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Read the rules in the OP before posting, please.In order to ensure that this thread continues to meet TL standards and follows the proper guidelines, we will be enforcing the rules in the OP more strictly. Be sure to give them a re-read to refresh your memory! The vast majority of you are contributing in a healthy way, keep it up! NOTE: When providing a source, explain why you feel it is relevant and what purpose it adds to the discussion if it's not obvious. Also take note that unsubstantiated tweets/posts meant only to rekindle old arguments can result in a mod action. |
On April 23 2014 06:38 RvB wrote:Show nested quote +On April 23 2014 05:57 JonnyBNoHo wrote:On April 23 2014 05:20 GreenHorizons wrote:On April 23 2014 05:04 JonnyBNoHo wrote:On April 23 2014 04:05 GreenHorizons wrote:On April 23 2014 03:01 Falling wrote:How does access to cheaper credit offset stagnating wages? Debt is a way for capital to lay a claim to future profits by propping up current demand That actually sounds rather like the Roaring Twenties leading into the crash. People have been talking about it for a while. If something dramatic isn't done soon, the crash seems inevitable. In total, American consumers owe:
$11.68 trillion in debt An increase of 3.7% from last year $854.2 billion in credit card debt $8.15 trillion in mortgages $1,115.3 billion in student loans An increase of 13.9% from last year SourceDeferred loans now represent 43.5% of all student loan balances.
The study also showed that the balances on these deferred loans have grown from $228 billion in 2007 to $388 billion in 2012, an increase of 70%. The average student loan debt per borrower grew 30% to $23,829 during those years.
SourceMy guess is that people fed up with everything and buried under an insurmountable amount of debt just say F it. I wouldn't be surprised if millions of people just decided they aren't going to pay the loans. The government made sure that they would get their money, but only if the people make money to start with. Seeing how many of loans aren't getting paid because graduates are unemployed or underemployed, that's not much of a solution. Not to mention the credit card bubble which is almost as large, but doesn't have access to the same protection. Without some massive employment surge, I don't really see how it will be avoided. Debt levels already went down over the past few years and debt service is really low. You're late to the party  Yeah... Sure... Ok... That all you had to add? As such a stickler for sources that was a pretty silly comment. Here's some sources: Debt service ratio - Source (Fed table here) Aggregate household debt (nominal) - SourceEdit: *ahem* People have been talking about it for a while. If something dramatic isn't done soon, the crash seems inevitable. Maybe you were talking about Canada? Edit 2: + Show Spoiler + The household debt service ratio is low because of the incredibly low interest rates as well. There might be problems when interest rates start rising again, although on the other hand they'll start rising only when there's less unemployment. Sure, but it's more common for rates to be fixed in the US than in Europe. The most common mortgage is a 30yr fixed with options to refinance (a lot of people too advantage of that). Auto loans are typically fixed too.
Edit: + Show Spoiler +Mortgage product comparison: source
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Debt service ratio is lower than immediately before the greatest financial crisis in almost a hundred years. The bottom 93% of people saw an aggregate net worth drop of almost 5% too.
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On April 19 2014 05:47 JonnyBNoHo wrote:Show nested quote +I don't know what you are talking about with marginal tax rates. The marginal tax rate is the same in the income range we are talking about. If you are arguing that increasing employee wages will result in no gain because they lose benefits of equal value you are going to have list which benefits they are losing, at what income, and how much those benefits are worth, because I think you are completely bullshitting. I don't give a fuck about Walmart per se. Walmart is just the current manifestation of a phenomenon that is gutting the middle class and adding to a vast underclass of poverty-ridden people who depend on government redistribution just so they can shop at Walmart. Posted before. Not bullshitting. + Show Spoiler +
So the graph you posted from that report is misleading in a number of ways, foremost among them being that this is an "ideal" case where the income is a family income for a number of dependents wherein the family qualifies for all of the various programs that the graph is taking into account (SNAP, CHIP, Section 8, Medicaid, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, etc.). Considering that in 2007 only ~6% of people who were married were living below the poverty line, we can assume that perhaps a majority of people working at Walmart don't qualify for most of these benefits. Another significant plurality, if not majority, do not have kids, and so do not qualify for more of those benefits.
