skills to develop computer programs, you're not going to help their poverty by getting rid of all the toy making jobs.

opus said:
See you're saying that people want to work for $3 an hour as part of their "rational self-interest". But I can tell you that they would rather work for the minimum wage than work for $3 an hour for the same job. But I can also tell you that the corporations would rather pay $3 an hour than the minimum wage. This is not an issue of efficiency or marketplace freedom, it's an issue of corporate domination. Yes, raising the minimum wage here causes corporations to go offshore - but guess who they exploit now? Instead of exploiting American workers, they exploit workers from the Phillipines, Myanmar, and every other place that manufacturers your wardrobe.

Again as Alfred Marshall stated, "We might as well reasonably dispute whether it is the upper or under blade of a pair of scissors that cuts a piece of paper, as whether value is governed by [demand] or [supply]." In other words, it doesn't much matter what they each want, it matters how their wants interact with each other. I also would rather work for $50 an hour than $10 an hour. But guess what, that doesn't mean jack **** because someone will not pay me $50 an hour (I'm not that productive yet). Furthermore, the corporation would rather pay somebody $1 an hour, but again, that doesn't mean jack **** because if people aren't willing to work for it, then they won't have employees. How about another analogy since this economics thing really isn't your cup of tea. I want to date Tyra Banks or Heidi Klum, but guess what that doesn't mean jack ****.

I also find your use of the word exploitation incorrect. Is it really exploitation when a company goes into a country, and people voluntarily choose to work at a certain wage? I already pointed out that people work at these jobs willingly, because it's their best opportunity, so how exactly is that exploitation?

And please actually answer my question this time, instead of cherry picking quotes, and launching personal attacks.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #37
Economist said:
Again, answer me this. If I want to work for $1 an hour (and I find an employer who will take me at this wage). Why (because of some legislation that you voted for) should it be illegal for me to enter in this voluntary contract with an employer for $1 and hour?

You could use the same argument against OSHA. Lots of people are willing to work in extremely dangerous conditions, but I don't see anybody *****ing about OSHA and the cost to comply with their standards. Fume hoods in chem labs cost several thousand dollars each. Why don't we just scrap those and do it all on the bench? A guy testing SO2 should just stop being a ***** and hold his breath; he doesn't need an air pack.
 
  • #38
ShawnD said:
You could use the same argument against OSHA. Lots of people are willing to work in extremely dangerous conditions, but I don't see anybody *****ing about OSHA and the cost to comply with their standards. Fume hoods in chem labs cost several thousand dollars each. Why don't we just scrap those and do it all on the bench? A guy testing SO2 should just stop being a ***** and hold his breath; he doesn't need an air pack.

Actually, the economics on safety regulations are quite clear. Increased safety in work environments generally leads to lower wages. I also don't agree with most government imposed safety regulation in the work place. If someone is willing to work in a dangerous environment, who am I to stop him?
 
  • #39
Economist said:
Actually, the economics on safety regulations are quite clear. Increased safety in work environments generally leads to lower wages. I also don't agree with most government imposed safety regulation in the work place. If someone is willing to work in a dangerous environment, who am I to stop him?
Wow, so we should get rid of all regulations in the market? Who cares about lead in our water, mercury in our food, as long as those corporations keep cutting costs and corners to bring the savings to us, the consumer!

EDIT: you know what, this video can explain things better than i ever can, also with cute drawings

http://www.slatev.com/player.html?id=1334447289
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #40
opus said:
Wow, so we should get rid of all regulations in the market? Who cares about lead in our water, mercury in our food, as long as those corporations keep cutting costs and corners to bring the savings to us, the consumer!

This is such an innaccurate picture. Do you really think the reason companies don't poison us is because of the FDA? Do you also think it is in a profit maximizing firms best interest to intentionally hurt their consumers? I can just hear them in the board room saying, "I've got a wonderful idea! Let's put mercury in their food, then they will continue paying us for our product! Muhahahaha." Companies don't act safely because they are compasionate, rather they do so because it is in the their financial best interest. In other words, it's hard to stay in business when you mistreat customers, which is what really keeps companies in check (not the government).

