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Inequality What does it really mean?

#381 User is online   kenberg 

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Posted 2014-May-19, 11:39

I have bought Capital (Piketty) and A Fighting Chance (Warren). I am reading Silken Prey (Sandford). Am I beyond hope?
Ken
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#382 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2014-May-19, 16:16

View Postkenberg, on 2014-May-19, 11:39, said:

I have bought Capital (Piketty) and A Fighting Chance (Warren). I am reading Silken Prey (Sandford). Am I beyond hope?


My god, man. Next thing you know you'll be singing the praises of Norway and Sweden.
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#383 User is online   kenberg 

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Posted 2014-May-19, 17:03

View PostWinstonm, on 2014-May-19, 16:16, said:

My god, man. Next thing you know you'll be singing the praises of Norway and Sweden.


Well, I am soon heading back to Minnesota for a bit which is almost the same thing, or so I thought. But

http://mentalfloss.c...ish-and-spanish

Hmong? I repeat, Hmong? Sven? Ole? What's a Hmong?
Ken
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#384 User is offline   akwoo 

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Posted 2014-May-19, 17:08

View Postkenberg, on 2014-May-19, 17:03, said:

Well, I am soon heading back to Minnesota for a bit which is almost the same thing, or so I thought. But

http://mentalfloss.c...ish-and-spanish

Hmong? I repeat, Hmong? Sven? Ole? What's a Hmong?


And I think even Somali is more common than Swedish, Norwegian, or German.
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#385 User is online   kenberg 

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Posted 2014-May-19, 17:17

View Postakwoo, on 2014-May-19, 17:08, said:

And I think even Somali is more common than Swedish, Norwegian, or German.


Maybe Garrison Keillor needs some updating.

Minnesota is a wonderful place, the ice in the lakes almost always melts by June, and all the children are above average. We are looking forward to the trip.
Ken
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#386 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2014-May-20, 10:25

View Postkenberg, on 2014-May-19, 17:03, said:

Hmong? I repeat, Hmong? Sven? Ole? What's a Hmong?


I had to look it up -- they're people from mountain villages in Southeast Asia.

Wikipedia has this interesting tidbit about Hmong use in Minnesota:

Quote

In 2012 McDonald's introduced its first Hmong language advertising in the United States at a restaurant in Minneapolis. However it was unintelligible to Hmong speakers.[22]


#387 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2015-May-28, 14:27

Good conversation here about income inequality and what can be done about it by Robert Solow and Paul Krugman.
If you lose all hope, you can always find it again -- Richard Ford in The Sportswriter
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#388 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2015-May-28, 15:31

View Posty66, on 2015-May-28, 14:27, said:

Good conversation here about income inequality and what can be done about it by Robert Solow and Paul Krugman.


I watched last night Inequality for All by Robert Reich. It is a really demoralizing explanation of where we are and what it will take to get out. The worst part was at a meeting Reich had to help workers get unionized, and one of the workers said, "I don't deserve to be treated any better than the company treats me."

It is that kind of faith in the right-wing ideology that makes me think there is no cure. As one comedian says, You can't fix stupid.
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#389 User is online   kenberg 

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Posted 2015-May-28, 20:19

It's late and I will listen to more of it tomorrow. I got far enough to find that Bob Solow regards me as a phony who just prattles on. This is because I am more oriented toward equality of opportunity than I am toward equality of outcome. There are many reasons for my thinking, the most obvious being that society can provide opportunity, this is under our control at least partly, but how a person responds to opportunity is under his/her control. I would like to see young people of today have opportunities, like I had, to make a decent life for themselves. Not that I didn't screw a few things up, which is sort of my point. I'll thank society for the opportunity, I'll take responsibility for the screw-ups.


I think problems can arise when we get too theoretical, and the first twelve minutes of this conversation were, I thought, vague and theoretical. Quite possibly I would agree with concrete proposals, I think it is even likely that I would. Instead I listen and find myself described as a phony prattling on.

It's similar in bridge. I am plating tomorrow with someone who prefers that 2H-Pass-2S be played as non-forcing. I can agree to that as long as I am not required to listen to or agree to all the theory about it. Same with Flannery. He likes it so I'll play it as long as I don't have to listen to why only stupid people like me prefer that 2D be a weak 2.

