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62   spydah_hh   2014 Feb 2, 8:53am  

tatupu70 says

spydah_hh says

Edit: I find it odd that CPI stays relatively low for over 50 years but the other economic indicators tell a much different story.

It's called productivity.

Yet people's wages and purchasing power have stagnated for the last 30-40 years. If real productivity was increasing then people's wages would have increased as well. But that's not the case at all.

63   spydah_hh   2014 Feb 2, 8:56am  

tatupu70 says

spydah_hh says

Wow seriously going to use the CPLie?

lol--yes, I prefer to go with actual facts and data. I prefer that over pulling numbers out of one's ass. Seriously--where did you get $25??

CPI isn't telling the real story it doesn't include things like home sales and energy or even food for the matter. It tends to subcategories food and even homes in a different manner.

So yes the data they present is factual but it doesn't tell the story of higher cost of living since they're not using the right variables in the data.

64   tatupu70   2014 Feb 2, 9:00am  

spydah_hh says

Yet people's wages and purchasing power have stagnated for the last 30-40 years. If real productivity was increasing then people's wages would have increased as well. But that's not the case at all

In aggregate, they have. The problem is that inequality has also grown dramatically so medians don't show it.

65   tatupu70   2014 Feb 2, 9:03am  

spydah_hh says

CPI isn't telling the real story it doesn't include things like home sales and energy or even food for the matter. It tends to subcategories food and even homes in a different manner.

Yes it does. As I've posted on here numerous times--CPI includes housing costs, food costs, and energy costs.

There is also something called core CPI which excludes food and energy because they are more volatile and can skew the numbers. But the straight CPI DOES include everything in the basket of goods.

Like I said--I've spent the past 6 posts correcting all your factual inaccuracies. Which is how most debates go on here anymore.

66   spydah_hh   2014 Feb 2, 9:07am  

tatupu70 says

spydah_hh says

Yet people's wages and purchasing power have stagnated for the last 30-40 years. If real productivity was increasing then people's wages would have increased as well. But that's not the case at all

In aggregate, they have. The problem is that inequality has also grown dramatically so medians don't show it.

Honestly, I think most of the productivity comes from the top, so yes there is inequality in that sense. But productivity in the average worker, I am willing to bet is down considering that real not official unemployment is high and also because most people are on some form of social welfare and not working or if they are only part-time.

But the problems with the inequality we're experiencing are the barriers of entry to form a business. There are too many hoops and barriers for one to cross if they were to start a business and try to compete with the big dogs. Since they remain at the top and stay at the top thanks to government policies and bailouts income inequality will always remain. Truth is there is no competition with wall street and that's why the wealth gets concentrated to the top.

67   tatupu70   2014 Feb 2, 9:45am  

spydah_hh says

Honestly, I think most of the productivity comes from the top

lol--I'm sure you do.

spydah_hh says

But productivity in the average worker, I am willing to bet is down considering that real not official unemployment is high and also because most people are on some form of social welfare and not working or if they are only part-time.

So, in your opinion, it's not the lower level workers that are doing more, it's the CEOs? The companies that are doing more with less these days--they are employing fewer CEOs and VPs?? That is really what you think?

68   smaulgld   2014 Feb 2, 9:45am  

marcus says

Actually, when inflation occurs, wages must go up.

that may be but they don't necessarily rise at the same rate. In the mid and late 70's price inflation outstripped wage inflation creating the phenom of stagflation.
The circumstance are similar today with the fed trying to hit its inflation target in deflationary times, while wages are not rising

69   smaulgld   2014 Feb 2, 9:55am  

Schiff inartfully compared the ability of capitalist and socialist economies to provide goods and services by saying-"people don't go hungry in a capitalist economy." They do.

