Drinky Crow said:I'll answer that question when I'm done sodomizing the corpse of Leon Trotsky, sir.
You must be talking upper upper upper management.Matlock said:Fuck the working class! MANAGEMENT IS WHERE IT'S AT.
Worse, the growth in profits combined with a drop in wage and salary incomes suggest that the recovery has a narrow base, with most American consumers only able to increase their purchasing power through debt.
Evolution VIII said:Oh, the EPI. They're one of the most liberal economic think tanks in the country. I'll pass.
That just makes their conclusions or contextual observations "biased". It doe not change the statistical information comparing this to the last eight economic recoveries (from the US government). It does not change historic peaks for these statistics.Source: National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA) from the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA).
you can argue that if you want.These are ominous signs, suggesting a new march toward greater inequality in the American economy. Worse, the growth in profits combined with a drop in wage and salary incomes suggest that the recovery has a narrow base, with most American consumers only able to increase their purchasing power through debt. Wage growth is not just fair, it is also necessary for a more sustainable recovery.
Evolution VIII said:Perhaps this is the problem with the working class, and not with the corporation. Why exactly does the working class have to finance their purchasing power through debt, when all they actually need to do is adjust their consumption patterns, thereby enjoying a healthier, affordable lifestyle?
When average wage increases has been lagging behind inflation. When the cost of living has been increasing beyond either.Perhaps this is the problem with the working class, and not with the corporation. Why exactly does the working class have to finance their purchasing power through debt, when all they actually need to do is adjust their consumption patterns, thereby enjoying a healthier, affordable lifestyle?
scola said:That just makes their conclusions or contextual observations "biased". It doe not change the statistical information comparing this to the last eight economic recoveries (from the US government). It does not change historic peaks for these statistics.
When average wage increases has been lagging behind inflation.
You are making an assumption that all of the consumption patterns of the entire working class are somehow gross or unwarrented. Not everyone is out buying and HDTV that is outside of their means, I assume some are just trying to get to work, feed the kids and pay the bills.
Well, we both know thatEvolution VIII said:The beauty of economics is you can bend it to meet whatever political agenda you most align yourself with. Get a conservative think tank and they will say that the economy is all hunky dory. So I'll pass on both.
Well I think regardless of spin from any camp, I don't think one month of anything isolated by itself is very tellingEvolution VIII said:The beauty of economics is you can bend it to meet whatever political agenda you most align yourself with. Get a conservative think tank and they will say that the economy is all hunky dory. So I'll pass on both.
Oh, and if you read the stats on inflation adjusted income, it says that personal income rose .6 percent in the month of April. I guess workers are worse off, eh?
Perhaps this is the problem with the working class, and not with the corporation. Why exactly does the working class have to finance their purchasing power through debt, when all they actually need to do is adjust their consumption patterns, thereby enjoying a healthier, affordable lifestyle?
Neutron Night said:Solution to poverty: BUY LESS STUFF!!!
Brilliant. Oh wait, no, you're an idiot.
Drinky Crow said:I'll answer that question when I'm done sodomizing the corpse of Leon Trotsky, sir.
Evolution VIII said:Why exactly does the working class have to finance their purchasing power through debt, when all they actually need to do is adjust their consumption patterns, thereby enjoying a healthier, affordable lifestyle?
Why exactly does the working class have to finance their purchasing power through debt, when all they actually need to do is adjust their consumption patterns, thereby enjoying a healthier, affordable lifestyle?
Translation: A bunch of layoffs, and the remaining employees are now working harder.not surprising but not a crisis, businesses have made productivity gains, so they need the same or less workers at this point,
Translation: The corporate profits bump on the graph hasn't yet translated into actual jobs, and probably never will.when demand picks up, they will have to hire and it goes from a business market where they can pick and choose to a employee market where they will have to lay down incentives to have people working for them.
You do know the rich are the ones who pay the taxes right?Pimpwerx said:Aren't the richboy tax cuts (aka economic stimulus) supposed to translate into more jobs?
I know what you are trying to say, but don't you think that most corporations had way too many people from the boom of the late 90's? They "trimmed the fat" and unfortunately will not be hiring as many as they laid-off. (Especially now that labor is dirt cheap in India and other Asian countries and is the current, widely-accepted trend.)Aren't these companies supposed to keep their profits at a nominal level and transfer the profits into job creation??? Oops, Error 001 for Reaganomics. You can bring a horse to water, but you can't make rich people stop hording their money. The job market shouldn't have to shrink. As profits increase, these companies should be rehiring all those lost positions. Instead, they are just grinding their current employees more, replacing some of the lost jobs with lower paying ones, and reinvesting the rest of the money elsewhere.![]()
Seriously, profits are up. Why? Aren't the richboy tax cuts (aka economic stimulus) supposed to translate into more jobs? Aren't these companies supposed to keep their profits at a nominal level and transfer the profits into job creation???
The job market shouldn't have to shrink. As profits increase, these companies should be rehiring all those lost positions. Instead, they are just grinding their current employees more, replacing some of the lost jobs with lower paying ones, and reinvesting the rest of the money elsewhere.
I know what you are trying to say, but don't you think that most corporations had way too many people from the boom of the late 90's? They "trimmed the fat" and unfortunately will not be hiring as many as they laid-off. (Especially now that labor is dirt cheap in India and other Asian countries and is the current, widely-accepted trend.)
what is this "nominal" level? companies goal is to make as much profit as possible, not we have a profit, lets make jobs for the helluva of it, you create jobs to fill a need of a business. companies are hiring and hourly wages are up this year keeping pace with consumer price inflation.
No one has a right to a job nor should companies ever be forced to hire just because, thats the sort of nonsense that is killing the German market.