When you factor in how many people who are eligible for such programs don't enroll, you are looking at even fewer people reaping in all the extra disposable income that you are arguing all of these sub-$10 wage earners at Walmart are raking in. The report itself says in the opening paragraphs that "the majority of lower-income families do not receive means-tested transfers, either because they do not meet additional, nonfinancial eligibility requirements or because they are eligible but do not apply for benefits. Of those who receive transfers, the majority participate in only one program." The report goes on to state that only about 21% of taxpayers who were eligible in a sample of tax returns received SNAP benefits. On page 20 of 53, the report states that only 38% of families with income under 250% of poverty level participated in one or more programs, and that the majority only participated in one program. Figures 5 and 6 on pages 32 and 33 of 53 are much more meaningful graphs of marginal tax rates, showing that only the 90th percentile of low-income families, which includes huge families who don't make very much money, and perhaps are hit doubly by payroll taxes with two earners, hit marginal tax rates above 60%.
You said that the marginal tax rates in the income ranges we were discussing approaches 100%. The report explicitly finds that the effective marginal tax rate for most people who would be affected by the proposed wage increase is between 30 and 35%. You posted this misleading graph either without reading the report or deliberately omitting its findings. You argued that raising the wages of Walmart employees was a regressive tax of ~1.4% on customers and wouldn't materially benefit those working there because the marginal tax rate was approaching 100%. That is complete bullshit.
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On April 23 2014 08:00 IgnE wrote:Show nested quote +On April 19 2014 05:47 JonnyBNoHo wrote:I don't know what you are talking about with marginal tax rates. The marginal tax rate is the same in the income range we are talking about. If you are arguing that increasing employee wages will result in no gain because they lose benefits of equal value you are going to have list which benefits they are losing, at what income, and how much those benefits are worth, because I think you are completely bullshitting. I don't give a fuck about Walmart per se. Walmart is just the current manifestation of a phenomenon that is gutting the middle class and adding to a vast underclass of poverty-ridden people who depend on government redistribution just so they can shop at Walmart. Posted before. Not bullshitting. + Show Spoiler + So the graph you posted from that report is misleading in a number of ways, foremost among them being that this is an "ideal" case where the income is a family income for a number of dependents wherein the family qualifies for all of the various programs that the graph is taking into account (SNAP, CHIP, Section 8, Medicaid, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, etc.). Considering that in 2007 only ~6% of people who were married were living below the poverty line, we can assume that perhaps a majority of people working at Walmart don't qualify for most of these benefits. Another significant plurality, if not majority, do not have kids, and so do not qualify for more of those benefits. When you factor in how many people who are eligible for such programs don't enroll, you are looking at even fewer people reaping in all the extra disposable income that you are arguing all of these sub-$10 wage earners at Walmart are raking in. The report itself says in the opening paragraphs that "the majority of lower-income families do not receive means-tested transfers, either because they do not meet additional, nonfinancial eligibility requirements or because they are eligible but do not apply for benefits. Of those who receive transfers, the majority participate in only one program." The report goes on to state that only about 21% of taxpayers who were eligible in a sample of tax returns received SNAP benefits. On page 20 of 53, the report states that only 38% of families with income under 250% of poverty level participated in one or more programs, and that the majority only participated in one program. Figures 5 and 6 on pages 32 and 33 of 53 are much more meaningful graphs of marginal tax rates, showing that only the 90th percentile of low-income families, which includes huge families who don't make very much money, and perhaps are hit doubly by payroll taxes with two earners, hit marginal tax rates above 60%. You said that the marginal tax rates in the income ranges we were discussing approaches 100%. The report explicitly finds that the effective marginal tax rate for most people who would be affected by the proposed wage increase is between 30 and 35%. You posted this misleading graph either without reading the report or deliberately omitting its findings. You argued that raising the wages of Walmart employees was a regressive tax of ~1.4% on customers and wouldn't materially benefit those working there because the marginal tax rate was approaching 100%. That is complete bullshit. Even if the effective marginal tax rage You make some fair points, however:
1) iirc the CBO wasn't considering all government programs, just a selection of major federal ones. 2) The discussion was explicitly about people who were receiving benefits (or corporate welfare as they were being called). 3) Increasing the minimum wage would affect more than just low income households. Almost half would go to households over 3X the poverty line (source). If you like that, fine, but you're no longer talking about raising wages for low income households.