Anyway, I will listen to more tomorrow. Or soon.
Ken
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#390 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2015-May-28, 20:34

View PostWinstonm, on 2015-May-28, 15:31, said:

I watched last night Inequality for All by Robert Reich. It is a really demoralizing explanation of where we are and what it will take to get out. The worst part was at a meeting Reich had to help workers get unionized, and one of the workers said, "I don't deserve to be treated any better than the company treats me."

It is that kind of faith in the right-wing ideology that makes me think there is no cure. As one comedian says, You can't fix stupid.

Krugman observed in his conversation with Solow that even self identified Republicans acknowledge the value of unions and that Germany is a good example of a successful economy where industry and unions have a strong relationship. I hope you'll watch some of it. I think even kenberg will enjoy a few minutes of their conversation (the Solow parts anyway). They both talked about the era of their youth when inequality was not a problem. They both think the challenge isn't to "solve inequality" by achieving some numerical goal but to get things going in the right direction along some of the lines suggested by Atkinson whose book they were discussing. They are both optimistic that this will eventually happen but it will probably take few election cycles.
If you lose all hope, you can always find it again -- Richard Ford in The Sportswriter
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#391 User is online   kenberg 

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Posted 2015-May-29, 06:57

I got up to 25 minutes. A concrete proposal was referred to. Apparently the book suggests making people into "mini-capitalists",perhaps just Krugmand's phrasing of the idea, by giving young people $15,000, or "the equivalent of $15,000" as Solow put it, as they turn 18. Both Solow and Krugman disagree with this idea. I had not really thought of this as an idea, but I think I also disagree.

Other than that, Solow opined that the way to reduce inequality would be to reduce the income of the people at the top and raise the income of people at the bottom. Yes, I can see how that would reduce inequality. He spoke of envy as a stronger motivating force than compassion. For me, that is not the case. And, observing others, I am not so sure it is generally true. He also suggests that there should be public policy to protect workers but he doesn't really see how this could be done.


Turning toward the positive.
The most informative part that I saw was that the book contains fifteen proposals. I searched a bit on the web hoping to see them, but so far to no avail. But I will try to find them or maybe even buy the book.

I think, at some fundamental level, I see life differently than Krugman and Solow do. As I listen to them, I realize that I just don't think their way. It's similar to my reaction to religious people when they speak. I may agree with a suggestion, we may be able to get together on practical matters, but I will never see the world in their way.
This is, of course, always the challenge. How to work productively with people who really are quite different in their outlook.

Added: I see that Atkinson is a Brit, I suppose that is why the $15,000 was phrased as the equivalent of $15,000.
Ken
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#392 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2015-May-29, 11:52

View Posty66, on 2015-May-28, 20:34, said:

Krugman observed in his conversation with Solow that even self identified Republicans acknowledge the value of unions and that Germany is a good example of a successful economy where industry and unions have a strong relationship. I hope you'll watch some of it. I think even kenberg will enjoy a few minutes of their conversation (the Solow parts anyway). They both talked about the era of their youth when inequality was not a problem. They both think the challenge isn't to "solve inequality" by achieving some numerical goal but to get things going in the right direction along some of the lines suggested by Atkinson whose book they were discussing. They are both optimistic that this will eventually happen but it will probably take few election cycles.



The problem is so much larger than even inequality - that inequality has led to inequality of power. Medicine is controlled by big pharma; food is controlled by big ag; the motive of all the corporations involved is not good health nor good healthy food - it is solely pofit.

Half of the schools in our country have ties to fast food restaurants to provide school lunches; this in turn leads to obese children; obese children lead to increased drug prescriptions, meaning more profit for pharma. There is no incentive to break this cycle.

We are screwed.
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#393 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2015-May-31, 09:16

25 minutes is no doubt well up into the top 1 percent of the worldwide audience for this conversation.

Some highlights for me:

Solow and Krugman both ask: What kind of a world do we want to live in? This is an obvious question. But I don’t hear it being asked much.

Solow and Krugman see current levels of inequality as incompatible with democratic ideals of citizenship, equal opportunity and personal dignity. Solow takes a stronger moral position. He finds the current level of inequality repulsive. Isn’t it refreshing to hear scholars and people in positions of responsibility say what they really think?

