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46083   Tenpoundbass   2014 May 6, 11:51pm  

The NSA... because bitches be crazy.

46084   control point   2014 May 7, 12:24am  

Paralithodes says

I assume you mean "small business" and not just "business,"

No. In the macroeconomy, size does not matter. There are some advantages to size, ie "the economy of scale," while there are advantages to "small" business, ie ability to quickly react to market conditions.

Paralithodes says

Regulation often serves as a barrier to entry for small business

You've addressed this later, here:
Paralithodes says

Maybe most of those it crowds out should never get started in the first place

What you mean to say is the marketplace crowds out non-competitive firms. Making the argument that regulation is anti-competitive is suspect. In the absence of any regulation, there would still exist market factors that would make certain participants non-competitive. Regulations are like rules of a game. Anyone can win at chess if they don't adhere to the rules.

Paralithodes says

makes it more difficult for small businesses to compete due to the cost of compliance in terms of both time and money.

Again, these are market factors, or "rules" by which all participants must play. However, my argument is simply this - regulations are but one "tax" levied by the government on doing business. There is a regulation that corporations are only allowed to use legal labor in the production of their goods and services. This regulation certainly increases their labor cost above would it would be if they were permitted to hire anyone off the street, regardless of work status. There are other rules that have been changed over the last 35 years as well - "right to work," union breakup, income taxes themselves, minimum wages, etc., etc., etc...

All of these "rules" affect profit margins. My argument is in sum total - all "regulations" or "rules" of business have fallen over the past 35 years. This is not debatable; after tax corporate profits as a percentage of GDP have increased consistently over the past 35 years or so.

This is the quantifiable data to determine the "cost" of business regulation, in total.

In short, yes - while it may cost corporations more for licensing (as an example) today than it did 30 years ago, the business owner pays a lower cost of capital and labor that more than offset this increased cost of this regulation.

There is one way to increase corporate profit margins: increase revenues relative to cost. (Can be accomplished by holding revenues constant while lowering cost as well, fwiw)

This implies our markets are MORE FREE in totality than 35 years ago.

46085   bob2356   2014 May 7, 12:30am  

Paralithodes says

I asked you specifically: What about new (post 2006) regulations charging medical device manufacturers with an annual fee for each type of medical device that they sold, and how does this impact a small manufacturer with $100K revenue vs. GE

Are you are referring to the Medical Device User Fee and Modernizaiton act of 2002? If so it specifically has a waiver for small business. Small being defined as less than 30 million. http://www.fda.gov/MedicalDevices/DeviceRegulationandGuidance/Overview/MedicalDeviceUserFeeandModernizationActMDUFMA/ucm109105.htm The act only generates 25 million (increasing for inflation) a year to pay for testing of medical devices. No one can seriously make the case that 25 million a year is holding back the 250 billion dollar a year medical device industry in the US.

If you are referring to ACA it's an excise tax that affects all manufacturers foreign an domestic exactly the same. Exports are exempt from the tax.

It's pretty ironic that an industry that makes such huge profits mostly because of government regulations protecting them from competition is complaining so loudly about government regulation.

46086   Strategist   2014 May 7, 12:35am  

The Professor says

Is AF Brilliant? Demented? Or just sarcastic?

I pity the fool at NSA assigned to watch him.

The guy assigned to watch him would have the thrills of his life.

46087   Strategist   2014 May 7, 12:46am  

Homeboy says

People still shop at stores?

Atleast they pretend to. I need to go to Best Buy about 6 times to check out a gadget before I can convince myself I need it. Then I buy it from Amazon.

46088   Strategist   2014 May 7, 12:51am  

Call it Crazy says

At the end of 2009, Office Depot and OfficeMax combined had about 2,085 stores in North America, which will drop to about 1,500 stores in the United States by 2016 after the closures.

By 2025 they will be down to 500 stores. They will be victims of technology and go the way of Kodak. Remember Kodak, guys? Those under 20 wont.

46089   zzyzzx   2014 May 7, 1:12am  

It's all Obama's fault!!!

46090   tatupu70   2014 May 7, 1:14am  

Call it Crazy says

It's really hard not to go back up in this thread and delete all his comments... As usual, he provides nothing of value, is a total fucking Troll, and all he does in a thread is argue WITHOUT providing and substance, data, facts, etc.....

