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On October 11 2013 08:33 Vegetarian wrote:Show nested quote +On October 11 2013 03:35 m4inbrain wrote:Someone argued that, but just like you they were unable to source their claims since USA corporate taxes are the highest of any developed country in the world. Nothing is stopping you from comparing tax rates of the USA to EU countries, I chose to compare USA taxes to China because I found it amusing that the communists have lower rates of taxation than we do. The US has a nominal tax of 35%. Effectively, you don't. It's a case of "look dat number is higher than yours, therefore im right" - it's not. You leave half the important stuff in the dark, i guess willingly, to support your argument. Let me cite something as well: "NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- U.S. corporations pay one of the highest tax rates in the world. There's little debate about that. Still, some argue the difference in the overall tax burden for U.S. companies isn't nearly as great it appears. In fact, the United States collects less corporate tax relative to the overall economy than almost any other country in the world. And that's a more objective measure of tax burden. Different accounting rules around the world means what's counted as income in one country isn't counted in another -- that makes comparisons of tax rates misleading. U.S. corporate tax collections totaled only 1.7% of GDP in 2009, the most recent year for which complete data is available, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. On that measure, the United States had the third lowest corporate tax burden, behind France and Germany. The worldwide average was 2.8%." "U.S. businesses have another edge over countries with lower tax rates: They don't pay a Value Added Tax or VAT, a type of sales tax. All other developed nations raise a significant part of their tax revenue through VATs, but it is not included in the comparisons of corporate tax collections." So please, if you compare "burdens" on corporations, don't just look at the direct taxations, because that would be stupid. If you want to look at effective tax rate, then you should actually look at it. The study I will link to reviewed 13 other studies and found an effective U.S tax rate of 27.9% compared to an average of 20.3%. http://taxfoundation.org/sites/taxfoundation.org/files/docs/sr195.pdfThe following study looked only at the industrial and automotive sectors and found that the USA had an effective tax rate of 30.9% compared to the United Kingdom's 16.7% rate. http://www.pwc.com/en_US/us/industrial-products/publications/assets/pwc-industrial-products-tax-rate-benchmarking-report-2013.pdfIn the United States we also pay what is called a sales tax. It varies by state but averages roughly 10%. The first link is from a conservative think tank with number magic which probably lead xDaunt to his 2012 election predictions. That second link you offered doesn't even make sense in the current discussion... http://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/ftpdocs/69xx/doc6902/11-28-corporatetax.pdf
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On October 11 2013 08:42 Vegetarian wrote:Show nested quote +On October 11 2013 08:27 Jormundr wrote:On October 11 2013 08:19 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 03:33 Nyxisto wrote:On October 11 2013 03:26 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 03:13 WhiteDog wrote:On October 11 2013 03:01 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 02:20 HellRoxYa wrote:On October 11 2013 01:53 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 01:20 mcc wrote: [quote] Considering that you link to mises.org I assume you are one of those people who claim that displayed preference is actual preference. That is contrary to what we know about human brain. The argument that the fact that government organizations consist of humans means they cannot know better than singular human is of course nonsensical. There is something called expertise, some people just know better. Of course the hard thing is to make sure that the decisions are made by the people with actual expertise and prevent them from bending the system for their gain. In many areas of life this actually is successfully done. Properly designed organizations of the type like FDA and other regulatory agencies work pretty well. Much better than self-regulatory attempts in many cases. Self-regulatory agencies do not solve one-off scams that do not care about repeat customers. You can argue that if you buy something from such a business it is your fault, but history shows that such a scenario is extremely common even in completely unregulated markets and thus solving it is a task of the government as per its task description.
As for your examples of self-regulatory agencies, you can do better. There are actually successful examples of such that are relevant. Those two that you mentioned cannot lose basically anything by doing anything as GMOs vs non-GMO is completely irrelevant as both of those products are checked by FDA for health hazards. Same goes for vitamin supplements. And so what they are actually doing ? Checking if there is some GMO in the product, who cares, there is probably no functional difference. And vitamin supplements are one big scam, sorry, in 99% completely unnecessary product whose sales are driven purely by misinformed consumers.
EDIT: Also US taxes are not higher than in most other developed countries. Also for you previous post, can you provide any example of welfare state going bankrupt, you say it is inevitable, but the incidence of such events is rather low (non-existent basically). The FDA has a horrendous track record of approving unsafe drugs, artificial sweeteners, and other food additives. You also make no argument as to how government regulation can overcome my arguments against it. How do you see government regulation solving scams better than the free market? Can you give an explanation? I have already given lengthy ones. I am also curious about these extremely common scenarios you speak of in unregulated markets can you give even one example? GMO vs non GMO is not irrelevant. The FDA approves gmo food because large agricultural firms in the USA lobby the FDA despite the growing evidence that they are not safe for human consumption. GMOS are banned or restricted in all of the EU, Japan, Australia and a bunch of other developed countries. Contrary to your post vitamin supplements are not tested by the FDA. Consumerlab.com tests them for purity and traces of heavy metals and other toxins. And, I think you have it backwards on vitamin supplements. I think they are definitely necessary in the modern environment if you are trying to achieve optimal health. I am not arguing you cant survive to age 70 without supplements, but with soil erosion and modern environmental toxins you will be hard pressed to have optimal health without taking any supplements. The concept is simple: Government institutions work for the people, private institutions (businesses) work for their shareholders. Safe food is a public issue, where whoever handles it should be responsible to those it affects. This very basic argument leads up to conclude that it should not be handled by private interests. If you have a problem with the FDA it's probably because it, like many if not most other government institutions in the US, is bought and paid for by private interests. Pretending this problem of corruption would magically go away if you directly shifted it over to the private sector is a ridiculous claim. Clean up the FDA and make it work like intended instead of pretending that it can't work. As usual the problem is that you need reform in the US. No corruption, no lobbying (or at least, reasonable lobbying). The problem is not, however, that the government handles issues of safety for the population. It doesn't help that one half in US political debates maintain this vision of government = bad because it leads politicians from that side to time and again validate their arguments by literally making the government not work optimally. Even clearer when they make parts of the government not work at all, like right now. Or when they make sure actual improvements to healthcare (don't really care if you're against big government, single-payer systems are more economical, even if you don't also find them inherently moral like I do) are reduced to something like the ACA, which is just a hollow shell of what it could be. Lastly, what the hell does "soil erosion" and "environmental toxins" have to do with eating food without supplements? The problem is eating the right food, not that the right food cannot be found. Although the latter is becoming a bigger and bigger problem in the US, but not because of soil erosion or environmental issues. (It's because of social attitudes and big business which together create a situation where fast food restaurants and fast food in stores becomes more and more popular while healthy alternatives are left unsold, leading stores and restaurants that serve these healthy alternatives to either change their stock or menu or close) I already posted a decent amount about what government regulation actually does in the market in the last two pages. I won't go into detail here I will just say that you have it backwards and government institutions do not work for the people they work for special interests while businesses can only appease their shareholders by increasing the value of their company which they can only do by offering better products or services to the people than their competitors. You argue that countries with high taxation rate have lower living conditions, then when someone argue that "socialists" countries have both higher taxation rate and living conditions, you respond that the US does not really have a low taxation rate if you compare it to... China. Your whole point of view are based on nothing but the negation of what is. No, you should reread my posts if you even read them in the first place. Countries that have a high taxation rate will have lower economic growth than countries with a lower tax rate. And this is very evident in socialist countries that experienced higher rates of growth before they instituted higher tax rates and welfare states. Someone argued that, but just like you they were unable to source their claims since USA corporate taxes are the highest of any developed country in the world. Nothing is stopping you from comparing tax rates of the USA to EU countries, I chose to compare USA taxes to China because I found it amusing that the communists have lower rates of taxation than we do. Lower taxes do not stimulate growth, and higher taxes do not harm economic growth, there is very little correlation between taxation and economic growth. source: http://www.businessinsider.com/study-tax-cuts-dont-lead-to-growth-2012-9 If you don't believe this source you're free to look up the one million other studies, graphs and data that all lead to the same conclusion. There's also no theoretical reasoning behind it, because governments are not burning the money they're collecting through taxes, they're spending it. If you, a company or your government makes an investment makes no difference in terms of economic growth. So let me get this straight. Someone that is self-employed is going to work the exact same amount of hours if you tax him at 10% as opposed to 90%? This actually sounds logical to you? The government can not know better than professional investors as to what investments are the best use of societies scarce resources. Again, how does it make sense to you that government officials would be as good at trading as professional investors. Clearly the government is going to make bad investments thereby wasting societies scarce resources at a much higher rate then someone whose lively hood depends on them making correct investments with their own money, not taxpayers. This stuff really should not be that difficult to understand. You've been living in a libertarian talking point cave for too long. You're getting an echo. Excellent argument.1. Yes, assuming he gets the same utility from his work that he did before. The % doesn't mean anything unless. Not sure how you don't get such a basic concept but the higher the tax rate the less incentive anyone has to work beyond the point of being able to afford to survive. If you have enough money that you don't need to work and the government says it will take 90% of what you make if you choose to work, clearly many start ups will be to risky, you will be less inclined to want to work, and obviously economic growth will suffer.