The point is that lack of goods, food and bread lines are more common in socialists countries like the USSR, Cuba and modern day Venezuela that in capitalist ones.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/at-markets-chavez-successor-falls-short/2014/01/31/ac85c62a-8518-11e3-a273-6ffd9cf9f4ba_story.html

70   smaulgld   2014 Feb 2, 10:02am  

bgamall4 says

spydah_hh says

Yeah do what Singapore is doing, remove minimum wage. It causes more problems than it creates.

Damn you must be a new world order Zionist. You want total destruction of main street don't you?

Singapore from the little I know is a real mixed bag-it has "free markets", yet is very restrictive in personal freedom with plenty of rules on what you can do and say and it has workfare.

Here is a short article on singapore. Would like to learn more
http://www.mws.org.sg/Dispatcher?action=SocialIssueTopic&id=Sc12ce388725076

71   theoakman   2014 Feb 2, 10:25am  

smaulgld says

bgamall4 says

spydah_hh says

Yeah do what Singapore is doing, remove minimum wage. It causes more problems than it creates.

Damn you must be a new world order Zionist. You want total destruction of main street don't you?

Singapore from the little I know is a real mixed bag-it has "free markets", yet is very restrictive in personal freedom with plenty of rules on what you can do and say and it has workfare.

Here is a short article on singapore. Would like to learn more

http://www.mws.org.sg/Dispatcher?action=SocialIssueTopic&id=Sc12ce388725076

Singapore looks for market mechanisms to solve any problem involving cost.

72   Vicente   2014 Feb 2, 10:57am  

smaulgld says

Schiff inartfully compared the ability of capitalist and socialist economies to provide goods and services by saying-"people don't go hungry in a capitalist economy." They do.

USA USA USA!

Guys like Schiff never want to talk about socialist countries which do a GREAT job of feeding their people. Typical. Still trapped in a Cold War paradigm, socialism=Commie=bread lines. They cannot explain Norway, France, Denmark so they just ignore them. Those aren't "real" countries I suppose.

73   marcus   2014 Feb 2, 11:22am  

smaulgld says

70's price inflation outstripped wage inflation creating the phenom of stagflation

I thought stagflation was when we have inflation and recession simultaneously.

74   marcus   2014 Feb 2, 11:23am  

tatupu70 says

spydah_hh says

Honestly, I think most of the productivity comes from the top

lol--I'm sure you do.

Of course, didn't you know it's capital that does the heavy lifting.

And watching rents go up is especially strenuous.

75   mell   2014 Feb 2, 11:42am  

Vicente says

smaulgld says

Schiff inartfully compared the ability of capitalist and socialist economies to provide goods and services by saying-"people don't go hungry in a capitalist economy." They do.

USA USA USA!

Guys like Schiff never want to talk about socialist countries which do a GREAT job of feeding their people. Typical. Still trapped in a Cold War paradigm, socialism=Commie=bread lines. They cannot explain Norway, France, Denmark so they just ignore them. Those aren't "real" countries I suppose.

The problem is with these definitions, similar to left and right and republican vs democrat. Many of those countries don't have any minimum wage, but their unions and employers usually come to good agreements in most sectors. Rent control has been removed or lifted in a lot of European countries known as "socialistic". Capital gains tax is all over the place but usually less taxed than income (some have no cap. gains tax). If you look at the progressive tax rates, a lot of these "socialist" countries tax less than the US, some have flat taxes. And they don't continuously bai out underwater home owners and bankers, so less socialism there as well. Grouping countries in these terms becomes more and more meaningless.

76   gsr   2014 Feb 2, 12:27pm  

Vicente says

cannot explain Norway, France, Denmark so they just ignore them

Actually, you should know, Norway has no minimum wage, even though average fast food workers make more over there. Germany also does not have one yet. Even Denmark doesn't have a strict minimum wage. They do have other social programs. But they are not more socialist in every respect.

France does have the highest minimum wage, and we know great French economy has been lately.