Did you find the proof of snopes bias yet?

46091   zzyzzx   2014 May 7, 1:21am  

U.S. businesses are being destroyed faster than theyre being created

It's all Obama's fault!!!

46092   smaulgld   2014 May 7, 2:12am  

Home prices were up in March
Focus on what is important

46093   smaulgld   2014 May 7, 2:13am  

Its part of the creative recovery

46094   corntrollio   2014 May 7, 2:28am  

Facebooksux says

I don't mean to stop the circle jerk here, but She-Man cannot claim to have 5.5 million in assets. That's horseshit since he's levered multiple times over and better pray that this laughable 0.1% rise in GDP isn't a harbinger of things to come(which it is).

I'm biased because I assume nameless faceless people on the internet are all talk. In addition, even if the $5.5 million number even resembles reality, I sort of see it as how Donald Trump is claimed to be a billionaire. His actual net worth is not nearly as impressive as he projects (and his people sue any time they think the estimate given by the media is too low) because he has billion dollar properties that are leveraged to the hilt.

46095   edvard2   2014 May 7, 2:52am  

There's a big difference between having 5.5 million 'worth' in assets versus being actually worth 5.5 million bucks. Nevertheless, different people have different things they invest in because they feel they are either safer, better, or more likely to generate income. ALL are risks. Real Estate is perhaps a bigger risk since its value is heavily tied to the overall job market and in particular the success of the middle class. Seeing as how the middle class has been stagnate for years with little evidence in any meaningful change, that is a consideration.

46096   corntrollio   2014 May 7, 7:57am  

Prices there are ridiculous compared to online sometimes. I was looking at a replacement toner cartridge, and the price was more than 50% higher than typical internet retail price for it at Raples or Office Despot.

Unless you absolutely have to have that toner cartridge today, why would you buy it from these two stores? Better to keep a spare one around and replace it when necessary. These stores exist nowadays for the "I need it today" customer, and those are disappearing.

It's also partially because there's little competition for any of this stuff at bricks & mortar these days. Something like Best Buy only carries very limited stock of toner cartridges/inkjet cartridges, and there aren't a lot of other stores around that'd sell some of this stuff any more (no CompUSA or Circuit City, and Fry's only carries cheap Chinese knock-offs {sorry, that was redundant}, and the local stores didn't even have those in stock).

It'd make more sense to close more of their retail stores and only do catalog delivery for businesses and online for everyone else. Big businesses tend to pay these ridiculously high prices without complaining for some reason.

46097   EastCoastBubbleBoy   2014 May 7, 3:32pm  

Now I've got that Prince song in my head... tonight were gonna party like it's 1929!

46098   Paralithodes   2014 May 7, 10:36pm  

tatupu70 says

OK--let's do real world examples. Please provide details on the exact regulation to which you refer. When did it take effect? How are these fees implemeted?

OK, let's do real world back up of assertions... Please provide evidence that there is actually less regulation now than in the past, and that new regulation does not impact small businesses. These were your very specific assertions. Please provide some exact evidence for your refutations in this thread above.

We both know your request for the "exact" regulation and details is nothing more than to waste time because you are unable to provide any details (ever) about your own assertions and cannot refute anyone else's arguments. And we both know that you have absolutely no idea, though anyone in this forum who might be involved on the business end of medical device manufacturing knows what I'm talking about. You can Google it yourself.

46099   tatupu70   2014 May 7, 10:46pm  

Paralithodes says

OK, let's do real world back up of assertions... Please provide evidence that there is actually less regulation now than in the past, and that new regulation does not impact small businesses. These were your very specific assertions. Please provide some exact evidence for your refutations in this thread above.

Wow--so you can't even tell me which regulation you were referencing? That's pretty weak.

Paralithodes says

Please provide evidence that there is actually less regulation now than in the past, and that new regulation does not impact small businesses. These were your very specific assertions

I challenge you to show me where I made that "very specific" assertion. Because I would never have said that new regulation does not impact small business. Of course some of it does--much is exempted for small business--but certainly not all.