Good, so the tax cuts should be repealed. No one has a right to do anything apparently. The tax cuts aren't there just to generate numbers on a quarterly report. They weren't just to allow Bush's Yale buddies to horde a few more millions. It's supposed to create jobs and get people back spending and building the economy again. It has not done that. Trickle-down my ass. You say no one has a right to a job? Well, businesses don't have a right to tax cuts. PEACE.
Most of the tax relieve helped the middle- and upper-class -- the one's who pay taxes. The poorer people pay jack with respect to their income. And that's a fact. Outsourcing has been a common practice for years in corporate America, it's just now becoming more widely accepted. The tax cuts aren't stealing from American tax payers -- remember, it's the rich that pay taxes.Outsourcing being cost-effective is not an excuse. The tax cuts should have come with a strict stipulation that profits within a certain percentage should go directly to employment, otherwise they don't qualify. There's no reason companies should be able to take their tax savings and send it to India. That's stealing from American tax payers. The globalist socialis in me agrees with the concept of wealth redistribution, but it seems obvious to me that this is a great disservice to the American people who essentially co-signed to it. The tax cuts were meant to help here, not abroad.
The more disposable income people have (no matter how wealthy), the more services are used and then the more service-type jobs are created. Look at Starbucks, they just reported an increase in revenue. It does trickle down, just not as fast as some were hoping. And all reports from the last several months show an increase in jobs.Good, so the tax cuts should be repealed. No one has a right to do anything apparently. The tax cuts aren't there just to generate numbers on a quarterly report. They weren't just to allow Bush's Yale buddies to horde a few more millions. It's supposed to create jobs and get people back spending and building the economy again. It has not done that. Trickle-down my ass. You say no one has a right to a job? Well, businesses don't have a right to tax cuts. PEACE.
It has created jobs, helped business and people are spending/building(homes) unless every report has been wrong over the last 6+ months.
The more disposable income people have (no matter how wealthy), the more services are used and then the more service-type jobs are created. Look at Starbucks, they just reported an increase in revenue.
AirBrian said:The tax cuts aren't stealing from American tax payers -- remember, it's the rich that pay taxes.
Originally Posted by AirBrian
The tax cuts aren't stealing from American tax payers -- remember, it's the rich that pay taxes.
outsourcing is an over-hyped "issue" it affects a very small percentage of jobs lost, most of the time the "outsourcing" is to other states.
Hitokage said:Uh no, purchasing power merely refers to the goods and services actually attainable with a given amount of money.
And sir, you are basing your argument on a claim you have yet to prove: that they are actually spending beyond their means through "lattes, cigarettes, [and] fast food".
You're arguing from an extreme. Are you saying that the answer is to give them less money? No, you're not, and I doubt the people you're talking to are saying "Give them more money to fuel their caffeine riddled, plasma screen TV habits!"
Oh, and if the answer it not to give them more money, what were the rebates for?
You just failed the Reaganomics class.
CrunchyB and pollo pointed it out. If people "adjust their consumption patterns" (stop spending), then the economy doesn't recover. Revenues shrink, employment shrinks, the economy shrinks. Reaganomics is financial crack. Reps got idiots hooked on the concept.
levious said:I know very little about economics, but the thing that worries me is that the likely salary range I'll receive as a new lawyer will not be enough to purchase a single family home in my area. I did not expect this situation ten years or even three years ago. I suspect that this is a trend in many lines of work. Owning a condo or townhome is becoming more and more common... I just wish there was more of a middle ground in property value.
kablooey said:Outsourcing is just silly, in my opinion. The inevitable consequence of it, if it's done for long enough, is that enough workers will be displaced so that there won't be any consumers to buy the products that're made overseas.
Those corporate idiots could learn something from Henry Ford. He raised the wages of his workers, and gave them benefits; because of this, they became consumers of the Model T's as well, as they could actually afford them, adding to his fortune.
What I'm trying to say, is that even if you ignore the "human" aspects of Bush's economic policies, they still don't make any sense logically.
Uh, no. If people adjust their consumption patterns by buying goods and services that are relatively cheaper than the goods and services they were originally going to buy, the money saved can be put to other goods and services. Here's an example. Say there's a two plasma TVs, one costs $4000 and another costs $2000. They're the same size, offer the same quality, but the only difference is that one is from Sony and the other is from Akai. Let's say there is a consumption tax of 10% in place. If the consumer buys the $4000 TV, he pays $400 in taxes. If he buys the $2000 TV, he only pays $200. The consumer chooses to buy the second TV because he doesn't want to pay the higher tax. The consumer has just saved $1800 ($4000-$2000-$200 tax), with which he can spend his left over money on other goods and services OR (preferably) he can save that money and gain a pretty good interest on it. If he chooses the former, he's still better off because he has $1800 to spend, but he hurts the economy because we don't know whether if he is going to spend that money on domestic goods or imported goods. If he chooses the latter he is better AND helps the economy because he is saving his money and allowing the banks to use his funds to give out loans to private individuals, firms, and the government. The firm is better off because they are able to borrow money to finance ffuture projects and hire more workers because they will demand more workers. The government is better off because they are able to finance social programs that will make all citizens better off. The economy as WHOLE is better off because we have ample money saved that will cover future consumption AND it controls inflation because less goods are demanded over time.
And before anyone thinks I'm a kook for calling for putting in a consumption tax, don't be alarmed. Many of the great economic minds (Adam Smith, Alfred Marshall, David Ricardo, John Hicks, Milton Friedman, David Becker, John Keynes, etc.) proposed that the best type of tax is a consumption tax because it's better to tax consumption than to tax wealth. And it makes perfect sense.