2. You've invented some mythical group of people called investors who allocate resources based on maximal efficiency. This group does not exist. You then say that the government is going to fuck up investments because... Oh wait you didn't have any reason for that. I really wonder what world you think your living in. Have you heard of venture capitalists? Investment banks? The stock market??? People in the private sector invest money everyday with the goal of making a profit. The profit motive causes them to only make investments that they deem are a good use of their resources. The government lacks a profit motive and the investments that they make will be based on lobbyists and politics not on what is the best use of the resources the government took from the private sector.
So we're left to take you on your word that "government is bad" or something or other. Sorry, not very convincing. You don't have to take my word for it you just have to take an introductory economics class. 1. You're still wrong. http://www.forbes.com/sites/susanadams/2012/11/26/doesnt-anyone-disagree-with-warren-buffett-about-taxes/ 2. The government lacks a profit motive? Then you've just invalidated #1, because I'm pretty sure there are a whole lot of government people who do things, even though you're saying they don't have a for profit motive according to you.
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On October 11 2013 08:43 Jormundr wrote:Show nested quote +On October 11 2013 08:33 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 03:35 m4inbrain wrote:Someone argued that, but just like you they were unable to source their claims since USA corporate taxes are the highest of any developed country in the world. Nothing is stopping you from comparing tax rates of the USA to EU countries, I chose to compare USA taxes to China because I found it amusing that the communists have lower rates of taxation than we do. The US has a nominal tax of 35%. Effectively, you don't. It's a case of "look dat number is higher than yours, therefore im right" - it's not. You leave half the important stuff in the dark, i guess willingly, to support your argument. Let me cite something as well: "NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- U.S. corporations pay one of the highest tax rates in the world. There's little debate about that. Still, some argue the difference in the overall tax burden for U.S. companies isn't nearly as great it appears. In fact, the United States collects less corporate tax relative to the overall economy than almost any other country in the world. And that's a more objective measure of tax burden. Different accounting rules around the world means what's counted as income in one country isn't counted in another -- that makes comparisons of tax rates misleading. U.S. corporate tax collections totaled only 1.7% of GDP in 2009, the most recent year for which complete data is available, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. On that measure, the United States had the third lowest corporate tax burden, behind France and Germany. The worldwide average was 2.8%." "U.S. businesses have another edge over countries with lower tax rates: They don't pay a Value Added Tax or VAT, a type of sales tax. All other developed nations raise a significant part of their tax revenue through VATs, but it is not included in the comparisons of corporate tax collections." So please, if you compare "burdens" on corporations, don't just look at the direct taxations, because that would be stupid. If you want to look at effective tax rate, then you should actually look at it. The study I will link to reviewed 13 other studies and found an effective U.S tax rate of 27.9% compared to an average of 20.3%. http://taxfoundation.org/sites/taxfoundation.org/files/docs/sr195.pdfThe following study looked only at the industrial and automotive sectors and found that the USA had an effective tax rate of 30.9% compared to the United Kingdom's 16.7% rate. http://www.pwc.com/en_US/us/industrial-products/publications/assets/pwc-industrial-products-tax-rate-benchmarking-report-2013.pdfIn the United States we also pay what is called a sales tax. It varies by state but averages roughly 10%. The first link is from a conservative think tank with number magic which probably lead xDaunt to his 2012 election predictions. That second link you offered doesn't even make sense in the current discussion... http://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/ftpdocs/69xx/doc6902/11-28-corporatetax.pdf
If you are arguing that the study is biased then why can't you tell me where their methodology was flawed? And how can a study on specific industries that compares effective tax rates for that industry not apply to a discussion on effective corporate tax rates? Are we having the same discussion here?
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On October 11 2013 08:46 Jormundr wrote:Show nested quote +On October 11 2013 08:42 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 08:27 Jormundr wrote:On October 11 2013 08:19 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 03:33 Nyxisto wrote:On October 11 2013 03:26 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 03:13 WhiteDog wrote:On October 11 2013 03:01 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 02:20 HellRoxYa wrote:On October 11 2013 01:53 Vegetarian wrote: [quote]
The FDA has a horrendous track record of approving unsafe drugs, artificial sweeteners, and other food additives. You also make no argument as to how government regulation can overcome my arguments against it. How do you see government regulation solving scams better than the free market? Can you give an explanation? I have already given lengthy ones. I am also curious about these extremely common scenarios you speak of in unregulated markets can you give even one example?
GMO vs non GMO is not irrelevant. The FDA approves gmo food because large agricultural firms in the USA lobby the FDA despite the growing evidence that they are not safe for human consumption. GMOS are banned or restricted in all of the EU, Japan, Australia and a bunch of other developed countries.