In any case you're right that the marginal tax rate won't always go to 100% - sometimes it will be less than 100%, sometimes more. It'll likely average less than 100% and be higher for those who are more needy.
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30% is vastly different from 100%. The proposition was to increase the median wage at Walmart to around at least $12. Framing the discussion by citing a 100% marginal tax rate for the "needy" is just outright mendacious.
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On April 23 2014 09:47 IgnE wrote: 30% is vastly different from 100%. The proposition was to increase the median wage at Walmart to around at least $12. Framing the discussion by citing a 100% marginal tax rate for the "needy" is just outright mendacious. I wrote: Currently the marginal tax rate including benefit cuts is close to 100%.
Obviously if you don't have the benefits you won't suffer a benefit cut. Yes, some people who work at Walmart aren't needy and aren't on benefits. I don't think that makes what I wrote dishonest - we were talking about those who worked for low wages and were on benefits.
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Except it's not close to 100%. Even the 90th percentile of people who receive benefits only pay a ~60% marginal tax. Unless you are talking about the rara avis who stacks every benefit loss and every tax increase into one package. But that would be like talking about a black swan.
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On April 23 2014 10:35 IgnE wrote: Except it's not close to 100%. Even the 90th percentile of people who receive benefits only pay a ~60% marginal tax. Unless you are talking about the rara avis who stacks every benefit loss and every tax increase into one package. But that would be like talking about a black swan.
The simulated marginal tax rates include the combined effects of federal individual income taxes, state individual income taxes (under provisions in effect in 2006), federal payroll taxes, and the reduction in SNAP benefits. The marginal tax rates were based on taxpayers’ total compensation before their employers’ share of payroll taxes was deducted. Hardly an exhaustive list of benefits. Also: including additional programs would generally increase estimates of marginal tax rates. Other parts of the report that include more / other benefits do approach 100%.
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On April 23 2014 10:54 JonnyBNoHo wrote:Show nested quote +On April 23 2014 10:35 IgnE wrote: Except it's not close to 100%. Even the 90th percentile of people who receive benefits only pay a ~60% marginal tax. Unless you are talking about the rara avis who stacks every benefit loss and every tax increase into one package. But that would be like talking about a black swan. Show nested quote +The simulated marginal tax rates include the combined effects of federal individual income taxes, state individual income taxes (under provisions in effect in 2006), federal payroll taxes, and the reduction in SNAP benefits. The marginal tax rates were based on taxpayers’ total compensation before their employers’ share of payroll taxes was deducted. Hardly an exhaustive list of benefits. Also: Show nested quote +including additional programs would generally increase estimates of marginal tax rates. Other parts of the report that include more / other benefits do approach 100%.
Ok but you didn't post the graph where they only included SNAP. That graph looks different from the one you posted. If you had looked deeper you would see the more widely cited 30% and the overall conclusion that most people pay roughly 30% marginal tax at that income.
Other parts of the report include more/other benefits that reach up to 60%, and mention in passing that benefits can approach 100% before going into analysis that for the large majority of people 100% marginal tax is not a reality. I do not understand why you persist in this. Just look at the summary on page 1.
Edit: It's kind of enraging that you paste an out-of-context quote unrelated to the graph and then say that they only counted SNAP benefits. They did a number of simulations, including ones where they only counted SNAP benefits. The graph you posted uses all of the programs that I cited earlier. Talking with you is like pulling teeth. I can't tell if you are just profoundly stupid or merely disingenuous.
