BobKowalski
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 17 May 2007
- Messages
- 21,511
You be happy with your car and tv. I’m aiming for a palace mate.
Fancy a moon myself. Nice and quiet. No atmosphere though.
Gotta love the classics.
You be happy with your car and tv. I’m aiming for a palace mate.
Well better vote Tory then, for in doing so, you have a slim chance. Under Labour, you have none.You be happy with your car and tv. I’m aiming for a palace mate.
So you've banked your money and can now afford to be generous with other peoples' ;-) I get it.Really? Have mentioned it before. Big Bang in the City. Thatcher. Greed is good. Wide braces. Was right in all that shit :)
So you've banked your money and can now afford to be generous with other peoples' ;-) I get it.
It is a problem if the rich are getting rich off rents earned from the poor (that is rent in the wider sense of the word, not just income from housing property). I recommend Atkinson's book. He's not a lefty, or a righty, and he was very well respected.Interesting comments.
I had not heard of "Atkinsons Inequality", so I did a quick google and considered perhaps buying a copy and having a read. And I read the precis on Amazon:
"Inequality is one of our most urgent social problems. Curbed in the decades after World War II, it has recently returned with a vengeance. We all know the scale of the problem talk about the 99% and the 1% is entrenched in public debate but there has been little discussion of what we can do but despair. According to the distinguished economist Anthony Atkinson, however, we can do much more than skeptics imagine. Atkinson has long been at the forefront of research on inequality, and brings his theoretical and practical experience to bear on its diverse problems. He presents a comprehensive set of policies that could bring about a genuine shift in the distribution of income in developed countries. The problem, Atkinson shows, is not simply that the rich are getting richer."...
I am significant deterred from further reading as a result of that line. It bothers me. Why, because that is not the problem at all. In fact it's great that the rich are getting richer. The problem is why are the poor not getting richer at the same rate. The poor ARE getting richer of course, although the left would have you believe otherwise. The "poor" now drive cars when only a few decades ago, they did not. They have large flatscreen TV's ditto. You get the picture. The standards of living of everyone in society are on an upwards trend and have been for decades. And yet the book seeks to describe "the problem" as "the rich are getting richer"??? Really???
In China only a few decades ago, 1 billion people - give or take - lived in abject poverty. Nowadays whereas many are still in poverty, tens if not hundreds of millions are not. And yet China now has hundreds of billionaires. Can China's problems be described as "the rich are getting richer"? Milllions in China have got richer to some degree. Would they prefer to go back to when everyone was poor? I doubt it.
Is it?It is a problem if the rich are getting rich off rents earned from the poor (that is rent in the wider sense of the word, not just income from housing property). I recommend Atkinson's book. He's not a lefty, or a righty, and he was very well respected.
Which is why I find most baffling why adamant remainers refuse to support one as a compromise to leaving.If anything, I think such a deal would likely see us back in the EU in a few years. Which, personally, I would be happy about.
Rent seeking behaviour by capital is by it's very nature destructive to an economy. It doesn't produce anything of worth, it just sucks out value and hands it to those already with excess capital. I'm fully in favour of the productive use of capital, it built the societies we live in, but rent seeking is just fucking lazy and counter productive. As for inequality being a good thing, I'd argue that only stands true if inequality is balanced, which it is not at the moment. Billionaires do not need another billion when that money could be put to better use. Besides, when all the increase in income goes only to the richest, they don't spent anything like as much as a percentage of their earnings in the wider economy, which subsequently shrinks the economy. And finally, when you talk about trends in increase in wealth, those trends are only good at the point where the rate of growth is the same for both (or less for capital as those with capital consists of a much smaller percentage of the population). At this moment in time, the rate of return on capital is greater than the rate of growth in wages. Due to compound interest, this means we're moving back to a similar state of affairs that we had economically in victorian times. I'm paraphrasing from Piketty here, he describes it much more coherently than i ever could.Is it?
So long as both rich and poor are getting richer, then that's a good thing, right? If the rich are getting richer and the poor getting poorer, then yes that's a problem, but I don't see that as a trend anywhere in the developed world. Over the course of a few years you get variations for sure but the long term trend for both rich and poor is upwards.
And inequality is a good thing. It is one of the prime motivations for hard work and excellence, since without the ability to be rewarded more than someone else, why work harder than them?
