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1002   knewbetter   2009 Sep 25, 4:02am  

staynumz says
Yes, I have noticed how all these jobs have come back to the states since your buddies took control. Cap and tax will surely invite millions of jobs back to the states.
Our industry has some of the cheapest prices for energy in the world. That's not the problem. Cap and tax is an idea supported BY industry, because it makes another market out of nothing. Wanna pollute? Just turn up the dial.
1003   bob2356   2009 Sep 25, 6:15am  

thomas.wong87 says
“So why don’t ‘you’ fill us in.” And who is ‘us’ ? ‘You’ speak for the rest of ‘us’.
Ok fill ME in. How exactly was it that the patriot act made it possible to arrest these people and why was it impossible under existing laws pre patriot act. I I I I I I am waiting with baited breath.
1004   chrisborden   2009 Sep 25, 6:23am  

Re Patriot Act: Frightening violation of civil liberties, passed by a panicked Congress only a short time after 9/11, and most of them didn't bother to read it! Watch Michael Moore's documentary. We are governed by ill-informed idiots (who are put into office by equally ill-informed idiots). Fear lives! Fear, fear, fear, fear. Be afraid. Be very afraid for the future of your country. It isl destroying itself from within, WITH YOUR HELP.
1005   Patrick   2009 Sep 25, 9:57am  

I think gold and silver coins are quite practical, and they were used for centuries. But true, most transactions would still probably be digital, so you're back to debt, ie promises to pay.

I don't see counterfeiting being as much of a problem as debt.

Savings would sit idle more with gold, but that's not all bad. There should not be investment unless the investment has some chance of actually being profitable. Our big problem right now is artificially low rates that encouraged debt for unproductive investments.

1006   reniam   2009 Sep 26, 2:11am  

Kevin,

Good post. I agree with you and disagree with elvis on many things.

We appear to be heading to digital credit/debit dollars. As a boy in the early 1970's my mother used to drive to the local bank, make a cash withdrawal and drive around town paying bills, bring home the receipts and fill out the ledger. Later she switched to checks. Fast-forward to today where all my bills are paid electronically and I rarely have more than 10 physical dollars on me to buy coffee. I've thought for some time now that minting money is, well, a waste of money. Overall digital currency is good. It's how modern commerce works and it could almost eliminate counterfeiting. I think the idea of paying with a pirate’s bag of gold coins where the merchant has to check the purity seems dated. A vision of a 19th century gold rush town clerk biting coins comes to mind.

Yes, there have been honest and dishonest politicians for time immemorial. The founding fathers were a collection of excellent men gathered at an opportune time and place but, were ambitious and egotistical. Not bad things. They had passionate differences. Benjamin Franklin thought the Currency Act of 1764, where England outlawed Colonial Script (a fiat currency) and forced hard money, was the catalyst for the Revolution. Hamilton, like most Federalists, was not opposed to a central bank. He proposed the First Bank of the United States in 1791. We are still debating Hamiltonian vs. Jeffersonian ideals today if we know it or not.

Confidence is central to all tender. Whether the tender is gold, paper, rice, or bamboo, the willingness to accept it depends on confidence that the next person will accept it at similar trade value. Though, like you said, Gold has no inherent value, it has been accepted as tender for over 3000 years so enjoys a history of universal confidence that cannot be matched. The problem with our currency is that it is only backed by the good intentions of the U.S. government and the demonstrated strength of the U.S. economy. This has been good enough for ~40 years but, very well could change. The inflationists argue it is already changing.

Where we diverge is that you seem to argue that because we have moved to more of a digital currency, it being backed by a commodity seems antiquated. These things move in cycles and presently I think the opposite. Currently the Federal Reserve can conjure money from the ether with the push of a button ("printing" is an allegory) and this, for many, is making the currency seem monopoly-ish. As money becomes more abstract, the need for it to be re-grounded is increased - lest confidence is lost.

1007   nope   2009 Sep 26, 3:58pm  

There should not be investment unless the investment has some chance of actually being profitable.

I'm not sure what you mean by "some chance" here -- nobody invests unless there's "some chance". What matters is that the risk be commensurate with the reward.

If you're saying that you should only invest if you strongly believe that you'll get a return on the reward, that's a different thing. You're talking about a very conservative investment strategy, which is fine when you're trying to protect existing wealth. You won't become wealthy that way though (lets be honest -- if we saved 100% of what we earned we'd still retire middle class).

Aggressive investment strategies require more risk taking (and I mean actual risk -- as in "if it goes wrong, you lose the money"). Consider Venture Capital as an example. VCs can be slimy sorts, of course, but the basic business model is reasonable, and I don't believe it would be in the country's best interest to discourage it.