Also, how do you explain the numerous companies that go above and beyond the safety regulations? You still haven't answered my related question, of how only like 2% of the US work force over 25 gets paid minimum wage? If these companies were so evil and had so much power like you say, then why wouldn't more peoples' wages be the minimum?

opus said:
EDIT: you know what, this video can explain things better than i ever can, also with cute drawings

http://www.slatev.com/player.html?id=1334447289

And you know what? This video can explain it much better than I can. Watch Volume number 7 titled "Who protects the consumer?" It's in the bottom right in case you don't see how to change volumes.

http://ideachannel.tv/

Edit: I just watched your video (I hope you may extend the courtesy of watching mine). I would actually like to point out that I am not against environmental regulation, because you have standard negative externalities (although I may be skeptical of how governments will actually tackle the problems). The same negative externalities don't quite apply in these other industries. In other words, environmental regulation is necessary because two individuals acting through voluntary exchange are more likely to harm third parties. But when an individuals chooses to work for less than the minimum wage or work at a dangerous job, then you don't have as many negative externality issues. Mostly likely he choose this option because he deemed it as his best opportunity for the moment, and if he is harming anybody, it is himself, and last I checked the government isn't a parent or a nanny who is there to protect from yourself and make sure you don't make bad decisions.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #41
opus said:
Flawless idea, except Iraq has been a disaster in capitalism and democracy.
Iraq has had two elections; in the National Assembly election of 2005 ~12 million people voted or ~79% of those registered. Apologies for letting a fact get in the way of your opinion.
http://www.sptimes.com/2005/12/29/news_pf/Worldandnation/UN_led_team_finds_Ira.shtml"
http://fpc.state.gov/documents/organization/68287.pdf"
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #42
opus said:
. And guess what? Norway, Finland, Sweden, Denmark, and Iceland all top off the US in most humanitarian rankings.
For the general population of the country (not everybody) the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_%28PPP%29_per_capita" , an indicator of, say, how much food one can buy with their income, has US #2 to #6 ; Sweden is #15 to #18. Now take away some niche countries that average point sources of wealth over vary small populations and the US is easily #1: Norway - North sea oil >50% of exports/4M people; Qatar - gulf oil/900k people; Luxem. - banks/480k people; Ireland (mostly Dublin, great town) - interesting but most of the $ is going offshore.

But to be fair we should compare the US to industrial democracies of some comparable size and in that case the US is clearly #1 followed by Canada - again doing well with oil exports, UK, Japan, Germany - might give them a break after absorbing the east, and France, which one might say has the most socialist economy of the 5, last.

If one wanted more of a compassion index, one might look at charitable donations in which the US is #1, a generous ~1.5% of GDP, UK comes in 2nd at half that (percent of GDP)

How about the best place to get a job? Unemployment rates: Japan #1 4.1%, US 4.8, UK 5.4, Canada 5.9, Germany 7.1, France 8.7
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #43
mheslep said:
Iraq has had two elections; in the National Assembly election of 2005 ~12 million people voted or ~79% of those registered. Apologies for letting a fact get in the way of your opinion.
http://www.sptimes.com/2005/12/29/news_pf/Worldandnation/UN_led_team_finds_Ira.shtml"
http://fpc.state.gov/documents/organization/68287.pdf"
"Yet due largely to political pressure from the international community, the elections went ahead in January 2005, under a misguided "closed party list" system. Rather than choosing a specific candidate, voters across the country chose from among rival lists of candidates backed and organized by political parties."
- http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/11/02/opinion/edallawi.php

Yes, because a successful democracy (a "fact" in your book) is a place of sectarian violence and non-stop religious rife.

EDIT:
mheslep said:
For the general population of the country (not everybody) the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_%28PPP%29_per_capita" , an indicator of, say, how much food one can buy with their income, has US #2 to #6 ; Sweden is #15 to #18. Now take away some niche countries that average point sources of wealth over vary small populations and the US is easily #1: Norway - North sea oil >50% of exports/4M people; Qatar - gulf oil/900k people; Luxem. - banks/480k people; Ireland (mostly Dublin, great town) - interesting but most of the $ is going offshore.
I said humanitarian rankings. No one doubts that the US is the richest country in the world (which GDP/PPP measures). I don't know what point your making, because clearly it does not refute the success of the democratic socialist models in Europe.
But to be fair we should compare the US to industrial democracies of some comparable size and in that case the US is clearly #1 followed by Canada - again doing well with oil exports, UK, Japan, Germany - might give them a break after absorbing the east, and France, which one might say is the most socialist of the 5, last.

If one wanted more of a compassion index, one might look at charitable donations in which the US is #1, a generous ~1.5% of GDP, UK comes in 2nd at half that (percent of GDP)
You're completely wrong. http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/row/RS22032.pdf

The US is the highest donor in the world, yes, but they are among the lowest as donors on a % of GDP. There is nobody that donates above 1% of GDP - the UN "mandate" was to reach 0.7%. Very few countries have exceeded that, and the United States is near dead-last in terms of the OECD. Nice try, though.