Contrary to your post vitamin supplements are not tested by the FDA. Consumerlab.com tests them for purity and traces of heavy metals and other toxins. And, I think you have it backwards on vitamin supplements. I think they are definitely necessary in the modern environment if you are trying to achieve optimal health. I am not arguing you cant survive to age 70 without supplements, but with soil erosion and modern environmental toxins you will be hard pressed to have optimal health without taking any supplements. The concept is simple: Government institutions work for the people, private institutions (businesses) work for their shareholders. Safe food is a public issue, where whoever handles it should be responsible to those it affects. This very basic argument leads up to conclude that it should not be handled by private interests. If you have a problem with the FDA it's probably because it, like many if not most other government institutions in the US, is bought and paid for by private interests. Pretending this problem of corruption would magically go away if you directly shifted it over to the private sector is a ridiculous claim. Clean up the FDA and make it work like intended instead of pretending that it can't work. As usual the problem is that you need reform in the US. No corruption, no lobbying (or at least, reasonable lobbying). The problem is not, however, that the government handles issues of safety for the population. It doesn't help that one half in US political debates maintain this vision of government = bad because it leads politicians from that side to time and again validate their arguments by literally making the government not work optimally. Even clearer when they make parts of the government not work at all, like right now. Or when they make sure actual improvements to healthcare (don't really care if you're against big government, single-payer systems are more economical, even if you don't also find them inherently moral like I do) are reduced to something like the ACA, which is just a hollow shell of what it could be. Lastly, what the hell does "soil erosion" and "environmental toxins" have to do with eating food without supplements? The problem is eating the right food, not that the right food cannot be found. Although the latter is becoming a bigger and bigger problem in the US, but not because of soil erosion or environmental issues. (It's because of social attitudes and big business which together create a situation where fast food restaurants and fast food in stores becomes more and more popular while healthy alternatives are left unsold, leading stores and restaurants that serve these healthy alternatives to either change their stock or menu or close) I already posted a decent amount about what government regulation actually does in the market in the last two pages. I won't go into detail here I will just say that you have it backwards and government institutions do not work for the people they work for special interests while businesses can only appease their shareholders by increasing the value of their company which they can only do by offering better products or services to the people than their competitors. You argue that countries with high taxation rate have lower living conditions, then when someone argue that "socialists" countries have both higher taxation rate and living conditions, you respond that the US does not really have a low taxation rate if you compare it to... China. Your whole point of view are based on nothing but the negation of what is. No, you should reread my posts if you even read them in the first place. Countries that have a high taxation rate will have lower economic growth than countries with a lower tax rate. And this is very evident in socialist countries that experienced higher rates of growth before they instituted higher tax rates and welfare states. Someone argued that, but just like you they were unable to source their claims since USA corporate taxes are the highest of any developed country in the world. Nothing is stopping you from comparing tax rates of the USA to EU countries, I chose to compare USA taxes to China because I found it amusing that the communists have lower rates of taxation than we do. Lower taxes do not stimulate growth, and higher taxes do not harm economic growth, there is very little correlation between taxation and economic growth. source: http://www.businessinsider.com/study-tax-cuts-dont-lead-to-growth-2012-9 If you don't believe this source you're free to look up the one million other studies, graphs and data that all lead to the same conclusion. There's also no theoretical reasoning behind it, because governments are not burning the money they're collecting through taxes, they're spending it. If you, a company or your government makes an investment makes no difference in terms of economic growth. So let me get this straight. Someone that is self-employed is going to work the exact same amount of hours if you tax him at 10% as opposed to 90%? This actually sounds logical to you? The government can not know better than professional investors as to what investments are the best use of societies scarce resources. Again, how does it make sense to you that government officials would be as good at trading as professional investors. Clearly the government is going to make bad investments thereby wasting societies scarce resources at a much higher rate then someone whose lively hood depends on them making correct investments with their own money, not taxpayers. This stuff really should not be that difficult to understand. You've been living in a libertarian talking point cave for too long. You're getting an echo. Excellent argument.1. Yes, assuming he gets the same utility from his work that he did before. The % doesn't mean anything unless. Not sure how you don't get such a basic concept but the higher the tax rate the less incentive anyone has to work beyond the point of being able to afford to survive. If you have enough money that you don't need to work and the government says it will take 90% of what you make if you choose to work, clearly many start ups will be to risky, you will be less inclined to want to work, and obviously economic growth will suffer.
2. You've invented some mythical group of people called investors who allocate resources based on maximal efficiency. This group does not exist. You then say that the government is going to fuck up investments because... Oh wait you didn't have any reason for that. I really wonder what world you think your living in. Have you heard of venture capitalists? Investment banks? The stock market??? People in the private sector invest money everyday with the goal of making a profit. The profit motive causes them to only make investments that they deem are a good use of their resources. The government lacks a profit motive and the investments that they make will be based on lobbyists and politics not on what is the best use of the resources the government took from the private sector.
So we're left to take you on your word that "government is bad" or something or other. Sorry, not very convincing. You don't have to take my word for it you just have to take an introductory economics class. 1. You're still wrong. http://www.forbes.com/sites/susanadams/2012/11/26/doesnt-anyone-disagree-with-warren-buffett-about-taxes/2. The government lacks a profit motive? Then you've just invalidated #1, because I'm pretty sure there are a whole lot of government people who do things, even though you're saying they don't have a for profit motive according to you.
This is getting boring. Stop throwing out random links like you think your making a point. Try making an actual argument and when you realize you are incapable of it you should consider changing your position.
The forbes article says nothing about effective tax rates what are you trying to argue by posting it?
The government has no profit motive. Government officials have personal profit motives that is not the same. They do not attempt to invest government funds in order to make a positive return. They do not choose to hand out contracts based on the best value, they do so based on politics. In the USA at least virtually every government run operation from the post office to social security insurance is insolvent and operates at losses every year. If the government was good at investing then they all wouldn't be trillions of dollars in debt.
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On October 11 2013 08:55 Vegetarian wrote:Show nested quote +On October 11 2013 08:46 Jormundr wrote:On October 11 2013 08:42 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 08:27 Jormundr wrote:On October 11 2013 08:19 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 03:33 Nyxisto wrote:On October 11 2013 03:26 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 03:13 WhiteDog wrote:On October 11 2013 03:01 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 02:20 HellRoxYa wrote: [quote]
The concept is simple: Government institutions work for the people, private institutions (businesses) work for their shareholders.
Safe food is a public issue, where whoever handles it should be responsible to those it affects. This very basic argument leads up to conclude that it should not be handled by private interests. If you have a problem with the FDA it's probably because it, like many if not most other government institutions in the US, is bought and paid for by private interests. Pretending this problem of corruption would magically go away if you directly shifted it over to the private sector is a ridiculous claim. Clean up the FDA and make it work like intended instead of pretending that it can't work.
As usual the problem is that you need reform in the US. No corruption, no lobbying (or at least, reasonable lobbying). The problem is not, however, that the government handles issues of safety for the population. It doesn't help that one half in US political debates maintain this vision of government = bad because it leads politicians from that side to time and again validate their arguments by literally making the government not work optimally. Even clearer when they make parts of the government not work at all, like right now. Or when they make sure actual improvements to healthcare (don't really care if you're against big government, single-payer systems are more economical, even if you don't also find them inherently moral like I do) are reduced to something like the ACA, which is just a hollow shell of what it could be.