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On April 23 2014 11:16 IgnE wrote:Show nested quote +On April 23 2014 10:54 JonnyBNoHo wrote:On April 23 2014 10:35 IgnE wrote: Except it's not close to 100%. Even the 90th percentile of people who receive benefits only pay a ~60% marginal tax. Unless you are talking about the rara avis who stacks every benefit loss and every tax increase into one package. But that would be like talking about a black swan. The simulated marginal tax rates include the combined effects of federal individual income taxes, state individual income taxes (under provisions in effect in 2006), federal payroll taxes, and the reduction in SNAP benefits. The marginal tax rates were based on taxpayers’ total compensation before their employers’ share of payroll taxes was deducted. Hardly an exhaustive list of benefits. Also: including additional programs would generally increase estimates of marginal tax rates. Other parts of the report that include more / other benefits do approach 100%. Ok but you didn't post the graph where they only included SNAP. That graph looks different from the one you posted. If you had looked deeper you would see the more widely cited 30% and the overall conclusion that most people pay roughly 30% marginal tax at that income. Other parts of the report include more/other benefits that reach up to 60%, and mention in passing that benefits can approach 100% before going into analysis that for the large majority of people 100% marginal tax is not a reality. I do not understand why you persist in this. Just look at the summary on page 1. Edit: It's kind of enraging that you paste an out-of-context quote unrelated to the graph and then say that they only counted SNAP benefits. They did a number of simulations, including ones where they only counted SNAP benefits. The graph you posted uses all of the programs that I cited earlier. Talking with you is like pulling teeth. I can't tell if you are just profoundly stupid or merely disingenuous. The graph I first posted included more programs and went nearly up to 100% marginal tax rate. The graph I used was consistent with my message.
The data you cited "Even the 90th percentile of people who receive benefits only pay a ~60% marginal tax" only included the SNAP benefits.
The 30% number from the summary is an average including people that make up to 450% of the poverty line - well beyond struggling cashier at Walmart - and only included SNAP benefits. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) finds that working taxpayers with income below 450 percent of federal poverty guidelines (commonly known as the federal poverty level, so abbreviated as FPL) face a marginal tax rate of 30 percent, on average, under the provisions of law in effect in 2012. That estimate takes into account federal and state individual income taxes, federal payroll taxes, and the reductions in benefits from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly known as the Food Stamp program) that occur when earnings increase. Edit: Removed the insult
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On April 23 2014 11:40 JonnyBNoHo wrote:Show nested quote +On April 23 2014 11:16 IgnE wrote:On April 23 2014 10:54 JonnyBNoHo wrote:On April 23 2014 10:35 IgnE wrote: Except it's not close to 100%. Even the 90th percentile of people who receive benefits only pay a ~60% marginal tax. Unless you are talking about the rara avis who stacks every benefit loss and every tax increase into one package. But that would be like talking about a black swan. The simulated marginal tax rates include the combined effects of federal individual income taxes, state individual income taxes (under provisions in effect in 2006), federal payroll taxes, and the reduction in SNAP benefits. The marginal tax rates were based on taxpayers’ total compensation before their employers’ share of payroll taxes was deducted. Hardly an exhaustive list of benefits. Also: including additional programs would generally increase estimates of marginal tax rates. Other parts of the report that include more / other benefits do approach 100%. Ok but you didn't post the graph where they only included SNAP. That graph looks different from the one you posted. If you had looked deeper you would see the more widely cited 30% and the overall conclusion that most people pay roughly 30% marginal tax at that income. Other parts of the report include more/other benefits that reach up to 60%, and mention in passing that benefits can approach 100% before going into analysis that for the large majority of people 100% marginal tax is not a reality. I do not understand why you persist in this. Just look at the summary on page 1. Edit: It's kind of enraging that you paste an out-of-context quote unrelated to the graph and then say that they only counted SNAP benefits. They did a number of simulations, including ones where they only counted SNAP benefits. The graph you posted uses all of the programs that I cited earlier. Talking with you is like pulling teeth. I can't tell if you are just profoundly stupid or merely disingenuous. The graph I first posted included more programs and went nearly up to 100% marginal tax rate. The graph I used was consistent with my message. The data you cited "Even the 90th percentile of people who receive benefits only pay a ~60% marginal tax" only included the SNAP benefits. The 30% number from the summary is an average including people that make up to 450% of the poverty line - well beyond struggling cashier at Walmart - and only included SNAP benefits. Show nested quote +The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) finds that working taxpayers with income below 450 percent of federal poverty guidelines (commonly known as the federal poverty level, so abbreviated as FPL) face a marginal tax rate of 30 percent, on average, under the provisions of law in effect in 2012. That estimate takes into account federal and state individual income taxes, federal payroll taxes, and the reductions in benefits from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly known as the Food Stamp program) that occur when earnings increase. Edit: Removed the insult 
Since the vast majority of people receive benefits from one or no programs and since SNAP is a high-cost benefit, the SNAP analysis is a good proxy for reality. Looking through most of the data, the ~30% rate is roughly accurate for everyone up to 450% of poverty, although it does approach 50% for some benefits users. 50% is still very different from 100%. You must have also ignored the part where they said increasing marginal tax rates has no perceptible impact on young males' willingness to work more (or seek higher wages).