46100   Paralithodes   2014 May 7, 10:55pm  

bob2356 says

Are you are referring to the Medical Device User Fee and Modernizaiton act of 2002? If so it specifically has a waiver for small business. Small being defined as less than 30 million. http://www.fda.gov/MedicalDevices/DeviceRegulationandGuidance/Overview/MedicalDeviceUserFeeandModernizationActMDUFMA/ucm109105.htm

Thanks for the information... Here is the information on the "waiver" and "fee", from your link:

Small business fees and waivers. In order to avoid creating governmental barriers to entry into the device marketplace, the MDUFMA user fee program contains a provision to protect small businesses. If you qualify as a small business, you may pay reduced user fees and may obtain a one-time waiver of the fee for your first premarket application.

So it is a "one time waiver." And yes, I am aware that the fees are reduced. Now tell us, if GE Medical pays 100% of the fee, and a $100K business pays 38% of the fee, who proportionately pays much more or less as a % of their business revenue, the major large business or the small business?

bob2356 says

The act only generates 25 million (increasing for inflation) a year to pay for testing of medical devices. No one can seriously make the case that 25 million a year is holding back the 250 billion dollar a year medical device industry in the US.

And no one is arguing that at all in this thread. On the contrary, hypothetically fees could be raised substantially higher on all of them, and all startups/small business are wiped out entirely, and the $250B industry could still grow even larger. Are you, like control point, trying to shift the conversation away from what it is really about: Impact of regulation on small business?

bob2356 says

It's pretty ironic that an industry that makes such huge profits mostly because of government regulations protecting them from competition is complaining so loudly about government regulation.

Perhaps it's not ironic at all that many of those in this forum refuse to acknowledge the distinction between the size and power of large business, and small business, or the impact of regulation on small business. Apparently small businesses should have no voice to speak about regulations that protect the large businesses and their huge profits from competition. It seems that you are directly supporting corporatism...

46101   Paralithodes   2014 May 7, 11:35pm  

control point says

No. In the macroeconomy, size does not matter.

Then you're looking to have a different conversation from the one in the OP.

control point says

What you mean to say is the marketplace crowds out non-competitive firms. Making the argument that regulation is anti-competitive is suspect.

Perhaps the word "crowds out" was the wrong word to use in a pedantic sense, but let's not try to twist my point into something different: In this case I was describing a regulation that I believe is reasonable, even if it may "crowd out" some entrepreneurs who would otherwise be fine because on the balance it probably keeps way more potentially bad actors out.

But in any case, this is an example of a government regulation that creates a barrier (cost and time for insurance and licensing) that will keep at least some competitors from entering the market. It is simply indisputable that by definition, this regulation which reduces competition whether justified or not.

The marketplace cannot crowd out competition that never enters the marketplace to begin with.

Are you arguing that no regulation is anti-competitive? That increasing compliance costs (time and expense) on small businesses has no impact on their competitiveness at all?

control point says

In the absence of any regulation, there would still exist market factors that would make certain participants non-competitive.

Completely irrelevant to the conversation. control point says

All of these "rules" affect profit margins. My argument is in sum total - all "regulations" or "rules" of business have fallen over the past 35 years. This is not debatable; after tax corporate profits as a percentage of GDP have increased consistently over the past 35 years or so.

This is the quantifiable data to determine the "cost" of business regulation, in total.

Yes, in total... Which again is not the topic of this discussion.

control point says

In short, yes - while it may cost corporations more for licensing (as an example) today than it did 30 years ago, the business owner pays a lower cost of capital and labor that more than offset this increased cost of this regulation.

Right, the "business owner" in general, ignoring any distinction whatsoever on the relative impact of compliance costs on small vs. large business.

control point says

This implies our markets are MORE FREE in totality than 35 years ago.

Sure.... And therefore, even more regulation might make things even more free, especially if we pretend that there is no distinction whatsoever between large vs. small businesses, and compliance costs are meaningless because if a sole proprieter has 5 extra days of compliance time and cost, so what, he/she can just increase revenue by selling more goods or services.

46102   Paralithodes   2014 May 7, 11:52pm  

tatupu70 says

Wow--so you can't even tell me which regulation you were referencing? That's pretty weak.

Sure I could have told you... But why bother? We both know you didn't ask out of sincerity and instead asked out of diversion and a means to criticize. Otherwise you could have let it go after Bob provided the info and I responded. As far as it being "weak." No matter... Is there ever anything you provide as evidence for your own positions, that is stronger? I think we both know the answer to that one!

tatupu70 says

I challenge you to show me where I made that "very specific" assertion. Because I would never have said that new regulation does not impact small business. Of course some of it does--much is exempted for small business--but certainly not all.