77   Vicente   2014 Feb 2, 2:05pm  

gsr says

Norway has no minimum wage

When something like 1/5th of Norwegians are Union members, you don't need it. The American minimum wage is a pathetic shred of labor protection by comparison.

78   indigenous   2014 Feb 2, 2:14pm  

mell says

If you look at the progressive tax rates, a lot of these "socialist" countries tax less than the US, some have flat taxes.

What is your source of information on this?

79   spydah_hh   2014 Feb 2, 10:45pm  

tatupu70 says

Yes it does. As I've posted on here numerous times--CPI includes housing costs, food costs, and energy costs.

There is also something called core CPI which excludes food and energy because they are more volatile and can skew the numbers. But the straight CPI DOES include everything in the basket of goods.

Like I said--I've spent the past 6 posts correcting all your factual inaccuracies. Which is how most debates go on here anymore.

You were saying?

Over the years, the methodology used to calculate the CPI has also undergone numerous revisions. According to the BLS, the changes removed biases that caused the CPI to overstate the inflation rate. The new methodology takes into account changes in the quality of goods and substitution. Substitution, the change in purchases by consumers in response to price changes, changes the relative weighting of the goods in the basket. The overall result tends to be a lower CPI. However, critics view the methodological changes and the switch from a COGI to a COLI focus as a purposeful manipulation that allows the U.S. government to report a lower CPI.

http://www.investopedia.com/articles/07/consumerpriceindex.asp

http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article4018.html

80   tatupu70   2014 Feb 2, 10:48pm  

spydah_hh says

You were saying?

I was saying you were wrong. Which you were. CPI includes housing, food, and energy.

You are welcome to join Indigenous in disbelieving all facts and statistics which counter his religious beliefs, but the onus is on you to provide some data showing how/why they are wrong.

81   spydah_hh   2014 Feb 2, 10:48pm  

bgamall4 says

So, you admit that it isn't the fault of main street but rather speculation and QE that has made commodities so expensive?

Yes most of the problems rely on speculation and QE. However main street is part of the problem too, specifically from public unions, public pensions, minimum wage etc. But if we removed QE and currency debasement we wouldn't need things like minimum wage or even public pensions at the tax payers expense for the matter.

82   spydah_hh   2014 Feb 2, 10:49pm  

tatupu70 says

spydah_hh says

You were saying?

I was saying you were wrong. Which you were. CPI includes housing, food, and energy.

You are welcome to join Indigenous in disbelieving all facts and statistics which counter his religious beliefs, but the onus is on you to provide some data showing how/why they are wrong.

CPI doesn't include home sales they use rents. That's just one of the things they changed. Geez, you can even look at the BLS CPI FAQ website.

So yeah.. You were saying?

83   spydah_hh   2014 Feb 2, 10:56pm  

tatupu70 says

spydah_hh says

You were saying?

I was saying you were wrong. Which you were. CPI includes housing, food, and energy.

You are welcome to join Indigenous in disbelieving all facts and statistics which counter his religious beliefs, but the onus is on you to provide some data showing how/why they are wrong.

Personally I like to look at Shadowstats Goverment statistics because they use the pre 1980 method of CPI before when Regan changed it and even before Clinton when he changed it in the 1990s. If oyu use the 1980s chart or 1990s chart (post Regan change) we get a different result of inflation over the years.

http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate_data/inflation-charts

84   tatupu70   2014 Feb 2, 11:06pm  

spydah_hh says

CPI doesn't include home sales they use rents. That's just one of the things they changed. Geez, you can even look at the BLS CPI FAQ website.

So yeah.. You were saying?

They use rental equivilent--not rents. So, yes I can look at it and comprehend it. Unfortunately, I can't say the same about you.

85   tatupu70   2014 Feb 2, 11:06pm  

spydah_hh says

Personally I like to look at Shadowstats Goverment statistics because they use the pre 1980 method of CPI before when Regan changed it and even before Clinton when he changed it in the 1990s. If oyu use the 1980s chart or 1990s chart (post Regan change) we get a different result of inflation over the years.