Solow and Krugman think the goal should be to steadily reduce inequality, get the trend going in the right direction, not try to hit specific numerical targets. This is obviously useful for keeping the focus of policy discussions and negotiations where it belongs and from getting bogged down before they even get started. But also more pragmatic than I was expecting from two Clark Medal and Nobel Prize winning progressive, liberal economists.

Most Democrats, Independents and Republicans see inequality as a big problem. They disagree about the roles of government and business to reduce inequality.

Does anyone think that a society in which government pursues a policy of less than full employment is desirable?

We need to strengthen the bargaining power of workers. Check.

We need to improve corporate governance. Check.

We need cumulative limits on gift giving and other tactics for avoiding estate taxes. Check.

This isn’t about globalization. 80 percent of U.S. GDP is services.

They did not discuss the role of automation.

The minimum wage is rising. Corporations like Walmart and McDonalds have recently raised the minimum wage they pay workers, partly in response to moral suasion and public pressure but also because of tightening labor markets and common business sense thinking about the contributions of high turnover and low productivity to the bottom line.

Obamacare is working.

The effective tax rate on 1 percenters is now close to what it was in the pre-Reagan era due to the expiration of Bush tax cuts and the 3.8 percent “Medicare surtax” on unearned income for high income taxpayers.

The current political climate is obviously not favorable for doing a lot to address income inequality. But this is not a short term problem. It will take a few election cycles to improve the political climate. But this will happen. And when it does, we can do more.
If you lose all hope, you can always find it again -- Richard Ford in The Sportswriter
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#394 User is offline   StevenG 

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Posted 2015-May-31, 09:57

View Posty66, on 2015-May-31, 09:16, said:

Does anyone think that a society in which government pursues a policy of less than full employment is desirable?

We need to strengthen the bargaining power of workers. Check.

If you had full employment, would you need to strengthen the bargaining power of workers? Wouldn't the labour market suddenly start to give the workers power automatically?
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#395 User is online   kenberg 

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Posted 2015-May-31, 10:09

I have been thinking about this. I took an intense personal dislike toward Solow but he will survive and I will move on..

I live in Maryland and our ex-gov has just declared his intention to run against Hillary for the nomination.

The Washington Post examined his history as governor and as Baltimore mayor at some length.

An excerpt, concerning his time as mayor:

Quote

O'Malley also drew mixed reviews for his economic development strategy. As mayor, he directed money and government support toward middle-tier neighborhoods, which he thought offered the best chance of recovery, or toward ones that had access to job centers.

Many urban experts praised the approach as a smart use of scarce resources. But critics said it diverted aid from communities most in need of help.

O'Malley played a key role in pushing forward the redevelopment of a poor neighborhood near the Johns Hopkins medical complex in East Baltimore. He did so partly to keep Hopkins, the city's largest private employer, from taking its expansion plans outside the city. He also targeted that community because it had a relatively good chance to prosper, owing to its proximity to hospital jobs.



"Mixed result" is the genral tone of the Post's review of his time. But consider this. Maryland is a very Democratic state. Spiro Agnew was governor when I moved here in 1967, O'Malley's predecessor, serving one term, was a Republican, and his succcessor, our current governor, is a Republican, but the rest have been Democrats. I am sure the Legislature has been Democratic since I arrived. O'Malley was energetic and interested in doing his best. One can argue how much of that was for his own future but of course all politicians, or people in other careers, want to be successful. He is praised for "data driven" policies, for advancing gay marriage, for many things. Still, the Baltimore public school system is a disaster, the murder rate is up, poverty is up.


We are dealing with a difficult problem. Hardly news.

Here is a quote from the article that relates back to why I found Solow so aggravating:

Quote

"The problem is that it is politically unsalable," said Donald F. Norris, director of the School of Public Policy at the University of Maryland Baltimore County. "We are a nation of suburbs, and suburban residents and elected officials do not care a whit about declining central cities."


I really wish these guys would stop telling me what I do and do not care about. If he were just being insulting, that would be bad enough. But it drives people away when he needn't do so. Added: OK, strictly speaking, he only insulted elected officials. But his point is pretty clear. He cares, I don't care.

We all have a common interest in making things work. But it really is not obvious how to bring it about.