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On April 23 2014 12:05 IgnE wrote:Show nested quote +On April 23 2014 11:40 JonnyBNoHo wrote:On April 23 2014 11:16 IgnE wrote:On April 23 2014 10:54 JonnyBNoHo wrote:On April 23 2014 10:35 IgnE wrote: Except it's not close to 100%. Even the 90th percentile of people who receive benefits only pay a ~60% marginal tax. Unless you are talking about the rara avis who stacks every benefit loss and every tax increase into one package. But that would be like talking about a black swan. The simulated marginal tax rates include the combined effects of federal individual income taxes, state individual income taxes (under provisions in effect in 2006), federal payroll taxes, and the reduction in SNAP benefits. The marginal tax rates were based on taxpayers’ total compensation before their employers’ share of payroll taxes was deducted. Hardly an exhaustive list of benefits. Also: including additional programs would generally increase estimates of marginal tax rates. Other parts of the report that include more / other benefits do approach 100%. Ok but you didn't post the graph where they only included SNAP. That graph looks different from the one you posted. If you had looked deeper you would see the more widely cited 30% and the overall conclusion that most people pay roughly 30% marginal tax at that income. Other parts of the report include more/other benefits that reach up to 60%, and mention in passing that benefits can approach 100% before going into analysis that for the large majority of people 100% marginal tax is not a reality. I do not understand why you persist in this. Just look at the summary on page 1. Edit: It's kind of enraging that you paste an out-of-context quote unrelated to the graph and then say that they only counted SNAP benefits. They did a number of simulations, including ones where they only counted SNAP benefits. The graph you posted uses all of the programs that I cited earlier. Talking with you is like pulling teeth. I can't tell if you are just profoundly stupid or merely disingenuous. The graph I first posted included more programs and went nearly up to 100% marginal tax rate. The graph I used was consistent with my message. The data you cited "Even the 90th percentile of people who receive benefits only pay a ~60% marginal tax" only included the SNAP benefits. The 30% number from the summary is an average including people that make up to 450% of the poverty line - well beyond struggling cashier at Walmart - and only included SNAP benefits. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) finds that working taxpayers with income below 450 percent of federal poverty guidelines (commonly known as the federal poverty level, so abbreviated as FPL) face a marginal tax rate of 30 percent, on average, under the provisions of law in effect in 2012. That estimate takes into account federal and state individual income taxes, federal payroll taxes, and the reductions in benefits from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly known as the Food Stamp program) that occur when earnings increase. Edit: Removed the insult  Since the vast majority of people receive benefits from one or no programs and since SNAP is a high-cost benefit, the SNAP analysis is a good proxy for reality. Looking through most of the data, the ~30% rate is roughly accurate for everyone up to 450% of poverty, although it does approach 50% for some benefits users. 50% is still very different from 100%. You must have also ignored the part where they said increasing marginal tax rates have no perceptible impact on young males' willingness to work more (or seek higher wages). One or no programs given what the CBO was looking at (not all programs). I was also commenting on people who are using benefits, not all Walmart employees or all minimum wage earners.
