![Mr. Green :mrgreen:](./images/smilies/icon_mrgreen.gif)
Here's an short synopsis and introduction, and frankly, I think it's a little scary. Thoughts?
"Plutocrats, the Rise of the New Global Super-Rich and the Fall of Everyone Else"
Moderators: Tunnelcat, Jeff250
He was a god of death/wealth before he was a goofy cartoon dog, you know.Sergeant Thorne wrote:"Plutocrat" was a terrible idea. I can't take a political term seriously when it starts with "Pluto".Plus it just rolls off TC's virtual tongue far too easily.
why don't you be honest and call them what they really are. Politicians.. Democrat and Republicantunnelcat wrote:I didn't coin the word, so don't blame me. I'd rather use the term "glorified thief".
the two go hand in hand, as follows: Very seldom are actual assets created from thin air. Thus, one can view assets and resources as close to a fixed pool. If one group is accumulating far more of those assets and resources, it has to be at someone else's expense. It is sort of akin to when the TV talking heads say that $1 trillion in capital was lost on the Stock Markets in a given day. No, it wasn't. A trillion dollars of wealth simply changed hands,Spidey wrote:The problem isn’t that some people are getting super rich, the problem is some people are getting poorer, at least in this country…most of the countries that article mentioned are still on the way up. (standard of living)
Before I can find a problem with the super rich, I need to actually see the correlation between being super rich, and causing poverty.
let's run with the Microsoft analogy.....when that corporation generated wealth, it wasn't in a vacuum. Other industries, and tons of workers took the hit, by way of obsolescence of competitors and old-school technology, and jobs lost to vastly increased productivity. See my comment above regarding the bizarre notion of 'wealth creation'. Globally, 'wealth' is not absolutely fixed, but functionally pretty static.And I don’t buy the old idea that someone has something, because they took it from someone else, or the old finite pie concept. I need to see real evidence that someone having a large amount of wealth actually keeps someone else from getting their share.*
Much of the evidence I have seen over the years is, when someone in the modern era acquires great wealth, most other people benefit as well…IE: Microsoft. So you need to look at these things on a case by case basis.
money buys resources....or, at least, smart money does. Old money always has.I have been watching way too many shows lately (Mankind, The Men who made America) to come to any kind of conclusion that the rich, haven’t helped everyone in the net effect.
*Except in cases where families took all of the resources for themselves.
Resources = Land, Mineral Rights etc.
You are misunderstanding me. I am not saying at all how anything it works. I just say that before I have hard evidence I reserve judgement about any state of affairs.callmeslick wrote:You merely say, 'this is how I think it works'. You are both very wrong, economics doesn't work that way. Ever.
You just kicked the entire concept of “value added” productivity right in the nuts.callmeslick wrote: the two go hand in hand, as follows: Very seldom are actual assets created from thin air. Thus, one can view assets and resources as close to a fixed pool. If one group is accumulating far more of those assets and resources, it has to be at someone else's expense.
I suppose I did.....value added in one place, is value reduced for someone or someplace else.Spidey wrote:You just kicked the entire concept of “value added” productivity right in the nuts.callmeslick wrote: the two go hand in hand, as follows: Very seldom are actual assets created from thin air. Thus, one can view assets and resources as close to a fixed pool. If one group is accumulating far more of those assets and resources, it has to be at someone else's expense.
only if someone, or many others value the product enough to part with some of their wealth to obtain it. As I stated, you aren't operating in a vacuum,In my business…
At the top, someone digs stuff out of the ground and processes it into something else…Value Added.
Next someone takes that product refines and modifies it further…Value Added.
This then continues until I purchase the products, and again use them to Add Value to something else…Value Added.
The result…Quality of life increased. IE: wealth
no, what you see is the utilization and acquisition of assets and resources which were previously NOT UTILIZED. In other words, to use your example, the stuff in the ground has been there all along, until someone dug it up. Progress can be seen as the ongoing learning curve by which mankind utilizes resources in new and useful(for mankind) ways. When men were far fewer, and living in huts, etc, resources were largely untapped, and for the most part even unknown as to their inherent usefulness(had cave men struck oil, who would have cared?). Sorry to disabuse your theory, but labor only creates wealth if it is used to create something someone else with assets wishes to acquire. In other words, you could work like a freaking dog, 20 hours per day, 7 days per week making whale-oil lamps, and very little wealth is coming your way. It isn't some sort of blind equation without accounting for the exchange of wealth amongst members of the society. Thus, my explanation holds, and always will. Ask a real economist, they will enlighten you far better than my feeble efforts.Your premise totally demeans the value of labor, and if it were true it would be impossible to increase the GDP by a few percent every year, and we would all still be wearing bear skins, and living in huts.
