Moderator: Soñadora
kdh wrote:....... Put whatever you want to give your kids in a trust. Now.
kdh wrote:Beau, of course you're right--my response was more emotional than analytical.
I long for the "good old days" when our country was viewed as having enough opportunity that people saw a tax on the rich as likely a tax that would apply to them when their ship came in.
Benno von Humpback wrote:kimbottles wrote:And then there is this article........
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/04/opin ... hultz.html
That was the partial inspiration for my post at 1620 EST.
Krugman is too far left for me, but he does make some good points.
kdh wrote:There are 540 billionaires in the US that hold a combined $2.4t, and 350m people in the US.
Billionaires are in the top 540/350m = .00015%.
If we took all of the billionaires' money, not just all their income but all they have, and distributed it evenly we'd all get about $7,000. That's a lot of cheese to some people but we're all still going to have to work for a living.
Panope wrote:kdh wrote:There are 540 billionaires in the US that hold a combined $2.4t, and 350m people in the US.
Billionaires are in the top 540/350m = .00015%.
If we took all of the billionaires' money, not just all their income but all they have, and distributed it evenly we'd all get about $7,000. That's a lot of cheese to some people but we're all still going to have to work for a living.
I agree, Keith. The super rich do not yet hold a significant % of our wealth. I'm concerned about what percentage they will hold in 50 years if the current trend continues.
Yes, we all need to work. I shudder whenever I hear talk of a garanteed income for all.
Panope wrote:Yes, we all need to work. I shudder whenever I hear talk of a garanteed income for all.
Benno von Humpback wrote:Panope wrote:Yes, we all need to work. I shudder whenever I hear talk of a garanteed income for all.
I don’t like the sound of guaranteed income either, but providing meaningful and remunerative work for the underclass we are creating in the various ways discussed above seems more difficult.
Olaf Hart wrote:Benno von Humpback wrote:Panope wrote:Yes, we all need to work. I shudder whenever I hear talk of a garanteed income for all.
I don’t like the sound of guaranteed income either, but providing meaningful and remunerative work for the underclass we are creating in the various ways discussed above seems more difficult.
Safe bicycle pathways?
Benno von Humpback wrote:Olaf Hart wrote:Benno von Humpback wrote:Panope wrote:Yes, we all need to work. I shudder whenever I hear talk of a garanteed income for all.
I don’t like the sound of guaranteed income either, but providing meaningful and remunerative work for the underclass we are creating in the various ways discussed above seems more difficult.
Safe bicycle pathways?
Good proposal. I'd even give up the pleasure of impeding traffic to use them. How about subsidized in-home care for the non-indigent elderly?
Panope wrote:My favorite rich person statistic: In 1913, Rockefeller's net worth was equal to about 2% of GDP
kdh wrote:Benno von Humpback wrote:Olaf Hart wrote:Benno von Humpback wrote:Panope wrote:Yes, we all need to work. I shudder whenever I hear talk of a garanteed income for all.
I don’t like the sound of guaranteed income either, but providing meaningful and remunerative work for the underclass we are creating in the various ways discussed above seems more difficult.
Safe bicycle pathways?
Good proposal. I'd even give up the pleasure of impeding traffic to use them. How about subsidized in-home care for the non-indigent elderly?
Sounds like work for welfare. I thought guaranteed income was for just showing up. A reward for merely existing.
Olaf Hart wrote:I have been on about safe bike paths for years, even instrumental in the feds putting up a $65 million fund to help local governments to build them.
Not only a good “ welfare” project to teach folks work skills, but lots of flow on public health benefits for safety, diabetes, obesity, depression, the list goes on...
BeauV wrote:The key is to stop folks living on renting out the money their Dad or Grand Dad or Great Great Grand Dad made.
BeauV wrote:Finally, in a country with crumbling infrastructure and a need for massive upgrades to its IT backbone and any number of other things, I simply can’t believe that we can’t put people to work! It might not be the work they want, but there is certainly a lot of it that needs doing.
kdh wrote:If I had any sense that our country's government and its people could do this effectively I'd write Uncle Sam a check whether he asked or not. Does anyone think we could effectively pull off a public works program like we had in the 30s? Obama's stimulus money around here seemed to have been spent on useless highway exits and waste.
Benno von Humpback wrote:There were no multi-generational epidemics of drug addiction, obesity/diabetes/vascular disease, chronic pain, sociopathy, and other social and biological responses to despair and displacement, at that time. Work is obviously critical, but we need a multi-pronged approach to restore communities and families and many people of working age today may simply be beyond the point of employability. I believe nothing we can do is going to look very effective while it's happening, but we have to do it anyway.
kdh wrote:Benno von Humpback wrote:There were no multi-generational epidemics of drug addiction, obesity/diabetes/vascular disease, chronic pain, sociopathy, and other social and biological responses to despair and displacement, at that time. Work is obviously critical, but we need a multi-pronged approach to restore communities and families and many people of working age today may simply be beyond the point of employability. I believe nothing we can do is going to look very effective while it's happening, but we have to do it anyway.
Good point. I'll add that drug addiction and obesity are associated with unemployment, and there is a plausible argument that lack of work is causing addiction/obesity, not the other way around. So going forward at least providing jobs might help.
For now we have homeless people eating out of dumpsters. In our area Ann and I have been active with the Pine Street Inn and Boston Healthcare for the Homeless. They are phenomenally efficient and effective and would serve as a great model for expansion. I'd be ecstatic to see more of my tax dollars going to programs like these.
Benno von Humpback wrote:kdh wrote:If I had any sense that our country's government and its people could do this effectively I'd write Uncle Sam a check whether he asked or not. Does anyone think we could effectively pull off a public works program like we had in the 30s? Obama's stimulus money around here seemed to have been spent on useless highway exits and waste.
This histories of the New Deal work programs I've read suggest that it they were less efficient and effective than has sometimes been portrayed. In addition, the problem was really one of lack of jobs. There were no multi-generational epidemics of drug addiction, obesity/diabetes/vascular disease, chronic pain, sociopathy, and other social and biological responses to despair and displacement, at that time. Work is obviously critical, but we need a multi-pronged approach to restore communities and families and many people of working age today may simply be beyond the point of employability. I believe nothing we can do is going to look very effective while it's happening, but we have to do it anyway.
Benno von Humpback wrote:Also, I don't think the post-Soviet health crash and explosion in substance abuse were associated with big changes in employment rates, but had more to do with the loss of a sense of social security.
kdh wrote:Benno von Humpback wrote:Also, I don't think the post-Soviet health crash and explosion in substance abuse were associated with big changes in employment rates, but had more to do with the loss of a sense of social security.
Will you elaborate on "the loss of a sense of social security?"