There's absolutely nothing wrong with risk. Risk is the main thing that sets the American economy apart from the rest of the world, and the reason why we enjoy the wealth that we have -- it's certainly not because we're better educated or biologically superior in some way. What is very important, however, is to ensure that when someone takes a risk, they internalize it as much as possible. If I fail, it shouldn't impact you (unless you invest in me or something).

reniam says

Overall digital currency is good. It’s how modern commerce works and it could almost eliminate counterfeiting.

Except on the part of the book keepers, of course.

reniam says

Where we diverge is that you seem to argue that because we have moved to more of a digital currency, it being backed by a commodity seems antiquated. These things move in cycles and presently I think the opposite. Currently the Federal Reserve can conjure money from the ether with the push of a button (”printing” is an allegory) and this, for many, is making the currency seem monopoly-ish. As money becomes more abstract, the need for it to be re-grounded is increased - lest confidence is lost.

The rub here is that even if you back with gold you're still not really constraining the ability to conjure money. Gold only enters the scene when someone actually wants to exchange credits for gold, which is an incredibly rare event. There's also nothing actually constraining the value of gold, and governments can (and have in the past) redefine its values arbitrarily. Consider the history of silver as a currency, particularly in the United States.

My main issue with this thread isn't so much about whether or not we should have a commodity standard, it's that I don't believe that it would actually address any more problems than it creates. There's a lot of evidence to argue in favor of fiat currency -- consider the massive improvements in quality of life since the world abandoned commodity standards half a century ago -- and even if you ignore those arguments, you're still left with a change that wouldn't likely accomplish much.

Would gold force real constraints on credit? How (remember, it's all digital and no gold changes hands until someone trades in their credits).
Would gold prevent the human-nature failures that are the central cause of every market failure?
Would gold improve the standard of living? How?
Would gold stabilize the economy? How?

It seems like the core issue here is inflation, but again, I would argue that inflation is not automatically a bad thing, and the debate on the issue is far from being black and white. If the only problem that sound money solves is inflation, then it doesn't solve much of anything.

1008   reniam   2009 Sep 27, 1:56am  

The purpose is to return to an objective, rules-based currency. Dollars can’t be conjured unless there is a specified amount of gold to back it up. If done correctly, would go a long way in restoring confidence in the currency - the main thrust of your original post. It would help limit government spending. If you’ve been reading the news you’ve probably heard that our creditors are nervous about the dollar and are not buying long term bonds. This is a big red flag for, as you pointed out - lack of confidence. To reiterate: Creditors are showing a lack of confidence in what backs up our currency – the good intentions of the U.S. government.

For your questions: I know the gold standard is not the panacea many proponents seem to believe. Cycles of capitalism, bad government policy, corporate greed and rackets, individual’s whims, follies, and idiosyncrasies will still be with us. These are separate issues.

Has standard of living improved? We live in bigger houses and have more stuff but, inflation-adjusted wages peaked in 1973 (pg. 92). Debt, cheap imports, and cheap energy has had much to do with the standard of living increases you have seen. I would think that visitors to this site would understand the consequences of borrowing money. It will make you look good for awhile, then poof. Cheap imports have hollowed out our economy. There is a good chance we have hit peak credit and peak oil.

The second-level question you should ask is: Is it sustainable? A circle where the world produces stuff for us/we send them IOU’s seems destined to fail. My belief is a gold standard would not improve standard of living as you would define it. It is a hard task master so would probably bring it down to a sustainable level. Instead of 3 people living in a 3,000 s.f. home they would live in a 1,400 s.f. home. I believe this is inevitable anyway as we bring our standards inline with reality.

On a more philosophical note, I haven’t seen standard of living improve in my lifetime (I’m ~40). People are more isolated and stressed, work in jobs that don’t create value, eat crappier food, are in worse health, and have fewer friends and loved ones. By my measure we have moved backward in many ways.

Inflation is a difficult thing to argue. It all depends on how it is defined. Commodity standards do not prevent inflations/deflations but, help minimize them. I’ll let data argue for me: By the BLS’s own calculator, the buying power of a 2009 dollar is ~4% of what it was in 1913. A 1790 dollar had $1.08 buying power in 1913 (according to CPI).

1009   KurtS   2009 Sep 28, 8:27am  

Kevin says

Another problem with precious metals is that counterfeiting is trivial, especially with modern technology.