EDIT 2 since you edited in more uncited figures:
How about the best place to get a job? Unemployment rates: Japan #1 4.1%, US 4.8, UK 5.4, Canada 5.9, Germany 7.1, France 8.7
Please have a look at http://www.oecd.org/document/38/0,3343,en_2649_33927_36936230_1_1_1_1,00.html

It's ultimately difficult to have comparative statistics on unemployment because there is a vast multitude of definitions on what "employment" and "unemployment" means. You can read the wikipedia article for this information. However, given that you normalize the figures across the countries, you will find very little discrepancy between most industrial economies. Not to mention ongoing economic cycles as well which ultimately affect these figures year to year.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #44
mheslep said:
For the general population of the country (not everybody) the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_%28PPP%29_per_capita" , an indicator of, say, how much food one can buy with their income, has US #2 to #6

PPP per capita is always the best economic index to use when comparing countries standards of living. People generally use exchange rates which gives one a very distorted picture. For example, when you hear someone saying that "The average person in a country Y only makes $2 a day" they are usually referring to exchange rates (in other words, how many US dollars could they buy with their daily earnings). However, this is a bad measure because it fails to take into account the fact that food (and other goods) are cheaper in those countries. Just to be clear, often times they are still really poor, but just not as poor as exchange rates would indicate.

To quote the macroeconomics textbook we used in my intermediate macro class: "The difference between PPP numbers and the numbers based on current current exchange rates can be very large. Return to our comparison between India and the United States. We saw that, at current exchange rates, the ratio of GDP per capita in the US to GDP per capita in India was 75. Using PPP numbers, the ratio is only 13. Although this is still a large difference, it is much smaller than the ratioo we obtained using current exchange rates. Or take comparisons among rich countries. Based on the numbers we saw from Chapter 1 - numbers constructed using current exchange rates - GDP per capita in the US in 2003 was equal to 102% of the GDP per capita in Japan. But, based on the PPP numbers in Table 10-1, GDP per capita in the US is, in fact, 137% of GDP per capita in Japan. More generally, PPP numbers suggest that the US still has the highest GDP per capita among the world's major countries."

mheslep said:
Apologies for letting a fact get in the way of your opinion.

LOL. That's funny. I'm definitely going to use this sometime. Don't worry though, I won't use it on this forum as that would be bad taste.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #45
opus said:
"Yet due largely to political pressure from the international community, the elections went ahead in January 2005, under a misguided "closed party list" system. Rather than choosing a specific candidate, voters across the country chose from among rival lists of candidates backed and organized by political parties."
- http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/11/02/opinion/edallawi.php
Well I'm an interested in what Allawi has to say, but hardly find him persuasive as he was elected to nothing by the nation and was effectively removed from office by the onset of elections.

Yes, because a successful democracy (a "fact" in your book) is a place of sectarian violence and non-stop religious rife.
The evidence of democracy in this case is merely what I stated earlier, that a vast number of people voted despite the the threat of violence. I don't lay responsibility the horrendous Al-qaeda enhanced sectarian violence on the 12 million that voted. Please let's stop with the avalanche of strawmen arguments ('in your book...', 'so you must think ...'). I'm interested in some of what you say and a discussion free from fallacy will be more productive.
 
  • #46
opus said:
I said humanitarian rankings.
'Humanitarian rankings' meaning exactly what then? Do you have in mind something superior to the standard of living indicated by PPP qualified GDP?

No one doubts that the US is the richest country in the world (which GDP/PPP measures). I don't know what point your making, because clearly it does not refute the success of the democratic socialist models in Europe.
What success? I see your opinion again. Please suggest a metric success that improves on the one on the table.

You're completely wrong. http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/row/RS22032.pdf

The US is the highest donor in the world, yes, but they are among the lowest as donors on a % of GDP. There is nobody that donates above 1% of GDP - the UN "mandate" was to reach 0.7%. Very few countries have exceeded that, and the United States is near dead-last in terms of the OECD. Nice try, though.
Yes you caught me here, I was low, its more like 2.2% of GDP now, or http://www.philanthropyuk.org/Resources/USphilanthropy"). Look, we may have some interesting point - counter point here on the effectiveness (or lack there of) of various economic policies, income disparities, but on the subject of charitable contribution it is game over, no country even comes close to the United States.

On the subject of purely govt. sponsored foreign aid, last I looked the evidence that it is effective, as now practiced, was decidedly mixed. I'd be interested, seriously, in evidence demonstrating effectiveness.

Finally, in looking at cited CRS report which has Norway as the #1 percentage ODA giver (no dispute, good for them): I note it mostly excludes military aid and it appears to give short shrift to it when it does, apparently only counting operational $(gas/salaries/etc). Now, many countries sent help for the Tsunami. The US sent the http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/politics/wire/sns-ap-tsunami-us,1,4959430.story?coll=sns-ap-politics-headlines" to Indonesia for the Tsunami relief. A Nimitz class like the AL has three hospitals on board that can treat several hundred people; they are nuclear powered and can supply emergency electrical power to shore facilities; they have three cafeterias with the capacity to feed 3,000 people three meals a day, they can produce several thousand gallons of fresh water from sea water each day, and they carry half a dozen helicopters for use in transporting victims and injured to and from their flight deck. How many such aircraft carriers does Norway have?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #47
mheslep said:
On the subject of purely govt. sponsored foreign aid, last I looked the evidence that it is effective, as now practiced, was decidedly mixed. I'd be interested, seriously, in evidence demonstrating effectiveness.