Lastly, what the hell does "soil erosion" and "environmental toxins" have to do with eating food without supplements? The problem is eating the right food, not that the right food cannot be found. Although the latter is becoming a bigger and bigger problem in the US, but not because of soil erosion or environmental issues. (It's because of social attitudes and big business which together create a situation where fast food restaurants and fast food in stores becomes more and more popular while healthy alternatives are left unsold, leading stores and restaurants that serve these healthy alternatives to either change their stock or menu or close) I already posted a decent amount about what government regulation actually does in the market in the last two pages. I won't go into detail here I will just say that you have it backwards and government institutions do not work for the people they work for special interests while businesses can only appease their shareholders by increasing the value of their company which they can only do by offering better products or services to the people than their competitors. You argue that countries with high taxation rate have lower living conditions, then when someone argue that "socialists" countries have both higher taxation rate and living conditions, you respond that the US does not really have a low taxation rate if you compare it to... China. Your whole point of view are based on nothing but the negation of what is. No, you should reread my posts if you even read them in the first place. Countries that have a high taxation rate will have lower economic growth than countries with a lower tax rate. And this is very evident in socialist countries that experienced higher rates of growth before they instituted higher tax rates and welfare states. Someone argued that, but just like you they were unable to source their claims since USA corporate taxes are the highest of any developed country in the world. Nothing is stopping you from comparing tax rates of the USA to EU countries, I chose to compare USA taxes to China because I found it amusing that the communists have lower rates of taxation than we do. Lower taxes do not stimulate growth, and higher taxes do not harm economic growth, there is very little correlation between taxation and economic growth. source: http://www.businessinsider.com/study-tax-cuts-dont-lead-to-growth-2012-9 If you don't believe this source you're free to look up the one million other studies, graphs and data that all lead to the same conclusion. There's also no theoretical reasoning behind it, because governments are not burning the money they're collecting through taxes, they're spending it. If you, a company or your government makes an investment makes no difference in terms of economic growth. So let me get this straight. Someone that is self-employed is going to work the exact same amount of hours if you tax him at 10% as opposed to 90%? This actually sounds logical to you? The government can not know better than professional investors as to what investments are the best use of societies scarce resources. Again, how does it make sense to you that government officials would be as good at trading as professional investors. Clearly the government is going to make bad investments thereby wasting societies scarce resources at a much higher rate then someone whose lively hood depends on them making correct investments with their own money, not taxpayers. This stuff really should not be that difficult to understand. You've been living in a libertarian talking point cave for too long. You're getting an echo. Excellent argument.1. Yes, assuming he gets the same utility from his work that he did before. The % doesn't mean anything unless. Not sure how you don't get such a basic concept but the higher the tax rate the less incentive anyone has to work beyond the point of being able to afford to survive. If you have enough money that you don't need to work and the government says it will take 90% of what you make if you choose to work, clearly many start ups will be to risky, you will be less inclined to want to work, and obviously economic growth will suffer.
2. You've invented some mythical group of people called investors who allocate resources based on maximal efficiency. This group does not exist. You then say that the government is going to fuck up investments because... Oh wait you didn't have any reason for that. I really wonder what world you think your living in. Have you heard of venture capitalists? Investment banks? The stock market??? People in the private sector invest money everyday with the goal of making a profit. The profit motive causes them to only make investments that they deem are a good use of their resources. The government lacks a profit motive and the investments that they make will be based on lobbyists and politics not on what is the best use of the resources the government took from the private sector.
So we're left to take you on your word that "government is bad" or something or other. Sorry, not very convincing. You don't have to take my word for it you just have to take an introductory economics class. 1. You're still wrong. http://www.forbes.com/sites/susanadams/2012/11/26/doesnt-anyone-disagree-with-warren-buffett-about-taxes/2. The government lacks a profit motive? Then you've just invalidated #1, because I'm pretty sure there are a whole lot of government people who do things, even though you're saying they don't have a for profit motive according to you. This is getting boring. Stop throwing out random links like you think your making a point. Try making an actual argument and when you realize you are incapable of it you should consider changing your position. The forbes article says nothing about effective tax rates what are you trying to argue by posting it? The government has no profit motive. Government officials have personal profit motives that is not the same. They do not attempt to invest government funds in order to make a positive return. They do not choose to hand out contracts based on the best value, they do so based on politics. In the USA at least virtually every government run operation from the post office to social security insurance is insolvent and operates at losses every year. If governments were good at investing then they all wouldn't be in so much debt.
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On October 11 2013 04:11 Adila wrote: Pretty sure the financial ratings agencies are privately run. That didn't stop them from giving AAA ratings for junk.
Any private agency can get corrupted by the industry it is supposed to watch just as easily as government agencies.
The ratings agencies are a government sponsored oligopoly. If you or me wanted to start a ratings firm to compete with them we would not be allowed to do so by our government. Just because something is privatized does not mean it is a free market.
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On October 11 2013 09:01 Vegetarian wrote:Show nested quote +On October 11 2013 04:11 Adila wrote: Pretty sure the financial ratings agencies are privately run. That didn't stop them from giving AAA ratings for junk.
Any private agency can get corrupted by the industry it is supposed to watch just as easily as government agencies. The ratings agencies are a government sponsored oligopoly. If you or me wanted to start a ratings firm to compete with them we would not be allowed to do so by our government. Just because something is privatized does not mean it is a free market.
Special pleading, basically.
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On October 11 2013 09:01 Vegetarian wrote:Show nested quote +On October 11 2013 04:11 Adila wrote: Pretty sure the financial ratings agencies are privately run. That didn't stop them from giving AAA ratings for junk.
Any private agency can get corrupted by the industry it is supposed to watch just as easily as government agencies. The ratings agencies are a government sponsored oligopoly. If you or me wanted to start a ratings firm to compete with them we would not be allowed to do so by our government. Just because something is privatized does not mean it is a free market.
And it's natural for companies to consolidate in a free market. Ultimately, over a period of time, the same situation would arise either way if there is no third party to intervene.
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On October 11 2013 08:43 Jormundr wrote:Show nested quote +On October 11 2013 08:33 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 03:35 m4inbrain wrote:Someone argued that, but just like you they were unable to source their claims since USA corporate taxes are the highest of any developed country in the world. Nothing is stopping you from comparing tax rates of the USA to EU countries, I chose to compare USA taxes to China because I found it amusing that the communists have lower rates of taxation than we do. The US has a nominal tax of 35%. Effectively, you don't. It's a case of "look dat number is higher than yours, therefore im right" - it's not. You leave half the important stuff in the dark, i guess willingly, to support your argument. Let me cite something as well: "NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- U.S. corporations pay one of the highest tax rates in the world. There's little debate about that. Still, some argue the difference in the overall tax burden for U.S. companies isn't nearly as great it appears. In fact, the United States collects less corporate tax relative to the overall economy than almost any other country in the world. And that's a more objective measure of tax burden. Different accounting rules around the world means what's counted as income in one country isn't counted in another -- that makes comparisons of tax rates misleading. U.S. corporate tax collections totaled only 1.7% of GDP in 2009, the most recent year for which complete data is available, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. On that measure, the United States had the third lowest corporate tax burden, behind France and Germany. The worldwide average was 2.8%." "U.S. businesses have another edge over countries with lower tax rates: They don't pay a Value Added Tax or VAT, a type of sales tax. All other developed nations raise a significant part of their tax revenue through VATs, but it is not included in the comparisons of corporate tax collections." So please, if you compare "burdens" on corporations, don't just look at the direct taxations, because that would be stupid. If you want to look at effective tax rate, then you should actually look at it. The study I will link to reviewed 13 other studies and found an effective U.S tax rate of 27.9% compared to an average of 20.3%. http://taxfoundation.org/sites/taxfoundation.org/files/docs/sr195.pdfThe following study looked only at the industrial and automotive sectors and found that the USA had an effective tax rate of 30.9% compared to the United Kingdom's 16.7% rate. http://www.pwc.com/en_US/us/industrial-products/publications/assets/pwc-industrial-products-tax-rate-benchmarking-report-2013.pdfIn the United States we also pay what is called a sales tax. It varies by state but averages roughly 10%. The first link is from a conservative think tank with number magic which probably lead xDaunt to his 2012 election predictions. That second link you offered doesn't even make sense in the current discussion... http://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/ftpdocs/69xx/doc6902/11-28-corporatetax.pdf
It actually is rather hilarious that a pretty hefty set of individuals were clueless enough to buy into the Fox News "Romney totally has this in the bag!!" utter denial of reality. The polls and everything else indicated the entire time that Obama was going to win by a fucking mile. All for the sake of "balanced media", lol
Just a tip for convincing people of things better: When you feel that urge to whip out a link to a study, make sure it's a peer reviewed study and not something pieced together by a company or a think tank. Peer review, look into it. The numbers produced by those 'studies' may or may not be accurate. Who knows! They weren't peer reviewed
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On October 11 2013 09:22 FallDownMarigold wrote: It actually is rather hilarious that a pretty hefty set of individuals were clueless enough to buy into the Fox News "Romney totally has this in the bag!!" utter denial of reality. The polls and everything else indicated the entire time that Obama was going to win by a fucking mile. All for the sake of "balanced media", lol I find this a lot more terrifying than I do funny, especially when even people like Karl Rove were fooled. When the top strategists of the party are buying into their own propaganda, what do you think will happen if and when they actually get elected?