This will prove to be a serious problem in the future for bullion coins. To make an almost undetectable gold coin or bar, one uses a core of tungsten with the same exact density as gold, then covers with a layer of gold thick enough to pass an assay. Then needed design and purity marks are stamped onto the bar/coin to simulate the original. I've done research on this subject, and have found that several offshore companies are already producing fake Pandas, Maple Leafs, and Aussie Nuggets. Just a head's up!

1010   Patrick   2009 Sep 30, 2:09am  

I like gold and silver as money, but it doesn't solve everything. There were many boom/bust cycles with gold and silver, maybe more of them. There were depressions in 1890 and 1907, and the creation of the Fed was an attempt to fix them (along with protecting the interests of the biggest banks).

The problem is that then banks promise to pay gold and silver they don't actually have because they've lent it out to someone who invested it in their business and it's in yet another person's hands now. That's not dishonest, just normal lending. Then people get spooked, they all show up at the bank, and wham, there are bank failures. And short term interest rates skyrocket, and businesses fail because they can't afford the higher rates.

So maybe one solution is to limit the promises of immediate repayment in gold or silver by banks to the reserves they actually have on hand. Other people would have something like a CD, where the money is tied up until a certain date. Maybe fewer people would deposit money, and there would be less investment though.

1011   Patrick   2009 Sep 30, 9:39am  

Why isn't universal health care a necessary service?

1012   bob2356   2009 Sep 30, 10:35am  

Last time I read the constitution it allows congress to tax. The 16th amendment allows taxing without census. There is no mention whatsoever about how congress may spend. Please explain how universal health care is unconstitutional. I'm always interested to listen to a learned dissertation on constitutional law.

That being said, can isn't the same as should. So where does public good become socialism? Does elvis drive on those socialist roads, fly using the socialist air traffic control system, log onto the socialist internet? Or is socialist any program for the public good that you don't agree with?

There has to be a balance where the public good outweighs the cost in taxes. I agree the US government has far overstepped that line. Some programs for, example aid to farms almost all goes to large corporations, are simply huge boondoggles. But simply saying all government programs are socialist is just silly.

1013   reniam   2009 Sep 30, 11:34am  

elvis says

You guys still MISS THE POINT.

Pardon me, I’m new here but this appears to be the de-facto refrain on this forum for those who don’t see things the same as others. Perhaps others have different points of view. Jeeesh.

Elvis - I didn’t see your point on some things because, frankly, some of what you said was wrong. I’m tired of the Jefferson quote. The founding fathers were not in agreement about central banking. The first Bank of the U.S. was chartered in 1791 with the support of Hamilton and Washington. It helped solidify the fragile federal government. Its charter was allowed to expire by Democrat-Republicans (the Homo-Erectus of the modern Democratic Party) in 1811 in opposition to the Federalists. After the death of the Federalist Party and an inflationary period during the War of 1812 (in which the U.S. had a hard time outfitting an army) the Democratic-Republicans suddenly decided the country needed a second Bank of the U.S. and massive government-sponsored, domestic infrastructure projects - just as the rival Federalists had always clamored for. Imagine this from Madison; a member of the Virginia Junto and disciple of Jefferson.

I do agree that a return to sound money would be wise. I work with several Asians and Europeans. Most Americans are unaware how much built up resentment there is toward America. It is almost completely ignored by the press. A large portion of the other 96% of the world’s population wouldn’t mind seeing us stripped of our reserve currency status.

Central Banks in and of themselves are not evil but, are fallible because they are run by men. They are the backbone to transactions in this country. Conspiracists quiver but, they move money around efficiently. They should be the lender of last resort. The gold, guns, and grub crowd may want a return to gold coins but, I, for one, like buying my widgets from Amazon. They should be regulated. They should not be a super-regulator or be central economic planners as President Obama has indicated. Currency they create should be backed by gold but, to me, what the medium of exchange isn’t very important as their job should be to make the public indifferent. Paper, zinc coins, digital, can all be replaced with the same gold, where 1000's of gold coins would be lost forever or destroyed per year.

1014   elliemae   2009 Sep 30, 12:39pm  

elvis says

LIBERALISM => SOCIALISM => TYRANNY. (I thought I’d put it in its simplist form)

Simple is as simple does.

1015   reniam   2009 Sep 30, 1:14pm  

elvis says

Universal health care is not a necessary service because it is unconstitutional.

But, like thunderlips11 said - you can extrapolate out this argument to police, fire, education, et cetera, et cetera. There wasn't a police force in NYC until the 1840's and the Mets and Muni's often fought each other. "Fire clubs" didn't show up until about 1850. At that time they were little more than strong arm gangs for politicians. Education wasn't standardized until the late 19th century. I'm and east coast guy - kids used to work in factories in my hometown. That's sad. I have a 9 year old kid.