That doesn't surprise me. Shadowstats has been roundly discredited on here several times.

86   control point   2014 Feb 2, 11:52pm  

spydah_hh says

Personally I like to look at Shadowstats Goverment statistics because they use
the pre 1980 method of CPI before when Regan changed it and even before Clinton
when he changed it in the 1990s.

Shadowstats had positive inflation rate of 2-4% in 2008/09. That is all you need to look at to know their numbers are incorrect.

You THINK CPI is bogus and Williams publishes something higher, so that is why you like the numbers. It is not because of his methodology.

I asked for his data and he wanted me to pay for it. Nice peer review there....

You can make a lot of money publishing "data" that "proves" a preconcieved notion. There are "think tanks" that do this all over the place.

Williams is nothing different. He knows what butters his bread and gets him subscribers - his data is going to support that narrative 100%....

87   control point   2014 Feb 2, 11:54pm  

spydah_hh says

CPI doesn't include home sales they use rents.

"Owners equivalent rent" does not equal "Rent."

88   Dan8267   2014 Feb 3, 12:22am  

tatupu70 says

A weaker dollar is actually good for the US right now. It would bring jobs back here.

Feel free to weaken the dollar by giving me all the newly printed dollars. I'll go right out and spend them.

A weak dollar, a strong dollar, it doesn't matter. You could make the dollar worth less than one millionth of its current value. It wouldn't help exports one damn bit if you did so instantaneously and without stealing purchasing power from people.

It is not a weak dollar that helps imports but rather a weakening dollar. It's not the value of the dollar, but the differential of the value of the dollar with respect to time that matters. In simple terms, it's the slope, not the value.

A weakening dollar is one in which money is being stolen from savers and fix-income folk, i.e. your grandma, and is being used to subsidize the purchases of U.S. goods by foreigners. If you are in favor of that, then at least to it honestly. Take the money right out of your grandma's social security check and send it directly to China.

89   tatupu70   2014 Feb 3, 12:38am  

Dan8267 says

A weak dollar, a strong dollar, it doesn't matter. You could make the dollar worth less than one millionth of its current value. It wouldn't help exports one damn bit if you did so instantaneously and without stealing purchasing power from people.

How could you make the dollar worth less than one millionth of its current value without stealing purchasing power from people?

Dan8267 says

It is not a weak dollar that helps imports but rather a weakening dollar

Whether you do it all at once or over a long time period, the effect is the same. It makes doing business in the US cheaper.

Dan8267 says

A weakening dollar is one in which money is being stolen from savers and fix-income folk, i.e. your grandma, and is being used to subsidize the purchases of U.S. goods by foreigners. If you are in favor of that, then at least to it honestly. Take the money right out of your grandma's social security check and send it directly to China.

Yep--these same fixed income people that have enjoyed low inflation for the past 20 years as our jobs were shipped overseas. I'm not going to shed any tears. You think we're not sending money to China now??? Have you seen our trade deficit?? I'd rather fix the trade deficit instead of worrying about our purchasing power.

90   smaulgld   2014 Feb 3, 12:44am  

marcus says

smaulgld says

70's price inflation outstripped wage inflation creating the phenom of stagflation

I thought stagflation was when we have inflation and recession simultaneously.

Yes that is a definition and the recession causes unemployment and wage stagnation http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stagflation an overall decline in the standard of living or an increase in the "misery index"

91   smaulgld   2014 Feb 3, 12:48am  

Vicente says

smaulgld says

Schiff inartfully compared the ability of capitalist and socialist economies to provide goods and services by saying-"people don't go hungry in a capitalist economy." They do.

USA USA USA!

Guys like Schiff never want to talk about socialist countries which do a GREAT job of feeding their people. Typical. Still trapped in a Cold War paradigm, socialism=Commie=bread lines. They cannot explain Norway, France, Denmark so they just ignore them. Those aren't "real" countries I suppose.