I'm not trying to get in the middle of your guys conversation, but I had something to add about this (namely foriegn aid). The book by William Easterly (NYU economics professor and a former research economist at the World Bank) seems to indicate that it may not be very effective. I'm not saying that I am against foreign aid, rather I am just trying to point out that it may not be a very good tool for aleaviating poverty (just like minimum wage, tariffs, etc which is part of the reason I don't have much faith in policy to address these problems). Anyway, it's supposed to be a good book, and if you don't feel like reading it but still want to be informed, then go to google video and type in William Eastery and you can hear some of his presentations/speaches on the topic/book.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1594200378/?tag=pfamazon01-20
 
  • #48
mheslep said:
'Humanitarian rankings' meaning exactly what then? Do you have in mind something superior to the standard of living indicated by PPP qualified GDP?
Things like the UN HDI, Transparency International, Freedom House, etc.

It is bull**** that you mention 'standard of living' now, because GDP doesn't measure a standard of living. An economy may have the highest GDP in the world may also have a terrible standard of living. It is not a measure of health, equality, or education. All it measures is economic activity. Granted there are strong connections between economic activty and the aspects described, your argument is trying to jump from one thing to the next. Read Economist's post on GDP as a measure, which I completely agree with.
What success? I see your opinion again. Please suggest a metric success that improves on the one on the table.
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?SID=mail&articleID=000AF3D5-6DC9-152E-A9F183414B7F0000&chanID=sa006 and http://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/content/oct2006/gb20061011_072596.htm and here. Obviously relates to my response above, but your entire claim to "country success" is predicated on GDP/PPP, and economic perfomrance exclusively.
Yes you caught me here, I was low, its more like 2.2% of GDP now, or http://www.philanthropyuk.org/Resources/USphilanthropy"). Look, we may have some interesting point - counter point here on the effectiveness (or lack there of) of various economic policies, income disparities, but on the subject of charitable contribution it is game over, no country even comes close to the United States.
Philantrophy has more in line to do with culture than public policy. Your article says this itself. Also, Canada beats the US by 0.1%! That probably again says something about the effect of culture, since both countries are similar in that respect. After all, philantrophy is "irrational" economic behaviour, and originally had religious roots. That's the whole point of the UN Millennium goals, to attack poverty from an institutional perspective, which says much more than a bunch of generous "individuals" that give, ladened with issues of wealth and class. Not to say that Bill Clinton et al. aren't bad people - just philanthropists are philanthropists. The wealth of a few individuals does not negate the total self-interest of everybody else (that is, the government).

There's also philantrophic self-interest, which itself seems like a contradiction. Intel spends a lot of money on education for third-world countries, which even the chairman admits, http://www.siliconvalley.com/latestheadlines/ci_7331276?nclick_check=1 . After all, Intel will be in the computers of each and every one of them. You can regard the Marshall Plan in pretty much the same light.

This is also not an argument against philanthropy, just scepticism that many believe philanthropy is anunquestionable "good".
Finally, in looking at cited CRS report which has Norway as the #1 percentage ODA giver (no dispute, good for them): I note it mostly excludes military aid and it appears to give short shrift to it when it does, apparently only counting operational $(gas/salaries/etc). Now, many countries sent help for the Tsunami. The US sent the http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/politics/wire/sns-ap-tsunami-us,1,4959430.story?coll=sns-ap-politics-headlines" to Indonesia for the Tsunami relief. A Nimitz class like the AL has three hospitals on board that can treat several hundred people; they are nuclear powered and can supply emergency electrical power to shore facilities; they have three cafeterias with the capacity to feed 3,000 people three meals a day, they can produce several thousand gallons of fresh water from sea water each day, and they carry half a dozen helicopters for use in transporting victims and injured to and from their flight deck. How many such aircraft carriers does Norway have?
So your prescription is that everybody should build aircraft carriers to combat poverty? You think that the only role an aircraft carrier plays is to help disasters?

I am not doubting the good intentions here (after all, lives were saved), but I am doubting on how you use an example of "relief" coming from a product of a military-industrial complex.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #49
ShawnD said:
This would essentially make menstruation a felony since it is very common for eggs to become fertilized but not stick to the uterus. Fertilized egg leaves with the rest of the monthly cleanup, and suddenly a woman is guilty of killing the "living person" who was inside her for a total of 1 day.

Under what Colorado statute would the woman be prosecuted?
 
Back
Top