Article 1 of the constitution - of which a framed parchment copy hangs above my desk as I write this - deals with the legislative branch. It is terse and vague with the understanding the legislature would create laws. I take it very seriously but, it is just a framework of operation.

1016   Malcolm   2009 Sep 30, 3:18pm  

God, more of the same drivel. It's really difficult for someone like me, traditionally conservative, with a view of limited government to have to argue for government in the face of this tired, almost religious, dogma.
1. The Robin Hood argument is pointless since it is NOT the 'exact same thing.' Government and its actions (taxation and expenditure) are accountable to the people. Government represents the population, provides for the general welfare, and also makes those laws which are "necessary and proper" to provide for the general welfare.
2. While I take issue with entitlements and policies, which unjustly create classes (mainly protected) government has a legitimate role when it comes to policies, which benefit the whole through public investments. Those being traditionally defense, public works, science and R&D.
3. When a free market, specifically health care as the current example, fails it is government who has to be the last resort to redesign the rules to ensure a free market where the public gets the service that it needs.

The current health care system is a complete failure. Rather than listing why, I would suggest people watch "Sicko" for the stone cold reality of US health care. Other nations, now as or more prosperous than the United States have universal healthcare. Their horror stories don't even compare to the cases anyone reading this in the United States probably know of first hand, be it through a friend or relative's experience.

1017   justme   2009 Sep 30, 4:17pm  

>> Universal health care is not a necessary service because it is unconstitutional.

Riiiiiight .....

1018   srla   2009 Sep 30, 4:38pm  

It's hard to get a read on just how out of touch the average citizen is on the state of healthcare, since every poll I have seen asks either biased questions or the wrong questions altogether. The sad fact of the matter is that you can be turned down for private coverage for something as trivial as a sinus infection, hay fever, or diaper rash. My old Blue Cross of CA agent has had people denied coverage for all these reasons. So if anyone in your family has been sick with anything that was diagnosed... ever... you might well be uninsurable in the private market. Most people simply don't realize this. If you doubt it, call an agent you trust and ask them about their experience.

For the past two years, do to a labor conflict, I was without my "cadillac" group plan and had private coverage. I would have been ineligible for that individual plan I had experienced so much as strep throat in the prior two years. My Cobra would have cost me $700 a month, and that would have run out six months before my group coverage resumed. So I would have been stuck trying to get one of those $10,000 deductible plans that costs more than $700 a month, and if I had been turned down for that, I would have been without insurance for half a year. All for getting that hypothetical case of strep throat.

So if your employer fires you or simply decides not to cover you, and if anyone at all in your family has been diagnosed with anything at all, no matter how seemingly trivial, you could be screwed. No matter if you, like I, have payed in over $100,000 in premiums in your adult life to health plans and faithfully always been insured. The second you are removed from the protected realm of employer-based covered, you are facing possible financial ruin if you break your leg or need any sort of major procedure. Is this really the best possible plan? Is it the one Americans would vote to support if they actually had all the information and knew how at risk they really were? Or is it just the scenario that works best for the powerful healthcare interests?

The only reason people like me with employer-paid coverage enjoy any level of protection at all is due to legislation. We cannot be turned down due to pre-existing conditions only because Congress passed a law granting us this right. So why on earth should entrepreneurs, workers, and anyone else on an individual plan not have these same rights? Why must they continue to be abused by insurers who do their best to weed out anyone who is a "risk," even if they have faithfully been insured all their lives?

There are so many examples of better systems out there, from single-payer to multi-payer. Unlike the UK, most other countries have privately run healthcare and even privately run, competitive insurers. The difference is they have rules made by the government that set prices, fix premiums, and guarantee coverage. If you think this is "socialism" and that it will somehow lead to tyranny, well, so be it. But what you don't get is that "capitalism" too can lead to tyranny and the destruction of freedoms. It almost did here in the late 1800's. Capitalism run amok can lead to fascism and the destruction of all the freedoms we hold dear, just as easily as can socialistic systems. What is desirable is a happy medium, in which basic freedoms are ensured for all citizens, free from the tyrannies of both extreme wealth and good intentions.

1019   elliemae   2009 Sep 30, 11:40pm  

The problem is that many people don't understand how vulnerable they are to cancellation, denials, job termination without the ability to pay COBRA, financial devastation, death, and other healthcare-related disasters.