Oh no. Not all Plutocrats are politicians and not all politicians are plutocrats.But plutocrats who ARE politicians are the most dangerous kind of animal, because they wield power no one else possibly can and influence policy that affects everyone, but especially themselves. And yes, I realize that there are both Republican and Democratic Plutocrats CUDA. Our political system is rife with them. That's why Europe and the U.S., and even China, are both suffering from increasing income inequality. I wasn't pointing to one political party, although the Republican Party's platform directly favors those who are rich.CUDA wrote:why don't you be honest and call them what they really are. Politicians.. Democrat and Republicantunnelcat wrote:I didn't coin the word, so don't blame me. I'd rather use the term "glorified thief".
no you wouldn't. Presuming that you weren't digging up minerals on someone else's property, you had that wealth from the get-go. You convert them, via your labor, to something else, you can increase your personal wealth, but only if you sold them to someone else. In other words, it is the ability to obtain the wealth of another that gives them inherent value.Spidey wrote:No, I can prove you (slick) wrong without even having to sell anything.
If I dug up those minerals and used them to create something for personal use, I would still be doing the process of Value Adding, and therefore increasing my personal wealth.
It isn't a mythology, it's called Macro Economics, and they teach it in colleges everywhere. Value added ideas aren't mythology, either, they are simply not factual.The left has been perpetuating this “Fixed Pie” myth for years, If you want to criticize others for things like belief in god, don’t you think it’s about time to disavowal your own dusty crusty mythology?
Spidey wrote: So let me see if I understand you correctly, the money you earn on the stock market every year comes at someone else’s expense?
you keep saying it, but providing thus far exactly ZERO examples of wealth created outside of the exchange of money or resources.Spidey wrote:The taxation scheme is only secondary to my main point, that you can create wealth with labor, regardless of whether you intend or can sell the result.
sure, I can. In fact, that sort of dimwitted thinking is what led to the last economic crash. Folks thought they had additional wealth because their home values(all on paper) were rising rapidly, and their investment values(all on paper) had gone up. They borrowed against this supposedly created wealth,You can’t deny the fact that I can increase the value of my home by using labor and a few cheap raw materials to increase its value.
not until you sell it. Sorry.Someone buying it is irrelevant. I'm still worth more as a result...period.
It seems that since money is used to purchase goods and services, wealth is inescapably tied to labor in addition to property, in the big picture. Labor is basically time, for all practical purposes. Property cannot be created, but it can be made more valuable by the addition of labor. So it seems that real wealth is a three-part equation. You need demand (which is variable), labor (previous investment of time--education/practice multiplied by time spent), and property. When you take $10,000 worth of property and by adding labor come out with $10,000,000, aren't you creating wealth? Or do you higher-ups accept labor and demand as a given?Dictionary.com wrote:Wealth [welth]
noun
1.
a great quantity or store of money, valuable possessions, property, or other riches: the wealth of a city.
...
If work has intrinsic value, why does it have so little value in pay? If manual work can be so strenuous and hard on the body through the years, why are the rich politicians, who sit on their butts all day and lift something no heavier than a pencil, keep trying to raise the age of retirement for those workers? Why does a person, ie., a hedge fund manager, who sits at a computer all day, and which all he does for a living is move around money from place to place that's not even his own, deserve so much more in pay?Spidey wrote:Work & Labor are the key, work has intrinsic value, and that value can become part of what is produced by work.
Well I’m pretty much done here, I have had this argument with people for over 30 years, and many years ago came to the conclusion that “wealth is finite” is not an economic theory, but in fact a political one.
Geez, TC. That's a stubborn, dumb question. He "deserves" it because none of your manual laborers know how to do it (or if they could, not enough have decided to do it). It's actually feasibility. Entitlement has absolutely nothing to do with it. I'm not defending any particular field, but you should be working toward making a killing by lifting a pencil, not whining about people who do. That does nothing but make them smarter and you bitter...ertunnelcat wrote:If work has intrinsic value, why does it have so little value in pay? If manual work can be so strenuous and hard on the body through the years, why are the rich politicians, who sit on their butts all day and lift something no heavier than a pencil, keep trying to raise the age of retirement for those workers? Why does a person, ie., a hedge fund manager, who sits at a computer all day, and which all he does for a living is move around money from place to place that's not even his own, deserve so much more in pay?
Wealth is always perceived value, including and especially money, but that does nothing to threaten the idea that wealth can and is created. It just tells us that to create wealth, you need to create something that people value. But that's not so difficult, is it?slick wrote:The examples you cite are either created from others choosing to part with some of their wealth to purchase goods and services or the perceived notion that something is more valuable. The latter is merely one's perception up to the point where money/resources/wealth changes hands.
that work has no intrinsic value beyond the same restraints of supply and demand that rule all economics. My whole point within this thread is thatSergeant Thorne wrote:What's your point, slick?
and, do you think the fact that the Federal tax rate on all income over $150,000 was 92% might have aided that circulation?flip wrote:There's only a certain amount of money in print. Everyone talks about how good the 50's were and the main reason was because the money was circulated to a much wider range than it is now. They are hoarding the money now, no doubt about that.