On October 11 2013 07:56 Lixler wrote: do you really think the only way the total amount of USD in circulation increases is by the government printing money? Is this a serious question? By definition a US dollar is only a US dollar if the government prints it.
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On October 11 2013 08:27 Jormundr wrote:Show nested quote +On October 11 2013 08:19 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 03:33 Nyxisto wrote:On October 11 2013 03:26 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 03:13 WhiteDog wrote:On October 11 2013 03:01 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 02:20 HellRoxYa wrote:On October 11 2013 01:53 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 01:20 mcc wrote:On October 11 2013 00:58 Vegetarian wrote:[quote] I agree that living standards are worse in the US than a lot of other seemingly socialist countries. However, I think the USA gets an unfair reputation of being a capitalist economy. Taxes are higher in the USA than in China and most other countries. USA Corporate taxes are some of the highest in the world. The government debt to GDP ratio, if you count unfunded liabilities, is the largest in the world. Regulations in the USA are so burdensome that many companies have been relocating and moving operations overseas. I've never heard of a way that I think regulation could work other than through the invisible hand of the market. The way I see it if the government is granted the power to regulate an industry then overnight one thing will change. The companies in that industry will no longer be competing against each other solely to provide a better product or service at a better value than their competition. Regulation introduces another way for companies to gain market share through lobbying the government to use the regulatory power to their advantage or to the detriment of their competitors. The most heavily regulated industry in the USA is finance and I don't think I am alone in considering it the most corrupt industry in this country, You say that consumers can be gullible and choose products wrongly in an unregulated market. But, government officials are no different except that they are in charge of spending other peoples money and not their own. This is also very subjective. In a free market no one can force you to buy a product or service so if someone chooses to buy a product or service they have made a determination that it is a beneficial transaction for them. Retailers also provide a check on manufacturers. Most stores are not going to want to stock faulty or contaminated products as they know they would eventually lose market share to a store that becomes known for better quality products or one that has a more favorable return policy. Lastly, the market really does self-regulate. GMO products are not labelled by the FDA in the USA, yet there is a private company that certifies products as non gmo and puts their stamp/reputation on products they approve. http://www.nongmoproject.org/ This company and others like consumerlab.com for vitamin supplements, and consumerreports indirectly regulate industries by offering reviews and tests of products. Companies like this would lose market share or go out of business if they approved a product that was later determined to be faulty as they would lose credibility if this occurred. On the other hand if a government regulatory agency like the FDA approves a drug that later turns out be unsafe the FDA does not lose its monopoly. Considering that you link to mises.org I assume you are one of those people who claim that displayed preference is actual preference. That is contrary to what we know about human brain. The argument that the fact that government organizations consist of humans means they cannot know better than singular human is of course nonsensical. There is something called expertise, some people just know better. Of course the hard thing is to make sure that the decisions are made by the people with actual expertise and prevent them from bending the system for their gain. In many areas of life this actually is successfully done. Properly designed organizations of the type like FDA and other regulatory agencies work pretty well. Much better than self-regulatory attempts in many cases. Self-regulatory agencies do not solve one-off scams that do not care about repeat customers. You can argue that if you buy something from such a business it is your fault, but history shows that such a scenario is extremely common even in completely unregulated markets and thus solving it is a task of the government as per its task description. As for your examples of self-regulatory agencies, you can do better. There are actually successful examples of such that are relevant. Those two that you mentioned cannot lose basically anything by doing anything as GMOs vs non-GMO is completely irrelevant as both of those products are checked by FDA for health hazards. Same goes for vitamin supplements. And so what they are actually doing ? Checking if there is some GMO in the product, who cares, there is probably no functional difference. And vitamin supplements are one big scam, sorry, in 99% completely unnecessary product whose sales are driven purely by misinformed consumers. EDIT: Also US taxes are not higher than in most other developed countries. Also for you previous post, can you provide any example of welfare state going bankrupt, you say it is inevitable, but the incidence of such events is rather low (non-existent basically). The FDA has a horrendous track record of approving unsafe drugs, artificial sweeteners, and other food additives. You also make no argument as to how government regulation can overcome my arguments against it. How do you see government regulation solving scams better than the free market? Can you give an explanation? I have already given lengthy ones. I am also curious about these extremely common scenarios you speak of in unregulated markets can you give even one example? GMO vs non GMO is not irrelevant. The FDA approves gmo food because large agricultural firms in the USA lobby the FDA despite the growing evidence that they are not safe for human consumption. GMOS are banned or restricted in all of the EU, Japan, Australia and a bunch of other developed countries. Contrary to your post vitamin supplements are not tested by the FDA. Consumerlab.com tests them for purity and traces of heavy metals and other toxins. And, I think you have it backwards on vitamin supplements. I think they are definitely necessary in the modern environment if you are trying to achieve optimal health. I am not arguing you cant survive to age 70 without supplements, but with soil erosion and modern environmental toxins you will be hard pressed to have optimal health without taking any supplements. The concept is simple: Government institutions work for the people, private institutions (businesses) work for their shareholders. Safe food is a public issue, where whoever handles it should be responsible to those it affects. This very basic argument leads up to conclude that it should not be handled by private interests. If you have a problem with the FDA it's probably because it, like many if not most other government institutions in the US, is bought and paid for by private interests. Pretending this problem of corruption would magically go away if you directly shifted it over to the private sector is a ridiculous claim. Clean up the FDA and make it work like intended instead of pretending that it can't work. As usual the problem is that you need reform in the US. No corruption, no lobbying (or at least, reasonable lobbying). The problem is not, however, that the government handles issues of safety for the population. It doesn't help that one half in US political debates maintain this vision of government = bad because it leads politicians from that side to time and again validate their arguments by literally making the government not work optimally. Even clearer when they make parts of the government not work at all, like right now. Or when they make sure actual improvements to healthcare (don't really care if you're against big government, single-payer systems are more economical, even if you don't also find them inherently moral like I do) are reduced to something like the ACA, which is just a hollow shell of what it could be. Lastly, what the hell does "soil erosion" and "environmental toxins" have to do with eating food without supplements? The problem is eating the right food, not that the right food cannot be found. Although the latter is becoming a bigger and bigger problem in the US, but not because of soil erosion or environmental issues. (It's because of social attitudes and big business which together create a situation where fast food restaurants and fast food in stores becomes more and more popular while healthy alternatives are left unsold, leading stores and restaurants that serve these healthy alternatives to either change their stock or menu or close) I already posted a decent amount about what government regulation actually does in the market in the last two pages. I won't go into detail here I will just say that you have it backwards and government institutions do not work for the people they work for special interests while businesses can only appease their shareholders by increasing the value of their company which they can only do by offering better products or services to the people than their competitors. You argue that countries with high taxation rate have lower living conditions, then when someone argue that "socialists" countries have both higher