Having worked at an agency where I was expected to deny more than I approved, treat people in a demeaning manner and demand verifications the clients obviously couldn't produce (last year's bank statements from a homeless person!), I understand the problems. People line up hours before the agency opens, only to find that they have to come back the next day to wait again. Once they're seen, they have to prove they need the help - so they're given a list of items they need to provide in order to receive help. One of these things includes completing 10-40 job searches or a statement of disability - which can't be obtained from a doctor until you can afford to see one - so the clients are sent off to get the stuff before they receive assistance. So, they get the stuff that they can, wait in line again for a day or two (no appointments at this point as they're not yet clients), and produce the verifications and job searches. If the worker can't deny the service (and they try - oh, they try!), the client is approved to receive help for a month from the county hospital clinic. This takes several days to a couple of weeks for the initial process. Oh, and if they're working, they probably don't qualify because they're "over income" even tho they make minimum wage, part time.

Then it's on to the clinic, where one must make an appointment to be seen (appts can't be made without the medical approval above). Appointments are often over a month away, meaning that the client must go through the above process again in order to actually fulfill the appointment. Even if we're talking prescriptions written by another doctor (say, from the ER), the script must be re-written by the clinic's doctor. To keep costs down, the clinic only provides the most minimal of care possible. Specialists aren't part of this system, and there are no cases of emergent treatment or prioritizing.

So, to recap - if one has no access to healthcare and is very low income and needs a prescription filled, if he is able to spend multiple hours standing outside in the heat/cold, embarassment and disappointment, wait for an appointment, go through the demeaning process again, and finally spend five minutes with an overworked doctor whose mandate is to keep costs down.

Nope, nothing wrong with the healthcare in our country.

1020   justme   2009 Oct 1, 12:00am  

Elliemae,

That must have been a very frustrating experience. Almost like working for an insurance company, in some respects.

1021   justme   2009 Oct 1, 1:42am  

>>Furthermore - Medi-Cal only pays something like 25% of the Bill and the doctor, clinic or hospital has to write the rest off - but if you have no insurance - you have to pay 100% of the bill. Go figure.

I think you've got it backwards. What happens is that hospitals bill uninsured people at ~4 times higher price than the negotiated rate they get from insurance plans. In other words, the uninsured pay 400% of what they SHOULD be paying.

1022   Malcolm   2009 Oct 1, 12:34pm  

Elvis - Your point of view is pure generalizations. Like I say, it is almost a religion. One can't dare criticize the free market for the same reason you can't question the bible. It is right and thats that. But that is not the case. You can sit back and name dozens of screw ups by government and I can sit back and name the same number of clear abuses by private companies.

75% of business activity is waste, no one cares about that because the activity creates jobs, generates tax revenue, and eventually generally produces optimal solutions, but that is the reality. There is nothing sacred or noble about the free market, it is what it is. People who claim the free market is incapable of failure are putting the blinders on.

Wait until you actually need an expensive procedure, you'll find out the hard way.

1023   justme   2009 Oct 1, 5:30pm  

>>OK- let me recap the problems with Socialism: it rewards failure and punishes success, it forcibly takes from some and gives to others, it destroys prosperity, it diminishes the work ethic, and it makes dependents out of people.

Sounds a lot like the United States in the years 1980(Reagan)-2009, except it was unbridled capitalism that caused those things to happen.

1024   justme   2009 Oct 1, 5:56pm  

>>75% of business activity is waste,

That's a good point, Malcolm.

I remember once pointing out to a free market fundamentalist about some of the waste and grotesque inefficiency one can find in private enterprises, and not only in the government. Can you guess what he said? He said that he did not care because none of his TAX (my emphasis) money was being spent.

Apparently he did not grasp that the waste in private industry means that he has to work much harder and longer to be able to afford some product or service that he needs. But that's ok, as long as it is not the #$%^& gubbermint causing any waste. It was not his TAX money, mind you.

It's a double standard, an it just does not make any sense.

1025   bob2356   2009 Oct 1, 11:05pm  

So what is your point elvis? All government expenditures are by definition socialist because they are taking property from one person and giving it to another either in cash or services. What parts are you considering socialist and what are your definitions? Why are some expenditures socialist to you and some aren't? Sound bite pap is all you are coughing up. Or does your concern have to do with having a free spending liberal black president as opposed to a free spending conservative white president. Both of which I find unpalatable at best.

Most of the 50 poorest countries are much closer to anarchy than socialism. Most have a government that functions only to enhance the wealth of the strong man in charge while totally lacking any true ideological base.

I'm very much in favor of libertarianism and capitalism. Neither can exist without government. The devil is in the details.