Disincentives to work are a different topic. Why wouldn't I ignore it?
Edit: CBO also used self-reported data that, according to them, under-reported program use. They also point out that people with children are more likely to use multiple programs.
On a friendly note, as I said at the start, I do think you brought up some good points. 100% marginal tax rate was a bit of hyperbole, even if they can go that high (or higher!) on occasion and tend to be higher for the more needy.
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On April 23 2014 12:33 JonnyBNoHo wrote:Show nested quote +On April 23 2014 12:05 IgnE wrote:On April 23 2014 11:40 JonnyBNoHo wrote:On April 23 2014 11:16 IgnE wrote:On April 23 2014 10:54 JonnyBNoHo wrote:On April 23 2014 10:35 IgnE wrote: Except it's not close to 100%. Even the 90th percentile of people who receive benefits only pay a ~60% marginal tax. Unless you are talking about the rara avis who stacks every benefit loss and every tax increase into one package. But that would be like talking about a black swan. The simulated marginal tax rates include the combined effects of federal individual income taxes, state individual income taxes (under provisions in effect in 2006), federal payroll taxes, and the reduction in SNAP benefits. The marginal tax rates were based on taxpayers’ total compensation before their employers’ share of payroll taxes was deducted. Hardly an exhaustive list of benefits. Also: including additional programs would generally increase estimates of marginal tax rates. Other parts of the report that include more / other benefits do approach 100%. Ok but you didn't post the graph where they only included SNAP. That graph looks different from the one you posted. If you had looked deeper you would see the more widely cited 30% and the overall conclusion that most people pay roughly 30% marginal tax at that income. Other parts of the report include more/other benefits that reach up to 60%, and mention in passing that benefits can approach 100% before going into analysis that for the large majority of people 100% marginal tax is not a reality. I do not understand why you persist in this. Just look at the summary on page 1. Edit: It's kind of enraging that you paste an out-of-context quote unrelated to the graph and then say that they only counted SNAP benefits. They did a number of simulations, including ones where they only counted SNAP benefits. The graph you posted uses all of the programs that I cited earlier. Talking with you is like pulling teeth. I can't tell if you are just profoundly stupid or merely disingenuous. The graph I first posted included more programs and went nearly up to 100% marginal tax rate. The graph I used was consistent with my message. The data you cited "Even the 90th percentile of people who receive benefits only pay a ~60% marginal tax" only included the SNAP benefits. The 30% number from the summary is an average including people that make up to 450% of the poverty line - well beyond struggling cashier at Walmart - and only included SNAP benefits. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) finds that working taxpayers with income below 450 percent of federal poverty guidelines (commonly known as the federal poverty level, so abbreviated as FPL) face a marginal tax rate of 30 percent, on average, under the provisions of law in effect in 2012. That estimate takes into account federal and state individual income taxes, federal payroll taxes, and the reductions in benefits from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly known as the Food Stamp program) that occur when earnings increase. Edit: Removed the insult  Since the vast majority of people receive benefits from one or no programs and since SNAP is a high-cost benefit, the SNAP analysis is a good proxy for reality. Looking through most of the data, the ~30% rate is roughly accurate for everyone up to 450% of poverty, although it does approach 50% for some benefits users. 50% is still very different from 100%. You must have also ignored the part where they said increasing marginal tax rates have no perceptible impact on young males' willingness to work more (or seek higher wages). One or no programs given what the CBO was looking at (not all programs). I was also commenting on people who are using benefits, not all Walmart employees or all minimum wage earners. Disincentives to work are a different topic. Why wouldn't I ignore it? Edit: CBO also used self-reported data that, according to them, under-reported program use. They also point out that people with children are more likely to use multiple programs. On a friendly note, as I said at the start, I do think you brought up some good points. 100% marginal tax rate was a bit of hyperbole, even if they can go that high (or higher!) on occasion and tend to be higher for the more needy.