I'll probably get back to this later, I am getting hungry.
Ken
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#396 User is offline   MrAce 

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Posted 2015-May-31, 10:16

View Postbarmar, on 2014-April-28, 09:29, said:

But isn't much of the controversy over anonymous donations? If the politician doesn't know who you are, how can there be quid pro quo?



You know very well that it is anonymous to you and me and to public. Not to the person who gets the donation. When a large amount of money is donated, they know very well where it is coming from.
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#397 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2015-May-31, 11:59

View PostStevenG, on 2015-May-31, 09:57, said:

If you had full employment, would you need to strengthen the bargaining power of workers? Wouldn't the labour market suddenly start to give the workers power automatically?

Full employment is a goal. You can move in the direction of full employment but you probably can’t get there or stay there very long unless the government acts as an employer of last resort which Krugman and Solow support or you have something like World War II.

Intuitively, it seems to me that strengthening bargaining power makes it harder to achieve full employment because it makes it harder to keep wages at levels consistent with what employers are willing to pay to maintain full employment. But if strengthening bargaining power really means creating strong unions, which I think it does, for example, like the German Confederation of Trade Unions, then it seems there’s a lot more going on than just collective bargaining for wages and that unions become a major player in determining what kind of society people want to live in, what kinds of arrangements with government and industry are needed to achieve this and, if full employment is a shared goal, what it will take to achieve it.

From The German Confederation of Trade Unions home page (English language site):

Quote

That is what we stand for

The German Confederation of Trade Unions strives for a society founded on solidarity. Employment and income have to be distributed fairly and people have to be given an equal chance regardless of origin, colour or gender. The DGB offers future-oriented concepts for a social market economy which is tailored to the changed social conditions of today. Humane modernisation and fair distribution: That is what we stand for.

Welfare state People have to be able to rely on social assistance in the future as well. They need security to be able to plan their lives, raise a family and safeguard the future. Only on this basis will each individual be ready to take on new challenges and take initiative in working life. That is the essential prerequisite for a modern working society.

Pay It is precisely in times of economic uncertainty that collective agreements protect the conditions of employment and payment which many now take for granted. Only strong unions can negotiate binding collective agreements and guarantee their protective, regulatory, forming and peacekeeping function. Hence free collective bargaining is and remains indispensable.

Codetermination The right to codetermination is a central element in any democracy. Through codetermination social responsibility is assumed – which ensures social peace. Codetermination enhances people´s quality of life by creating individual room for manoeuvre. All employees therefore have to be granted the maximum degree of own responsibility and selfdetermination.

Training The dynamic changes in our working environment make it all the more important that every employed person has a wide range of qualifications. Consequently all employees must be given access to further training courses. Thus prepared, each individual can face the challenges of a global, knowledge-intensive labour market with self-assurance.

Labour market Only a sustained recovery of the economic situation can bring about the upswing which is so urgently needed on the German labour market. Hundreds of thousands of jobs can be saved and created by means of a flexible and aggressive budgetary policy. Here the “Offensive for Employment and Economic Growth” launched by the DGB offers effective solutions in the long term.

Sorry for the long answer. I think the short answer is no.
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#398 User is online   kenberg 

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Posted 2015-May-31, 15:36

I would also expect the answer ro be no. Full employment would help. For one thing, people are employed rather than jobless, and for another it no doubt would drive up wages in at least some industries. But the good wages that working people once enjoyed were brought about by strong unions. If coal miners are prepared to go on strike, and prepared to beat the crap out of anyone who crosses the picket line, wages will go up.

Times change. John L. Lewis died in 1969 (I looked it up). Now we wait for the government to pass minimum wage laws. Unions wanted better than the minimum, and they did not plan to wait all that long.

The old days are gone, they are not coming back. Not everything was right back then either, we deal with the age that we live in.

But yes, full employment would be a plus.
Ken
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#399 User is offline   mike777 

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Posted 2015-May-31, 16:32

Robots are coming pretty darn close to being able to sew piece work.
This is a full blown threat to garment workers.
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#400 User is online   kenberg 

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Posted 2015-May-31, 20:11

Ar bridge the other day a woman was happily telling me that her son, about to graduate from high school, has been accepted into a robotics program at Maryland and is wait listed at MIT. He, I assume with others, built a robot that shoots free throws and it sunk 9 out of 10. No doubt it is only a matter of time until it can do a mean lay up.

The revenge of the Tin Man!
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