1026   Malcolm   2009 Oct 2, 12:41am  

"free market fundamentalist" Justme, thank you for adding to my vocabulary. I've needed a descriptive label for that ideology.

I was thinking the same thing Bob, about richer and poorer countries. I suspect if we take the 50 poorest countries we would easily identify areas where if their governments had the means to invest in infrastructure and allowed a free market they could build real wealth for their societies. If we look at the world's 50 richest countries, one would clearly see that the aforementioned types of investment yield far more social benefits than they cost. Many of them are no brainers no matter what business or economic measure you use. Las Vegas and Los Angeles wouldn't exist in any recognizable form without public water projects, which were called socialist at the time.

1027   bob2356   2009 Oct 2, 6:30am  

Very true Malcolm. Look at Zaire (Belgian Congo). It could be so wealthy. Unbelievable natural resources combined with some of the richest land on earth. When the Belgians left there were roads, railroads, electricity, running water, telephones, inland shipping on the Congo river, real development. Now it is pretty much all destroyed. They are living in the 1600's at best. But president Mobutu Sese Seko is probably one of the richest men in the world. Was it socialism that destroyed it? Not hardly, just exploitation. This is so common all over the world.

But you also have to accept the government infrastructure and research spending is a crapshoot. No one knows what the future is so some ideas will work out, some won't. Failing to invest will always leave you falling behind however. The spending in the US for basic sciences has dropped to levels that are a disgrace and will come back to bite us in the posterior region as talented people move to where they are best funded and we lose them forever.

Social programs are much much harder to quantify. Most are just payoffs to politicians to reward campaign contributors. Even the ones that have good merit are always set up to expand without end. Why wasn't social security indexed to life span for example. Properly set up social programs can have a net benefit to society. Universal health care, if it brought the cost of health care in line with the other industrialized nation (about half the cost therefore freeing up capital for other uses) could be a good investment. However America's unique political system means that corporate money will always rule the day. Corporations have learned that money spent lobbying politicians for tax breaks and political programs has the best return on investment that they can possibly get. Politicians are amazingly cheap to buy. Most large corporations have become extremely aggressive about this in the last 40 years. I believe it is now impossible to push through any social program that is not a major boondoggle to corporate profits at the expense of stated societal goals. Look at medicare part D. It's first and foremost a huge windfall for pharma companies. Any other reason you can think of that bargaining for better prices was explicitly forbidden for example? Think how much Wall Street would make if Social Security was privatized and converted to investments. Social security should be privatized but I just don't see any way it can be done without without our political whores putting corporate profits first and benefits for the people last.

Don't get me wrong. I'm a huge fan of capitalism. True socialism (not elvis's sound bite anti Obama kind) never worked very well in real life. I also believe there are places the government is the best way to accomplish certain goals. These are not conflicting believes. But capitalism in America in the 21st century means privatized profits and socialized losses. The emperor truly has no clothes at this point. Or in the immortal words of George Bush "I've abandoned free market principles to save the free market system.". Huh? Government bailouts and huge bonuses to executives who run their companies into the bankruptcy. This isn't capitalism by a long shot.

Very large, painful, wrenching societal spending decisions are coming really soon no matter what. On an actuarial basis the current levels of spending increases cannot continue for much longer. Politicians have known this for 50 years but nothing has been done. Almost everyone has willingly drank the cool aid of ideas like trickle down economics, tax decreases will increase revenues, the free market will grow us out of the problem. No pain and magic solutions have become the American way. Hard work and self sacrifice are so last generation ideas. It's really a pity.

1028   CBOEtrader   2009 Oct 2, 7:23am  

The main problem with this discussion in general is that the terms capitalism and socialism are far too general to describe anything specific.

In Murray Rothbard's "Capitalism vs Statism" he points out that the term capitalism itself was coined by Karl Marx, and is generally used as catch all term that "Marxists apply to virtually every society on the face of the globe." A good example of this is the reocurring claim of liberal pundits that Haiti is an example of a pure capitalistic society. That is enormous BS.

In most modern discussions about capitalism, we are discussing a state controlled, fascist version (US, europe, most of latin america) where money equals legislative power. Misdirecting our criticisms at the "free market" brand of capitalism is akin to killing the golden goose that gave the entire world its freedoms and wealth.

Unfortunately people have been misled to believe that the "free market" is the enemy whereas government is the solution. This is nothing new. The intellectual "elite" have been the handmaidens of the ruling class since the creation of government. Rothbard describes how the nature of these intellectuals has changed over the years from the priestcraft declaring a king's god given right to rule, to the "free market" neocon movement, to the current neo-keynesian movement. Regardless of the philosophy being spewed, the results are always the same. The "intellectuals" are allowed their positions of influence as long as their theories coincide with the agenda of the ruling class. The rulers in turn ALWAYS use the government to extract tribute from the productive masses, typically in the form of taxation. The rulers then use the resulting power of these tributes to stay in power...wash, rinse, and repeat.