So in conclusion, an increase in the wages at Walmart would benefit the employees and would impose a minor 1.4% price increase amounting to no more than a hundred dollars a year on the average customer.
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I guess the only question remaining is how it would benefit walmart's business operations or shareholder value. They aren't scoring any points with liberals that will always use them as whipping posts. Raising prices on their customers isn't something a company would consider, in general, if additional costs aren't being forced on them. It still looks like the takeaway is take on additional costs and pass them to the customers because the population voted in corporate welfare and corporate welfare is bad.
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"Corporate welfare?" What is that?
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Albuquerque police said an officer shot and killed an auto theft suspect early Monday, the third shooting by officers in the troubled department in just over a month and the first after a federal investigation faulted the department for excessive force and a culture of abuse and aggression.
Gordon Eden, police chief of the New Mexico city, said the shooting occurred Monday morning during a chase.
"An officer pursued on foot when the suspect stopped, turned and pointed a handgun at close range," Eden said.
Police identified the woman as Mary Hawkes, the daughter of Danny Hawkes, a retired magistrate judge in Valencia County, south of Albuquerque.
Court records show Mary Hawkes had two previous run-ins with the law as an adult, one for drinking in public and another for shoplifting, according to the Albuquerque Journal. As a juvenile, she was charged in 2011 with attempted criminal sexual contact of a child under 13. She was convicted of a lesser battery offense and sentenced to two years of probation.
No further details about the shooting were immediately available. Phone calls and e-mails to the Albuquerque Police Department were not returned.
Source
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On April 23 2014 15:36 Danglars wrote:Show nested quote +On April 23 2014 15:54 IgnE wrote: I guess the only question remaining is how it would benefit walmart's business operations or shareholder value. They aren't scoring any points with liberals that will always use them as whipping posts. Raising prices on their customers isn't something a company would consider, in general, if additional costs aren't being forced on them. It still looks like the takeaway is take on additional costs and pass them to the customers because the population voted in corporate welfare and corporate welfare is bad. "Corporate welfare?" What is that? It's been previously mentioned on this same page. Do you care to comment on the remaining question?
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Sounds like the entire albuquirky pd should just be removed, and start over with a new organization; and import people to cover until that's in place. Very deep systemic issues are hard to root out otherwise.
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On April 23 2014 16:58 Danglars wrote:Show nested quote +On April 23 2014 15:36 Danglars wrote:On April 23 2014 15:54 IgnE wrote: I guess the only question remaining is how it would benefit walmart's business operations or shareholder value. They aren't scoring any points with liberals that will always use them as whipping posts. Raising prices on their customers isn't something a company would consider, in general, if additional costs aren't being forced on them. It still looks like the takeaway is take on additional costs and pass them to the customers because the population voted in corporate welfare and corporate welfare is bad. "Corporate welfare?" What is that? It's been previously mentioned on this same page. Do you care to comment on the remaining question?
I don't see an explanation in that post of "corporate welfare." Is it when corporations pay zero taxes on massive profits? Or when corporations are bailed out of bankruptcy-level debt so that they can turn a profit that is based almost solely on their ability to arbitrage the value of an implicit government backing against smaller corporations?
Or, oh I see. You might mean something else. Are you, Danglars, the Chancellor of the Iron Law of Wages, who decrees that when wages are above the absolute very minimum to sustain existence the excess is simply "corporate welfare" bestowed on us poor peons from our corporate overlords? Some companies are bigger on the welfare than others, but Walmart believes in tough love. Even our dismal minimal wage must qualify as corporate welfare, as we could be paying people nearly third world wages and set up shanty towns for them out in Idaho if only there weren't federally mandated "corporate welfare" forcing companies to pay more than the absolute minimum wages required.
How about instead of raising prices 1.4% Walmart paid employees more out of the profits they received? The cost of raising the average wages of a Walmart employee to $13.63 from $8.81 would be about 25% of their profits from last year.