taxation rate and living conditions, you respond that the US does not really have a low taxation rate if you compare it to... China. Your whole point of view are based on nothing but the negation of what is. No, you should reread my posts if you even read them in the first place. Countries that have a high taxation rate will have lower economic growth than countries with a lower tax rate. And this is very evident in socialist countries that experienced higher rates of growth before they instituted higher tax rates and welfare states. Someone argued that, but just like you they were unable to source their claims since USA corporate taxes are the highest of any developed country in the world. Nothing is stopping you from comparing tax rates of the USA to EU countries, I chose to compare USA taxes to China because I found it amusing that the communists have lower rates of taxation than we do. Lower taxes do not stimulate growth, and higher taxes do not harm economic growth, there is very little correlation between taxation and economic growth. source: http://www.businessinsider.com/study-tax-cuts-dont-lead-to-growth-2012-9 If you don't believe this source you're free to look up the one million other studies, graphs and data that all lead to the same conclusion. There's also no theoretical reasoning behind it, because governments are not burning the money they're collecting through taxes, they're spending it. If you, a company or your government makes an investment makes no difference in terms of economic growth. So let me get this straight. Someone that is self-employed is going to work the exact same amount of hours if you tax him at 10% as opposed to 90%? This actually sounds logical to you? The government can not know better than professional investors as to what investments are the best use of societies scarce resources. Again, how does it make sense to you that government officials would be as good at trading as professional investors. Clearly the government is going to make bad investments thereby wasting societies scarce resources at a much higher rate then someone whose lively hood depends on them making correct investments with their own money, not taxpayers. This stuff really should not be that difficult to understand. You've been living in a libertarian talking point cave for too long. You're getting an echo. 1. Yes, assuming he gets the same utility from his work that he did before. The % doesn't mean anything unless. 2. You've invented some mythical group of people called investors who allocate resources based on maximal efficiency. This group does not exist. You then say that the government is going to fuck up investments because... Oh wait you didn't have any reason for that. So we're left to take you on your word that "government is bad" or something or other. Sorry, not very convincing. In order to get the same utility from his work, he has to make more money to get the equivalent.
Say he earns 40k/year before taxes. At a 10% tax rate, he gets 36k/year At a 90% tax rate, he gets 4k/year
He can't work the same amount under the latter conditions unless the government gives him everything for free. The reality is, there is a "sweet spot" that people tend to like. You have to align your taxes with that sweet spot given current wage earnings. If you tax too much, it hurts economic growth because they cant spend. If you tax too little, then the government suffers from not enough revenue (which also hurts economic growth)
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On October 11 2013 09:11 Adila wrote:Show nested quote +On October 11 2013 09:01 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 04:11 Adila wrote: Pretty sure the financial ratings agencies are privately run. That didn't stop them from giving AAA ratings for junk.
Any private agency can get corrupted by the industry it is supposed to watch just as easily as government agencies. The ratings agencies are a government sponsored oligopoly. If you or me wanted to start a ratings firm to compete with them we would not be allowed to do so by our government. Just because something is privatized does not mean it is a free market. And it's natural for companies to consolidate in a free market. Ultimately, over a period of time, the same situation would arise either way if there is no third party to intervene.
That is not how it works. If you have a free market then the companies that gain the most market share, ratings agencies in this case, will have shown they are better than their competitors at evaluating the risk levels of financial assets. Further, in a free market if ratings agencies wrongly evaluate assets they will lose market share to agencies that were more accurate or to entrepreneurs that see an opportunity to enter the market when competition is weak.
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I'm not sure where this idea of a free market as an absolute meritocracy comes from.
In reality, the companies which win are frequently not those which provide a better product, but can in fact be those which are better at selling and marketing an inferior product. The same principle would apply to the ratings agencies if they weren't sponsored, so you wouldn't necessarily gain much by making them "free".
That said, I'm not really sure why you brought that up...
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On October 11 2013 10:10 Vegetarian wrote:Show nested quote +On October 11 2013 09:11 Adila wrote:On October 11 2013 09:01 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 04:11 Adila wrote: Pretty sure the financial ratings agencies are privately run. That didn't stop them from giving AAA ratings for junk.
Any private agency can get corrupted by the industry it is supposed to watch just as easily as government agencies. The ratings agencies are a government sponsored oligopoly. If you or me wanted to start a ratings firm to compete with them we would not be allowed to do so by our government. Just because something is privatized does not mean it is a free market. And it's natural for companies to consolidate in a free market. Ultimately, over a period of time, the same situation would arise either way if there is no third party to intervene. That is not how it works. If you have a free market then the companies that gain the most market share, ratings agencies in this case, will have shown they are better than their competitors at evaluating the risk levels of financial assets. Further, in a free market if ratings agencies wrongly evaluate assets they will lose market share to agencies that were more accurate or to entrepreneurs that see an opportunity to enter the market when competition is weak.
Maybe in fantasy land free market but in reality no. As the agencies get whittled down by the "best" ones, more resources will go to them since they are "the best". This means they have more influence. This means they have more power. And you know what more power means right?
Comanies are run by people and people get corrupted by power. Else, government would be perfect and we woudln't be having this discussion.
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On October 11 2013 10:36 Adila wrote:Show nested quote +On October 11 2013 10:10 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 09:11 Adila wrote:On October 11 2013 09:01 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 04:11 Adila wrote: Pretty sure the financial ratings agencies are privately run. That didn't stop them from giving AAA ratings for junk.
Any private agency can get corrupted by the industry it is supposed to watch just as easily as government agencies. The ratings agencies are a government sponsored oligopoly. If you or me wanted to start a ratings firm to compete with them we would not be allowed to do so by our government. Just because something is privatized does not mean it is a free market. And it's natural for companies to consolidate in a free market. Ultimately, over a period of time, the same situation would arise either way if there is no third party to intervene. That is not how it works. If you have a free market then the companies that gain the most market share, ratings agencies in this case, will have shown they are better than their competitors at evaluating the risk levels of financial assets. Further, in a free market if ratings agencies wrongly evaluate assets they will lose market share to agencies that were more accurate or to entrepreneurs that see an opportunity to enter the market when competition is weak. Maybe in fantasy land free market but in reality no. As the agencies get whittled down by the "best" ones, more resources will go to them since they are "the best". This means they have more influence. This means they have more power. And you know what more power means right? Comanies are run by people and people get corrupted by power. Else, government would be perfect and we woudln't be having this discussion.
In a free market this does not mean they have more influence or power. That only exists when you give government the power to regulate companies. Absent the regulation a company can only gain more profits by doing what its customers want it to do.
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On October 11 2013 12:06 Vegetarian wrote:Show nested quote +On October 11 2013 10:36 Adila wrote:On October 11 2013 10:10 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 09:11 Adila wrote:On October 11 2013 09:01 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 04:11 Adila wrote: Pretty sure the financial ratings agencies are privately run. That didn't stop them from giving AAA ratings for junk.