Anyone that supports either major political party is basically cheering on their own their own suppression. Very sad indeed.

1029   bob2356   2009 Oct 3, 8:57am  

Interesting point CBOE. So you are saying capitalism can't exist in without a government aka zimbabwe, somolia, BUT with a government it's a state controlled fascist version that exists to perpetuate the elite. So what would the structure of a pure capitalist state look like in an ideal world?

So elvis how do you prevent a free market from turning into zimbabwe, somolia, mafia controlled russia etc.?? In an ideal world everyone would transact business in a totally honest manner, but it hasn't happened yet in human history. You preach a lot about what government shouldn't be, but never have any suggestions what it should be.

I'm not disagreeing with anyone, just curious how the ideologically pure would make it work. I think the US government has run totally out of control and it really might not survive the coming financial cataclysm. Best case scenario we will emulate England or Argentina who managed to go from being the wealthiest most powerful country in the world at the time to being at best an economic footnote in one generation. Don't think it can't happen.

1030   CBOEtrader   2009 Oct 3, 11:24am  

Great questions Bob.

Facist capitalism is a state controlled brand that sets prices, limits competition, legislates some industries into non competition driven monopoliesor oligopolies, rewards lobbying over efficiency, etcetera. Our "capitalistic" government sets or manipulates pricing of wages, health care, agriculture, education, interest rates, energy, utilities... Milton Freidman was very clear in his distaste for this type of government intervention in the market pricing system. I suggest you youtube milton friedman on the donnahue show in 1979 and 1980. He made multiple appearances and discussed this exact topic.

The constritution gives a pretty darn good outline of how a government system should work. The federal government should be strictly limited to a few important tasks like enforcing contracts and defending private property rights (this includes police as well as an army to defend the boarders). Since "the power to tax is the power to destroy" the federal government should be restricted from taxing labor or capital gains, at the very least. The states and local govenment are free to tax whatever they like. These states are held in check by a population that is free to relocate to a state with lower or no income taxes. Money should be based off some commodity. Gold and silver worked out alright in the past.

The US in the 1800's is probably the best example of the free market capitalism ideal. The US went from a country of agricultural peasants to the richest nation on earth over the course of 100 years. Of course we are blessed with natural resources, but so is latin america, russia, and africa. The difference of course is the fact that the US free market freed the productive and creative powers of our forefathers. Furthermore, the greatest examples of "mass abject poverty is found in societies that depart from that ideal." --paraphrasing Milton Friedman

In 1890 government spending accounted for 3% of GDP. 100 years later it was 35% and now we are closing in on 50%. Goverment is a cancer that has spread into every facet of our economy. Removing the government from our economy could in itself be dangerous and cause widespread economic turmoil. Think about how many people are completely dependant on the federal government for their welfare. There US government has something like $2 million employees. Then there are millions more who have jobs in companies that get the vast maority of their funding from the government, millions more on welfare, etc. We can't just expect 30 million people to find new productive roles in society overnight.

It would take massive political will and public pressure over many decades to accomplish a libertarian free market ideal. It ain't gonna happen. At the very least the dollar would have to collapse first, hopefully bankrupting the federal government in the process.

1031   Malcolm   2009 Oct 3, 4:52pm  

"The US in the 1800’s is probably the best example of the free market capitalism ideal."

Not to split hairs, but the best example of the free market was when slavery was legal?

1032   Honest Abe   2009 Oct 4, 12:05am  

Malcolm, Malcolm, Malcolm - surely you can't be serious. Why not retract that comment so you can save face. Abe

1033   justme   2009 Oct 4, 2:41am  

CBOEtrader,

I think it is overly simplistic to think that it was "free market capitalism" that should get the credit for US economic development in 1800-1900.

I think size, natural resources and the fresh start using old-world technology on new-world resources had more to do with it. As well as people getting out from underneath the yoke of Britain's own free market capitalism. The irony is that we ended up with a capitalist elite much like what Britain had (and still has).

1034   Bap33   2009 Oct 4, 6:52am  

"As well as people getting out from underneath the yoke of Britain’s own free market capitalism." I disagree. My research shows the founders of USA were escaping undue taxes and weath transfers from public welfare systems that entrenched the elites who were forcing the weath transfers to take place.