You specifically asserted that in general there was literally LESS regulation today than decades ago. You made a blanket claim very similar to above regarding "much is exempted for small business" but then as now, provide ZERO evidence for your positions.

Sure, you agree that some regulation impacts small business and "not all" is exempt. So we disagree only to the matter of the degree on a scale. If that's the case, what's your issue: that I say it's "significant" and you disagree and think it's not significant? OK, for once, provide some type of evidence or logical explanation, based on the real world, for why you think it's not. Time for you to actually provide some info of value beyond your simple (and often obviously inexperienced) opinion.

46103   bob2356   2014 May 8, 12:19am  

Paralithodes says

So it is a "one time waiver." And yes, I am aware that the fees are reduced. Now tell us, if GE Medical pays 100% of the fee, and a $100K business pays 38% of the fee, who proportionately pays much more or less as a % of their business revenue, the major large business or the small business?

You are being disingenuous. There are no 100k medical device makers or anywhere even close. I doubt there are very many if any less than 10 million dollar medical device makers. A 90k fee isn't holding anyone back from entering the field.

. Paralithodes says

Are you, like control point, trying to shift the conversation away from what it is really about: Impact of regulation on small business?

Your point is big corporations use taxes and regulations to restrict competition. Very true. My point is you picked a very bad example where there is a legitimate reason for the fees. Industry should pay for fees for government services needed in order conduct their business. Surely you are not going to say that medical devices should be self regulated and will be safe because of the high levels of civic responsiblity of medical device makers?

Increasing compliance costs affect small business more than large corporations, as do increasing rents, labor costs, material costs, transportation costs, etc. etc etc.. Small business are more nimble and are free from large amounts of organizational overhead. It's all part of the game. Large business have used government to stifle competition since the dawn of time. You haven't discovered anything new here.

Business formation fell off a cliff in the 1930's, yet there wasn't any huge amount of new regulations holding it back. I don't think a lack of business formation in a poor economy is some kind of surprise, except to the washington post.

46104   HydroCabron   2014 May 8, 12:44am  

Wouldn't another tax cut promote small business growth?

46105   HydroCabron   2014 May 8, 12:50am  

Everybody I talk to agrees that it's the president's job to steer the economy.

But we're not socialists.

46106   Vicente   2014 May 8, 12:59am  

Yeah everyone wants to drive on the roads, nobody wants to pay for them. Same person will gladly bitch about potholes and "why didn't they build another bypass so I can get to Walmart faster!!!"

Gas taxes are something close to half of the funding for roads. If you cut that stream drastically by driving hybrids or electrics, then you'll need to choose between either less roads kept open & maintained, or some other way to fund it.

46107   lostand confused   2014 May 8, 1:10am  

Vicente says

Gas taxes are something close to half of the funding for roads. If you cut that stream drastically by driving hybrids or electrics, then you'll need to choose between either less roads kept open & maintained, or some other way to fund it.

Meanwhile CA is the welfare capital of America. Why not cut payments to bums and pay for roads??

46108   zzyzzx   2014 May 8, 1:21am  

Vicente says

Gas taxes are something close to half of the funding for roads.

They would fund more than half if they would do away with requirements for union labor.

46109   Shaman   2014 May 8, 1:22am  

Currently the gas tax is at an astronomical value of $.59/gallon. My wife and I are small range drivers, about 12k each with our vehicles, avg between us of 20mpg. So that's 24,000/20=1200 gallons, at $0.59 is $708 dollars in gas tax we pay each year.
If we switch to a mileage tax, at $0.05/mile, that's $1200 in tax.
If this is a "replacement" tax, why is it almost double the already high gas tax?

Two commuter families are totally hosed, figure twice that in tax for $2400/year.
All this to cover up the fact that Sacramento raids road funds every time their liberal budget doesn't match incoming tax money. That's why our roads are shitty and the transportation is always underfunded.