Nordic country socialist successes can be explained by thriving private sectors and far more efficient administration and less waste fraud and abuse in government. Norway in particular also benefits from a low population and massive oil revenues
Venezuela, Cuba and ussr failed because the government tried to control the means of production and couldn't bake enough bread

92   smaulgld   2014 Feb 3, 12:54am  

indigenous says

mell says

If you look at the progressive tax rates, a lot of these "socialist" countries tax less than the US, some have flat taxes.

What is your source of information on this?

I think the tax codes are simpler too. In the us there are many loopholes that allow some to not pay their "fair share". While taxes may be intrusive if they are flat, companies and individuals can conduct their business without "tax planning" that results in non productive time consuming endeavors

93   MisdemeanorRebel   2014 Feb 3, 1:03am  

Venezuela's real, inflation-adjusted GDP was propelled to the moon following Chavez' election in 1999 and 2010, and particularly after he broke the State Oil Monopoly that was run by the top 1% of their own benefit (that was portrayed in th US as "Poor Striking Workers" - even though countless people that didn't exist were being paid outrageous salaries and some people were collecting multiple F/T Salaries)

Inflation was much lower under Chavez than his Chicago-School, US Crony, Criollo Predecessors.

http://www.globalresearch.ca/venezuela-economic-and-social-performance-under-hugo-chavez/5326013

94   smaulgld   2014 Feb 3, 5:17am  

thunderlips11 says

Venezuela's real, inflation-adjusted GDP was propelled to the moon following Chavez' election in 1999 and 2010, and particularly after he broke the State Oil Monopoly that was run by the top 1% of their own benefit (that was portrayed in th US as "Poor Striking Workers" - even though countless people that didn't exist were being paid outrageous salaries and some people were collecting multiple F/T Salaries)

Inflation was much lower under Chavez than his Chicago-School, US Crony, Criollo Predecessors.

http://www.globalresearch.ca/venezuela-economic-and-social-performance-under-hugo-chavez/5326013

Crony capitalism can be worse than a state owned economy depending on the players but Venezuela should never be used as an example of a properly functioning economy!

95   MisdemeanorRebel   2014 Feb 3, 5:24am  

smaulgld says

Crony capitalism can be worse than a state owned economy depending on the players but Venezuela should never be used as an example of a properly functioning economy!

Fair enough. I think "State Owned" to Venezuela is US Corpratist - MSM propaganda though. The Oil Monopoly was already public, just kowtowing to foreign companies and full of graft. Wide swaths of the VZ economy went unchanged, and aside from the Public Grocery stores offering only basic staple items at subsidized prices, Chavez didn't nationalize very much. .

He did start collecting the sales tax, which many businesses had been charging customers but pocketing for themselves.

96   spydah_hh   2014 Feb 3, 9:54am  

bgamall4 says

You know that won't happen. Wall Street is already complaining. The only way you can stop QE is to substitute real infrastructure improvement and getting more money into the hands of the regular guys who are being left behind.

QE will be stopped once the dollar collapse. In fact the only way to stop it will be to raise interest rates but if we did that then this country will go broke.

Yes, the money needs to not be concentrated to the top but to do so will require something different than what you're advocating.

97   spydah_hh   2014 Feb 3, 11:42am  

bgamall4 says

spydah_hh says

bgamall4 says

You know that won't happen. Wall Street is already complaining. The only way you can stop QE is to substitute real infrastructure improvement and getting more money into the hands of the regular guys who are being left behind.

QE will be stopped once the dollar collapse. In fact the only way to stop it will be to raise interest rates but if we did that then this country will go broke.

Yes, the money needs to not be concentrated to the top but to do so will require something different than what you're advocating.

We don't want concentration at the top. Only you do.

Uh no I don't I never even said I do. you're miss interpreting my posts.