1035   justme   2009 Oct 4, 6:55am  

Welfare systems? In Britain in the 1800s. Surely you jest.

1036   Bap33   2009 Oct 4, 6:59am  

1800's? well .... maybe, I'll have to check.
1700's absolutly ... unless one want to quibble as to what a gov mandated wealth transfer is.

1037   Bap33   2009 Oct 4, 7:34am  

if you want the link to the whole history book, just ask.

"In many country areas, the changes in agriculture brought hardship. To deal with rural poverty in Berkshire, the local justices of the peace met in 1795 at Speenhamland (now part of Newbury) and decided that a farmworker whose wages fell below a set level should receive an extra payment from the authorities. This raised the tax rates of farmers and landowners, who reacted by paying their workers low wages. The Speenhamland system was imitated throughout Britain, but it kept many farm laborers became poor."

That be welfare my friend. The earlier stuff (1600 or so) was more church basd forced donations to the state church.

1038   CBOEtrader   2009 Oct 4, 7:44am  

"An undeveloped and sparsely populated area originally, America did not begin as the leading capitalist country. But after a century of independence it achieved this eminence, and why? Not, as the common myth has it, because of superior natural resources. The resources of Brazil, of Africa, of Asia, are at least as great. The difference came because of the relative freedom in the United States, because it was here that the free-market economy more than in any other country was allowed its head. We began free of a feudal or monopolizing landlord class, and we began with a strongly individualist ideology that permeated much of the population. Obviously, the market in the United States was never completely free or unhampered; but its relatively greater freedom (relative to other countries or centuries) resulted in the enormous release of productive energies, the massive capital equipment, and the unprecedentedly high standard of living that the mass of Americans not only enjoy but take blithely for granted. Living in the lap of a luxury that could not have been dreamed of by the wealthiest emperor of the past, we are all increasingly acting like the man who murdered the goose that laid the golden egg.

And so we have a mass of intellectuals who habitually sneer at "materialism" and "material values," who proclaim absurdly that we are living in a "post-scarcity age" that permits an unlimited cornucopia of production without requiring anyone to work or produce, who attack our undue affluence as somehow sinful in a perverse recreation of a new form of Puritanism. The idea that our capital machine is automatic and self-perpetuating, that whatever is done to it or not done for it does not matter because it will go on perpetually — this is the farmer blindly destroying the golden goose. Already we are beginning to suffer from the decay of capital equipment, from the restrictions and taxes and special privileges that have increasingly been imposed on the industrial machine in recent decades."

Murray Rothbard

1039   CBOEtrader   2009 Oct 4, 7:47am  

justme says

CBOEtrader,
I think it is overly simplistic to think that it was “free market capitalism” that should get the credit for US economic development in 1800-1900.
I think size, natural resources and the fresh start using old-world technology on new-world resources had more to do with it. As well as people getting out from underneath the yoke of Britain’s own free market capitalism. The irony is that we ended up with a capitalist elite much like what Britain had (and still has).

"Free market capitalism" in merry old england? Surely, you jest!

Furthermore, are you really trying to equate the economic system we have now to "free market" capitalism? My whole point before was that calling our system a free market is at best misinformed, and at worst Orwellian double-speak. 50% of our economy is govt. spending. The government sets prices, or interferes with the pricing mechanisms of almost every major economic sector.

Most modern critics of our economic system have successfully seen the negative impacts of drinking the poisononed economic waters. However, in an interesting twist, most liberals confuse the poisonous government control part of our system as the solution to our problems and thus insist that we drink a more potent poison. This can not end well.

1040   bob2356   2009 Oct 4, 9:21am  

"An undeveloped and sparsely populated area originally, America did not begin as the leading capitalist country. But after a century of independence it achieved this eminence, and why? Not, as the common myth has it, because of superior natural resources. The resources of Brazil, of Africa, of Asia, are at least as great."

Bs. The resources in America are several orders of magnitude easier to access than almost anywhere else on the planet, not to mention some of the most varied. That combined with the natural protection of 2 oceans (very low military spending until WW II), a huge almost unpopulated continent with almost limitless opportunity for expansion, along with a political system that allowed capitalism to flourish. Slavery didn't hurt either. The south was much wealthier than the north at the outbreak of the civil war. Without all these factors the current wealth of America wouldn't have happened. Saying the political system alone made it happen just isn't so.

1041   Bap33   2009 Oct 4, 10:05am  

chicken and egg I guess. Without the correct political system in place there would be no desire/need/force in place for anyone to strive to be better or have more than the next guy.

CBO's points about Africa, Brazil, and I'll add Austrailia, are very good points that were not countered.

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