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On April 23 2014 06:46 JonnyBNoHo wrote:Show nested quote +On April 23 2014 06:25 aksfjh wrote:On April 23 2014 05:51 JonnyBNoHo wrote:On April 23 2014 02:03 aksfjh wrote:On April 23 2014 01:15 JonnyBNoHo wrote:On April 23 2014 00:48 FallDownMarigold wrote:The American middle class, long the most affluent in the world, has lost that distinction.While the wealthiest Americans are outpacing many of their global peers, a New York Times analysis shows that across the lower- and middle-income tiers, citizens of other advanced countries have received considerably larger raises over the last three decades.
After-tax middle-class incomes in Canada — substantially behind in 2000 — now appear to be higher than in the United States. The poor in much of Europe earn more than poor Americans.
The numbers, based on surveys conducted over the past 35 years, offer some of the most detailed publicly available comparisons for different income groups in different countries over time. They suggest that most American families are paying a steep price for high and rising income inequality. http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/23/upshot/the-american-middle-class-is-no-longer-the-worlds-richest.htmlWhile the US economy and Wall St. especially continue to grow, the middle class and poor continue to stagnate. How long will it go on and what will the end result be? Also: Stagnant wages and income inequality aside, Americans to a large extent pay out of pocket for health care and education, which are subsidized in European counterparts. These hits obviously impact the poor & middle class the hardest. It's not as bad as suggested. Canada jumped up in the last decade because of the resource boom - pushed up income and currency valuation. A lot of stagnation in middle class income has come from income definitions - most don't count non-cash benefits as income. I don't think that out of pocket healthcare costs have played much of a role as out of pocket costs have been falling ( source). Misleading graphs are misleading. Out-of-pocket share of GDP is roughly the same that it was in 1980 (a much more important start time if we're talking about income and inequality). Also, out-of-pocket costs don't count how much more people are paying for health insurance. While businesses are subsidizing portions of a plan (or all of it), this data doesn't touch how much they pay for a plan. The price of health insurance faced by the consumer when deciding whether to consume a particular health service is the out-of-pocket cost, the direct and uninsured payment from a patient to a health care provider. This shows that people are merely experiencing fewer shocks related to healthcare spending, not that their income is necessarily affected by it. To FallDownMarigold: Maybe the fact that Americans deal with healthcare costs more directly than their Western counterparts plays a role, but that shouldn't be referenced to as "out-of-pocket" costs. I don't think the graphs were misleading. Here's some more data... Who pays for health care: + Show Spoiler +And as a whole, the value of non-cash employee benefits have been rising faster than wages. I'll try to dig out a source for that. Read your own graphs, employers are paying a smaller share of healthcare than they used to. Year Employee Employer 1999 26.67% 73.36% 2011 27.39% 72.61% Certainly, it's great they haven't had to start paying the full share of it or something ridiculous, but these costs are rising faster than wages (~90% in 12 years inflation adjusted) and the general feeling is that employers seem more than capable of absorbing even more of the cost than they are. If we look at after-tax profits from FRED: + Show Spoiler +We get an inflation adjusted growth of roughly 2500%. Certainly, total profits probably aren't the BEST way to look at this, but it does shed some light if one group is getting a better deal than the other. Employers increase insurance payments by ~$6K, employees by ~$2.5K. That's a net increase to workers even accounting for their greater premium outlays. I don't see what profits have to do with my point about non-cash benefits. Regardless, your graph doesn't say it's in real terms, and it shows profits up something like 2.5X, not 25X. Additionally profits are cyclical, affected by both international and domestic markets and interest rates. Profits at a high today doesn't mean that they'll be higher tomorrow! Show nested quote +Gripe: + Show Spoiler +Not really your fault, but talk about a shitty graph. Let's just mislead everybody and overstate a change of ~25% less of disposable income going to debt payments. Not sure what your problem with the graph is. Debt service ratio is around a 30 year low - that's very substantial. Math error, my bad. Still, you have median income going down and they're paying more of a share of their insurance, while companies are reaping more profits. Even when you count in the cyclical nature, profits still rose at a faster rate than median income during the worst market crash in half a century.
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