Any private agency can get corrupted by the industry it is supposed to watch just as easily as government agencies. The ratings agencies are a government sponsored oligopoly. If you or me wanted to start a ratings firm to compete with them we would not be allowed to do so by our government. Just because something is privatized does not mean it is a free market. And it's natural for companies to consolidate in a free market. Ultimately, over a period of time, the same situation would arise either way if there is no third party to intervene. That is not how it works. If you have a free market then the companies that gain the most market share, ratings agencies in this case, will have shown they are better than their competitors at evaluating the risk levels of financial assets. Further, in a free market if ratings agencies wrongly evaluate assets they will lose market share to agencies that were more accurate or to entrepreneurs that see an opportunity to enter the market when competition is weak. Maybe in fantasy land free market but in reality no. As the agencies get whittled down by the "best" ones, more resources will go to them since they are "the best". This means they have more influence. This means they have more power. And you know what more power means right? Comanies are run by people and people get corrupted by power. Else, government would be perfect and we woudln't be having this discussion. In a free market this does not mean they have more influence or power. That only exists when you give government the power to regulate companies. Absent the regulation a company can only gain more profits by doing what its customers want it to do. The history of business disagrees.
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On October 11 2013 12:16 farvacola wrote:Show nested quote +On October 11 2013 12:06 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 10:36 Adila wrote:On October 11 2013 10:10 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 09:11 Adila wrote:On October 11 2013 09:01 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 04:11 Adila wrote: Pretty sure the financial ratings agencies are privately run. That didn't stop them from giving AAA ratings for junk.
Any private agency can get corrupted by the industry it is supposed to watch just as easily as government agencies. The ratings agencies are a government sponsored oligopoly. If you or me wanted to start a ratings firm to compete with them we would not be allowed to do so by our government. Just because something is privatized does not mean it is a free market. And it's natural for companies to consolidate in a free market. Ultimately, over a period of time, the same situation would arise either way if there is no third party to intervene. That is not how it works. If you have a free market then the companies that gain the most market share, ratings agencies in this case, will have shown they are better than their competitors at evaluating the risk levels of financial assets. Further, in a free market if ratings agencies wrongly evaluate assets they will lose market share to agencies that were more accurate or to entrepreneurs that see an opportunity to enter the market when competition is weak. Maybe in fantasy land free market but in reality no. As the agencies get whittled down by the "best" ones, more resources will go to them since they are "the best". This means they have more influence. This means they have more power. And you know what more power means right? Comanies are run by people and people get corrupted by power. Else, government would be perfect and we woudln't be having this discussion. In a free market this does not mean they have more influence or power. That only exists when you give government the power to regulate companies. Absent the regulation a company can only gain more profits by doing what its customers want it to do. The history of business disagrees. Even as someone who generally likes the free market this is necessarily the case. Regulation is taking power away from companies. Therefor dereg = more power for them.
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On October 11 2013 12:06 Vegetarian wrote:Show nested quote +On October 11 2013 10:36 Adila wrote:On October 11 2013 10:10 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 09:11 Adila wrote:On October 11 2013 09:01 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 04:11 Adila wrote: Pretty sure the financial ratings agencies are privately run. That didn't stop them from giving AAA ratings for junk.
Any private agency can get corrupted by the industry it is supposed to watch just as easily as government agencies. The ratings agencies are a government sponsored oligopoly. If you or me wanted to start a ratings firm to compete with them we would not be allowed to do so by our government. Just because something is privatized does not mean it is a free market. And it's natural for companies to consolidate in a free market. Ultimately, over a period of time, the same situation would arise either way if there is no third party to intervene. That is not how it works. If you have a free market then the companies that gain the most market share, ratings agencies in this case, will have shown they are better than their competitors at evaluating the risk levels of financial assets. Further, in a free market if ratings agencies wrongly evaluate assets they will lose market share to agencies that were more accurate or to entrepreneurs that see an opportunity to enter the market when competition is weak. Maybe in fantasy land free market but in reality no. As the agencies get whittled down by the "best" ones, more resources will go to them since they are "the best". This means they have more influence. This means they have more power. And you know what more power means right? Comanies are run by people and people get corrupted by power. Else, government would be perfect and we woudln't be having this discussion. In a free market this does not mean they have more influence or power. That only exists when you give government the power to regulate companies. Absent the regulation a company can only gain more profits by doing what its customers want it to do.
Isn't it generally accepted that free markets don't work where there are high transaction costs for bargaining, and less than perfect information?
Also, have you read The Jungle?
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United States7483 Posts
On October 11 2013 12:06 Vegetarian wrote:Show nested quote +On October 11 2013 10:36 Adila wrote:On October 11 2013 10:10 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 09:11 Adila wrote:On October 11 2013 09:01 Vegetarian wrote:On October 11 2013 04:11 Adila wrote: Pretty sure the financial ratings agencies are privately run. That didn't stop them from giving AAA ratings for junk.
Any private agency can get corrupted by the industry it is supposed to watch just as easily as government agencies. The ratings agencies are a government sponsored oligopoly. If you or me wanted to start a ratings firm to compete with them we would not be allowed to do so by our government. Just because something is privatized does not mean it is a free market. And it's natural for companies to consolidate in a free market. Ultimately, over a period of time, the same situation would arise either way if there is no third party to intervene. That is not how it works. If you have a free market then the companies that gain the most market share, ratings agencies in this case, will have shown they are better than their competitors at evaluating the risk levels of financial assets. Further, in a free market if ratings agencies wrongly evaluate assets they will lose market share to agencies that were more accurate or to entrepreneurs that see an opportunity to enter the market when competition is weak. Maybe in fantasy land free market but in reality no. As the agencies get whittled down by the "best" ones, more resources will go to them since they are "the best". This means they have more influence. This means they have more power. And you know what more power means right? Comanies are run by people and people get corrupted by power. Else, government would be perfect and we woudln't be having this discussion. In a free market this does not mean they have more influence or power. That only exists when you give government the power to regulate companies. Absent the regulation a company can only gain more profits by doing what its customers want it to do.
The entirety of history disagrees with you. The state can be a weapon used by corporations, it's true, but removal of the state in no way shape or form limits their power, in fact it strengthens it. Corporations will always make do with what they can get their hands on, it takes regulation levied by governments to limit them, and nothing else will ever work. You need to understand that capitalism did not develop out of a vacuum, it developed out of feudalism, a system which was certainly not fair. There was never a point, ever, where the ground was even and fair.
Capitalism is most beneficial for those who have capital, that will always be the case. There is nothing at all to stop corporations with capital from running all over everyone else without government intervention, imagine where we'd be without anti-trust laws. Companies that are rich just get richer, and can practice predatory pricing practices to keep others priced out of the markets. Oligopolies and monopolies can easily engage in price gouging and there's nothing anyone can do about it. Corporations can cut costs left and right, screwing the worker and making conditions unsafe as hell, and also produce highly unsafe products because there's nobody to stop them. Read "The Jungle".
The argument that the consumer will balance this out by only doing business with companies that engage in 'good business practices' is not at all backed by evidence, and relies on a near perfect or perfect symmetry of information that is impossible without forced disclosure. I can list hundreds of examples of horrible business behavior that hasn't been punished by consumer spending due to a lack of information.
