• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    11 year ago

    Except we’re not talking about the printing money - we’re talking about the wealthy leeching off the labour of others while pulling money out of circulation, acting as a predatory handbrake on the economy to the tune of a billion dollars vs putting that money in the hands of the workers that created the value, who will also spend it in a more economically stimulative manner.

    Everyone would be better off other than a very small few, who are functionally disconnected from the society they leech off in any case.

    • @I_dont_believe_it
      link
      English
      11 year ago

      If you’re going to just dump the money back into the system then you may as well be printing it. Money really isn’t the issue here, it’s the availability of resources. Money won’t fix shit if the goods aren’t available.

      If the wealthy own everything what good do you think giving the poor a bunch of inherently worthless bunch of paper notes will do?

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        1
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        It’s very clear you’re not familiar with economic theory - that’s not how any of this work in theory or in practice, (for one, you need increased money supply for inflation, which simply isn’t a factor in this conversation), and the inequality is incredibly socially and economically harmful and unproductive. The inequality is one of the greatest predictors of criminality for food reason.

        Pre-response edit: to put it a different way, you make the productive workers, who will be be more included to spend their money in a stimulative way the shareholders, also giving them greater motivation to be more productive. Instead, we’re channelling the profits to uninvolved do-nothing drains on the economy, who take resources from productive workers, siphoning off the motivation to be productive, and pulling resources out of circulation, showing the economy. Owning shit isn’t a job - there’s no reason for it to be the only path to unreasonable wealth.

        What’s your solution - or is there not a problem?

        • @I_dont_believe_it
          link
          English
          11 year ago

          I did state at the beginning that I’m “no economist” but I guess you didn’t catch that 🤷‍♂️

          Also looking back at what you wrote you weren’t suggesting giving everyone a million dollars, but a hundred thousand people a million dollars. I would still think that would have some negative consequences for inflation, although it’d depend where we’re doing this, what country, town city etc.

          I don’t understand how releasing that much money wouldn’t count as an increase in money supply (even though it would be a temporary increase… Is that where you make the distinction?), but I guess even that much would be a drop in the ocean in most larger Western countries.

          On top of all that as far as I’m aware the US and probably many other countries have been “borrowing” crazy amounts of money, to the point where I’m surprised the world economy hasn’t completely collapsed by now, prices are certainly rising more rapidly than I’ve ever seen.

          Other than the money give away I agree with what you’ve said in your last post for the most part.

          Solutions, for where? The whole world? Honestly Western countries are mostly doing ok in the great scheme of things, could things be better, sure, but it seems a bit spoiled brat like to complain when the average world income is less than $10,000 a year.

          One thing that I think would make a big difference worldwide (but will never happen) would be if people and companies weren’t allowed to hoard real-estate and houses, or at least strong disincentives to limit such behaviour.

          Being stuck renting especially with how rents are getting less and less affordable is pretty horrible, as is having to mortgage yourself up to the gills just to get a basic dwelling…

          But yeah, no solutions here, as even good ideas need to be executed, and how are we going to do that???

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            11 year ago

            Let me try a different approach…

            If noone but an infinitesimal minority have any money, and prices are low, who benefits?

            If that money is now distributed more equitably, people have more money and prices rise a little, who benefits?

            Does creating and protecting billionaire dynasties to address cost of living and inflation seem like an effective strategy to you? Particularly when we look at the way those billionaires are currently causing serious damage to our democracy by using their wealth to pay politicians to represent their tiny minority over the interests of everyone else, leading to things like literal apocalyptic inaction on climate change?

            • @I_dont_believe_it
              link
              English
              11 year ago

              Where did I say we should be protecting billionaires? We’re on the same page for the most part (I think).

              I’m just not for throwing the baby out with the bath water, which your first post about giving a hundred thousand people a million dollars seems like it might do, especially if done wrong… I live in a small city of 120k people, I can’t imagine almost everyone here becoming millionaires overnight would be good for the local economy, especially for the 20k that got nothing. But hey I’m not an Economist 🤷‍♂️

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                21 year ago

                Where did I say we should be protecting billionaires?

                The context here is a wealthy person having an extra billion dollars vs dispersing that money to workers. Yeah - we’re broadly on the same page though, I think.

                The exact split of the cash is a little beside the point - it’s ultimately a question of whether the money should be consolidated toward the wealthy or distributed among workers (in reality, I’d argue that the bulk should go to building social safety nets for example). If you look at Australia’s response to the GFC for example, putting more money in the broad population’s hands meant that they had one of the shallowest dips and quickest recoveries in the world, and were recognised as having the world’s best response. There’s a reason stimulus checks were handed out through COVID - money in the hands of workers is generally good for the economy. There’s plenty of historical case studies for this - including the old 90% top marginal tax bracket.