98   Vicente   2014 Feb 3, 12:54pm  

I like watching Rand Paul squirm when asked if the minimum wage should be abolished:

STEPHANOPOULOS: Should the Federal government be able to set a minimum wage?

PAUL: It's not a question of whether they can or canot. I think that's decided. I think the question you have to ask is whether or not when you set the minimum wage it may cause unemployment.

http://voices.washingtonpost.com/plum-line/2010/05/rand_paul_ducks_question_about.html

99   spydah_hh   2014 Feb 3, 1:20pm  

bgamall4 says

Good, then support the raising of the minimum wage, unless you have a better idea, like buckets of money being dropped into the back yards of Americans.

Already discussed this. Minimum wage isn't the solution to the problem of rising costs and wealth concentration. QE and currency debasement is and the only solution to them is to eliminate them.

100   mell   2014 Feb 3, 1:37pm  

PS commenting on the outrage:

"First of all I never said that I wanted to repeal the minimum wage so that the intellectually disabled could work for $2 per hour. The intellectually disabled are already exempt from the minimum wage and many are working for $2 per hour right now. Some earn even less. Samantha Bee asked me to give her an example of someone who would be willing to work for $2 per hour. She came up with that figure on her own. I had not part in suggested it. I told her that very few people would be willing to work for such a low a wage even if the minimum wage were repealed.
But I did give her two examples. 1. Unpaid interns; like the ones the Daily show employes and pay zero dollars per hour. They would gladly work for $2 per hour, as it would amount to a raise. However the minimum wage makes it illegal to pay interns $2 per hour so instead they are paid zero. The other group I mentioned were the intellectually disabled (though I told her I could not remember the politically correct term at that time.) I mentioned that group since I knew they were already exempt from the minimum wage.
My wife's aunt has Down's Syndrome and is currently employed for $2.50 per hour. She loves her job, and does not really need the money as she still lives with her mother. She works for the self-esteem and enjoyment the job brings to her life. If her employer were required to pay her the minimum wage he could not afford to hire her. No one else could either, and her life would be far less meaningful.
The real problem is that you are treating a highly edited comedy skit as actual news. Nothing that you saw was real. The entire conversation was pieced together by the Daily Show to try to make me look bad, entertain and outrage their audience, and advance their political agenda. Unrelated sentences were pieced together, and most of my answers were not even related to the questions being asked.
I spoke for four hours, and they simply re-arranged my words to create a 70 second conversation that never actually took place. The real conversation made a very compelling case for repealing the minimum wage. But since the Daily Show did not want their audience to hear that conversation they took my words out of context to create an alternate conversation. It’s amazing how easily you fell for it."

Sounds reasonable.

101   smaulgld   2014 Feb 3, 4:52pm  

marcus says

spydah_hh says

The low cost of living only occurs because of government debasement. The counter argument to that is to increase people's wages, but that doesn't work either.

Actually, when inflation occurs, wages must go up.

IF you want to argue for ways to prevent inflation from occuring, that's a separate discussion. What you seem to be arguing here is in favor of currency debasement. You are saying what ? That by totally fucking over all workers, by not allowing their wages to keep up with inflation, we may finally be able to put an end to inflation ?

Actually the opposite is true as far as I can tell.

It seems you are in favor of the net outcome of inflation being more wealth moving up to the top.

Currently inflation is helping the wealthy in the form of rising house and until recently stock prices cause by "accommodative" monetary policy that makes it easier for the wealthy to take advantage of low interest rates to buy real estate and by driving savers who get no interest on their accounts into the stock market.
Everyone is else is not helped as the job market has not improved, nor have wages and nearly half of the low sales volume housing recovery comes from cash investors.
To top it off because of the excesses of the last bubble and the collapse of the banking system absent QE prices would be falling and at least if people could not buy houses or stocks the price of food energy and shelter might have become more affordable

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