Seems to me the debate should be about how do we get faster growth in affluence amongst the poor, and really not much more than that. Am I bothered whether some billionaire has £3bn or only £2bn, or perhaps has £4bn? Honestly I don't give a stuff. I would hope people concentrated on how well off they are, rather than losing sleep about someone else being better off than them.
Great post. Economist Michael Hudson describes it as neo feudalism. That's where we are today and it's unsustainable. The question is where do we go from here.Rent seeking behaviour by capital is by it's very nature destructive to an economy. It doesn't produce anything of worth, it just sucks out value and hands it to those already with excess capital. I'm fully in favour of the productive use of capital, it built the societies we live in, but rent seeking is just fucking lazy and counter productive. As for inequality being a good thing, I'd argue that only stands true if inequality is balanced, which it is not at the moment. Billionaires do not need another billion when that money could be put to better use. Besides, when all the increase in income goes only to the richest, they don't spent anything like as much as a percentage of their earnings in the wider economy, which subsequently shrinks the economy. And finally, when you talk about trends in increase in wealth, those trends are only good at the point where the rate of growth is the same for both (or less for capital as those with capital consists of a much smaller percentage of the population). At this moment in time, the rate of return on capital is greater than the rate of growth in wages. Due to compound interest, this means we're moving back to a similar state of affairs that we had economically in victorian times. I'm paraphrasing from Piketty here, he describes it much more coherently than i ever could.
Do everyone's palaces and private islands disappear when labour goes into power? [emoji848]Well better vote Tory then, for in doing so, you have a slim chance. Under Labour, you have none.
Not sure who it was who challenged me on No Deal Brexiters being like a death cult here's further evidence to back up what was a flippant comment
Jess Phillips has said she received a death threat which quoted Boris Johnson.
“I have had a death threat this week that literally quoted the prime minister and used the prime minister’s name and words in a death threat that was delivered to my staff,” she said, while asking an urgent question in the House of Commons.
The threat read: “To quote Boris Johnson … people like you who don’t support Brexit will be found dead in a ditch’,” Ms Phillips told the BBC.
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...brexit-speech-labour-parliament-a9121231.html
Maybe some don't take this too seriously but we already have one dead MP and the PM describing her friends kind words about the tone of language as a humbug!!
Rent seeking behaviour by capital is by it's very nature destructive to an economy. It doesn't produce anything of worth, it just sucks out value and hands it to those already with excess capital. I'm fully in favour of the productive use of capital, it built the societies we live in, but rent seeking is just fucking lazy and counter productive. As for inequality being a good thing, I'd argue that only stands true if inequality is balanced, which it is not at the moment. Billionaires do not need another billion when that money could be put to better use. Besides, when all the increase in income goes only to the richest, they don't spent anything like as much as a percentage of their earnings in the wider economy, which subsequently shrinks the economy. And finally, when you talk about trends in increase in wealth, those trends are only good at the point where the rate of growth is the same for both (or less for capital as those with capital consists of a much smaller percentage of the population). At this moment in time, the rate of return on capital is greater than the rate of growth in wages. Due to compound interest, this means we're moving back to a similar state of affairs that we had economically in victorian times. I'm paraphrasing from Piketty here, he describes it much more coherently than i ever could.
Many, yes. But more to the point, no-one has any chance of getting one if Labour gets into power. Because Labour will punish the rich and make it impossible for anyone new to gate crash the scene.Do everyone's palaces and private islands disappear when labour goes into power? [emoji848]
Like I admitted I got carried away with the conservatives and the NHS yesterday, I fear you might be repeating my mistake of going over the top ever so slightlyMany, yes. But more to the point, no-one has any chance of getting one if Labour gets into power.
@Chippy_boy is right, we are moving a bit off topic here sooooooo, to bring it right back to the shit storm we currently find ourselves in right now, I don't think we can answer your question until we know what version of brexit (if any) is coming. No deal brexit, things are just going to get worse as all the indications from Lord Protector Johnson are he's going to turn us into a tax haven. And I don't know Michael Hudson, I'll check him out. Nice one.Great post. Economist Michael Hudson describes it as neo feudalism. That's where we are today and it's unsustainable. The question is where do we go from here.
I think if we could get a deal with some kind of altered backstop arrangement, whatever that would be - it would hopefully get through parliment.
If that didn’t get through. then I think the accusation of mps ‘basically not wanting brexit’ would be pretty clear.
We have a parliament at the minute that doesn’t know what it wants and will basically reject anything, without giving any answers to anything