46110   Strategist   2014 May 8, 1:27am  

Dear Governor Brown,
You said we need to reduce pollution, reduce the trade deficit, reduce asthma and respiratory illnesses due to pollution, and save the environment. You said I should buy a Prius, so I did.
Now you say I should get charged by the mile because the Prius is not consuming enough gas. Are you now saying I should not have got my Prius?
Thanks
Citizen

46111   Shaman   2014 May 8, 1:39am  

"It's the economy, stupid!"
- Some random democrat

46112   HydroCabron   2014 May 8, 1:47am  

Quigley says

"It's the economy, stupid!"

- Some random democrat

Not denying it.

That's what's interesting: every news anchor, everyone I work with, everyone in my family, all my friends would deny they're socialists (2-3 exceptions), but all believe the president is the captain of the ship who manages the economy. That is, there is an absolute embrace of the principle that the head of state is there to guide the economy - it's embedded to near-lizard-brain depth.

46113   Automan Empire   2014 May 8, 1:51am  

SoftShell says

When a small business owner is told "you didn't build that", they tend to fall
into an "Ok, I don't get credit for building the business, fuck you I don't give
a fuck anymore" state, and their business fails.

Really? Anyone with this kind of mindset doesn't have the mettle to be a business owner, or even much of an employee. It sounds like a rich man's wife, whining about running her heavily-subsidized-by-hubby hobby business.

46114   Shaman   2014 May 8, 1:52am  

The POTUS may or may not be the economic captain, but he certainly can be the rock upon which all economic legislation runs aground. If Obama doesn't like something like, say, the pipeline from Montana to Texas, it's going to make that almost impossible to get done. Obama has a proven record of being the spanner in the works of economic recovery, vetoing legislation that would add good jobs and money.

46115   Peter P   2014 May 8, 1:54am  

Don't call it a tax. All roads should be toll roads.

Cyclists and pedestrians should be charged a fee to use the streets too.

46116   zzyzzx   2014 May 8, 1:56am  

Peter P says

Don't call it a tax. All roads should be toll roads.

Cyclists and pedestrians should be charged a fee to use the streets too.

Using your reasoning parents should be paying much higher taxes to support all the tax dollars spent on their kids.

46117   Y   2014 May 8, 1:57am  

Sarcasm.
Time to mount your low horse....

Automan Empire says

SoftShell says

When a small business owner is told "you didn't build that", they tend to fall

into an "Ok, I don't get credit for building the business, fuck you I don't give

a fuck anymore" state, and their business fails.

Really? Anyone with this kind of mindset doesn't have the mettle to be a business owner, or even much of an employee. It sounds like a rich man's wife, whining about running her heavily-subsidized-by-hubby hobby business.

46118   Peter P   2014 May 8, 1:59am  

zzyzzx says

Peter P says

Don't call it a tax. All roads should be toll roads.

Cyclists and pedestrians should be charged a fee to use the streets too.

Using your reasoning parents should be paying much higher taxes to support all the tax dollars spent on their kids.

Absolutely.

46119   dublin hillz   2014 May 8, 2:02am  

Strategist says

Dear Governor Brown,
You said we need to reduce pollution, reduce the trade deficit, reduce asthma and respiratory illnesses due to pollution, and save the environment. You said I should buy a Prius, so I did.
Now you say I should get charged by the mile because the Prius is not consuming enough gas. Are you now saying I should not have got my Prius?
Thanks
Citizen

If the terminator were to have remained governor everyone would get a complimentary hummer and gas tax receipts would not be an issue...

46120   Strategist   2014 May 8, 2:09am  

Call it Crazy says

Strategist says

Dear Governor Brown,

You said we need to reduce pollution, reduce the trade deficit, reduce asthma and respiratory illnesses due to pollution, and save the environment. You said I should buy a Prius, so I did.

Now you say I should get charged by the mile because the Prius is not consuming enough gas. Are you now saying I should not have got my Prius?

Thanks

Citizen

Ha Ha Ha.... How do you like your Prius NOW while living in paradise (CA)??

It's for sale.

46121   FortWayne   2014 May 8, 2:16am  

I already pay outrageous taxes for just about everything, income tax, sales tax, property tax, all other miscellaneous taxes when buying sertain items.

And they want more taxes? Over my dead body!

46122   bob2356   2014 May 8, 2:21am  

Call it Crazy says

I think he might have been referring to this Medical Device Excise Tax as part of the ACA:

Already discussed.

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