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On October 11 2013 00:58 Vegetarian wrote:Show nested quote +On October 10 2013 22:54 Alex1Sun wrote:On October 10 2013 21:31 Vegetarian wrote:On October 10 2013 20:40 paralleluniverse wrote:On October 10 2013 19:15 Vegetarian wrote:On October 10 2013 18:42 kwizach wrote:On October 10 2013 18:20 Vegetarian wrote:On October 10 2013 17:06 HunterX11 wrote:On October 10 2013 16:04 Kaitlin wrote: Default isn't necessary for interest rates to go up. True, but it IS necessary that interest rates go up should the U.S. default, which means that anyone who claims they want to reduce debt but also doesn't want to raise the debt ceiling is an idiot, a liar, or both. Um no, if a country continuously borrows money and then shows themselves to be unable to pay it back unless they borrow more money it is called a ponzi scheme. All ponzi schemes end with massive spikes in interest rates/devaluation of whatever the ponzi scheme is selling. No country in history has had long term success doing what you are suggesting. Interest rates reflect current demand for treasury debt. The more debt the usa compiles the greater interest rates will eventually rise to. The obvious solution is to just cut spending. This is just flat-out wrong, as can be directly observed by looking at the current interest rates on U.S. debt (the debt is pretty much higher than it's ever been, yet the interest rates are certainly not). Also, the long-term solution to reducing debt is a healthy economy, and that doesn't come with cutting spending now. This is a pretty laughable post. I would have thought that in light of the housing bubble, as well as the nasdaq bubble that preceded it, people would recognize that current prices can sometimes be in...what are they called? BUBBLES! It should be pretty evident to anyone with half a clue that interest rates are low because the Federal Reserve is printing money to buy government bonds. They call it quantitative easing and apparently they have fooled some people. In case you still aren't following me, when the federal reserve stops subsidizing interest rates by buying bonds then interest rates will increase. And, as long as the federal reserve is printing money to buy bonds you have an equivalent amount of inflation being produced which acts to distort prices and hinder economic growth by transferring money from savers to debtors. The long-term solution to reducing the debt is pretty simple, you stop spending more money than you take in. I am not sure how your under the delusion that government spending is beneficial to economic growth. Completely wrong. Low interest rates predated QE. Your nonsense argument about Fed keeping rates low is debunked here. I'm not sure how you're under delusion that cutting government spending is beneficial to economic growth, since spending, government or private, creates growth. Less spending means less growth. It never ceases to amaze me how people can be so ignorant of very recent events. Low interest rates did predate "Quantitative Easing" they did not predate a federal reserve subsidized interest rate which is the same exact thing. Since you don't seem to understand the interest rate is determined by something called supply and demand. If the Federal Reserve prints money and buys bonds to keep rates at a certain level we can see that the demand is not real. It is artificial demand that is sustainable only so long as the Fed continues to print money and create inflation. Paul Krugman's article does not debunk anything, linking to it only highlights your lack of understanding of the issue. If you can't formulate a basic argument yourself it should reveal to you your true ignorance of the topic at hand. Further, private and government spending are not equal. There is a reason why the countries that have tried the most centralized economic planning have always experienced the lowest standards of living. Spending is not equal to growth. In order for an economy to grow you need to gain increases in efficiency so that current products or alternatives can be produced with less resources, hence economic growth. This scenario is not compatible with government spending. When the government spends money it first has to take that money from people in the private sector. The government then diverts these resources away from productive individuals that are making a profit by meeting peoples demands in a free market to government monopolies. Monopolies exist when a single entity is the sole provider of a product or service in a given market. Because government sponsored monopolies exist by government decree competition is usually illegal, or unprofitable because of subsidies to the government monopoly. This creates an environment where the government service or product provider has very little incentive to improve or lower costs of their product or service because they are faced with no competition. It should really be obvious by now but if you divert money from people who are forced to compete against each other for market share and transfer it to a government monopoly which has no competition you will achieve a lower standard of living as the resources diverted to government can never be used as efficiently as the resources left in the private sector. I'll comment on the second part only. I feel that there is some truth in it, but only up to a certain point. Fully centralized economic planning is no doubt bad for economic development, as evidenced by the fall of USSR and many other pro-communistic regimes. However median living standards in US are quite subpar in comparison to most socialist/capitalist hybrid economies, such as Canada, Australia and a number of Western and Northern European countries. The problem, as I see it, is that unregulated markets (as well as a markets regulated by business-bribed governments) are prone to business oligopoly or even monopoly/duopoly, which leads to high business profits only for large businesses combined with crappy services, unfair prices and low median wages. Also modern consumers are often swayed by advertisements more than by quality or price. Therefore some control by the government as well as some limited products and services provided directly by the government appear to be the best solution. The main problem with this hybrid socialist/capitalist approach is that for it to be efficient the government should be relatively independent from the big business and no too corrupt. Unfortunately the later is not always the case (hint: Greece). As for the USA, it may well not be ready for more socialism right now, not sure... I agree that living standards are worse in the US than a lot of other seemingly socialist countries. However, I think the USA gets an unfair reputation of being a capitalist economy. Taxes are higher in the USA than in China and most other countries. USA Corporate taxes are some of the highest in the world. The government debt to GDP ratio, if you count unfunded liabilities, is the largest in the world. Regulations in the USA are so burdensome that many companies have been relocating and moving operations overseas. I've never heard of a way that I think regulation could work other than through the invisible hand of the market. The way I see it if the government is granted the power to regulate an industry then overnight one thing will change. The companies in that industry will no longer be competing against each other solely to provide a better product or service at a better value than their competition. Regulation introduces another way for companies to gain market share through lobbying the government to use the regulatory power to their advantage or to the detriment of their competitors. The most heavily regulated industry in the USA is finance and I don't think I am alone in considering it the most corrupt industry in this country, You say that consumers can be gullible and choose products wrongly in an unregulated market. But, government officials are no different except that they are in charge of spending other peoples money and not their own. This is also very subjective. In a free market no one can force you to buy a product or service so if someone chooses to buy a product or service they have made a determination that it is a beneficial transaction for them. Retailers also provide a check on manufacturers. Most stores are not going to want to stock faulty or contaminated products as they know they would eventually lose market share to a store that becomes known for better quality products or one that has a more favorable return policy. Lastly, the market really does self-regulate. GMO products are not labelled by the FDA in the USA, yet there is a private company that certifies products as non gmo and puts their stamp/reputation on products they approve. http://www.nongmoproject.org/ This company and others like consumerlab.com for vitamin supplements, and consumerreports indirectly regulate industries by offering reviews and tests of products. Companies like this would lose market share or go out of business if they approved a product that was later determined to be faulty as they would lose credibility if this occurred. On the other hand if a government regulatory agency like the FDA approves a drug that later turns out be unsafe the FDA does not lose its monopoly. I agree with what you say, and I think myself that too much government control is bad. That is however only one side of the story. I'd like to mention the other side as well.
Basically it comes down to the following. Businesses exist to please shareholders. CEOs mostly think about quarterly reports and short-term or sometimes medium-term growth. They are not concerned with gigantic negative externalities [ http://economics.fundamentalfinance.com/negative-externality.php ] and grievous long-term consequences of increasing the corporate stock value at any cost. If a CEO decides to be more socially responsible and take a bigger picture into account, then the company in his/her charge will be quickly outrun by competitors who don't care about the such matters. In the end it all comes to the Tragedy Of The Commons [ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tragedy_of_the_commons ], which can only be solved by some form of governance or regulation.
Now a good government is there not to make record profits at any cost, but to protect and help its citizens and resolve problems such as the Tragedy Of The Commons. Then in order to answer the question whether more government or less government is better or worse in a particular situation, you should first determine the level of government corruption and the extent to which this government is subject to lobbying. There are multiple examples when a big government works wonderfully as well as multiple examples when it fails miserably.
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