The depositors would have been bailed-out, the debt written-off (what needs to happen!!), — synthesis
Had they let the banks fail, nothing would have happened other than the system would had gone through a much needed re-set (as happened in Iceland). — synthesis
I’m not sure how that tells the opposite story. It tells the same story. — NOS4A2
The enlargement of the middle class has been the real factor as when you talk about a demographic transition, the timescale is far longer than we usually use.And yet what we see in the UK data is the opposite: birth rate is highest where the mother either has a middle-management position or does not need to work full time, and lowest where women are unemployed or employed full-time in dead-end jobs. - It was generally the middle classes who had the least children — Kenosha Kid
Here I think both I and you have to be careful on just what the reasons are as it's a complex issue. If this would be the (only) case, then countries with free education and housing programs would have different statistics, but I'm not so sure they have. Lifestyle changes are important too. (Isn't there a heated debate in various anti-natalism threads, for example?)What I think we're seeing is that the middle- and lower-middle class couples are reducing the number of children to one, because they can only afford to school and house one child. — Kenosha Kid
Well let's say you run a business and you need to recruit, but your recruitment pool has contracted. This means that the probability of a potential employee choosing you over a competitor will shrink unless you offer more financial incentives to join your business. The same number of recruitments, but at more cost to the company, or else fewer recruitments. — Kenosha Kid
The enlargement of the middle class has been the real factor as when you talk about a demographic transition, the timescale is far longer than we usually use. — ssu
Here I think both I and you have to be careful on just what the reasons are as it's a complex issue. If this would be the (only) case, then countries with free education and housing programs would have different statistics, but I'm not so sure they have. — ssu
The market mechanism ought to handle these kind of difficulties. Or then you use migrant labor as the UK did, which had political consequences in the form of a Brexit vote. — ssu
The depositors would have been bailed-out, the debt written-off (what needs to happen!!),
— synthesis
By whom, if not the state? — Kenosha Kid
The idea is that you want to simplify processes, that is, individualize them — synthesis
Joe Blow is in a much better position to ascertain the needs for himself and his family than is a politician attempting to make the same decisions for a million of his closest friends and neighbors. — synthesis
if you have less people to sell shit to, you have less profit. — Kenosha Kid
As mentioned above, I bet the people in Reykjavík are a little more careful these days when doing their banking. This is a wonderful thing. I know that people in the U.S. could seem to care less who they bank with...not such a good thing. — synthesis
It is the government interfering in the markets that makes capitalism inefficient. If nothing else, and despite the fact that is human beings at the controls, it is a very efficient system. — synthesis
The alternative is to make the remaining population so stupid that they'll keep buying the same shit over and over again with the increased wages they're getting form a better employment market...
...I wonder if we can muster any evidence of that happening... — Isaac
Do I recognise that... Live in a community where both male and female mostly are academics... Me and missus have two great children(now in university age), but boy did she go on about having a third in the beginning of the millenia. All the neighbour women managed to wring a third(and some fourth) out of their husbands but I remained steadfast. Having neighbour gettogethers, the neighbour ladies even tried to convince me, and there were evil schemes laid out...The birthrate has a double peak: women in middle management positions and semi-routine occupations are by far the largest contributors to the birthrate. The former will typically be in good, reliable, twin-income households (in couples in which only one person works, it is more likely the worker is male here; likewise the vast majority of couples contributing to the birthrate are heterosexual). — Kenosha Kid
How many iPhones can you release in a year before idiots stop queueing around the block the day before release day? — Kenosha Kid
if they're already doing it, there's no headway for the future. The short-termism of capitalism demands that, if further profit can be made, it be made now. — Kenosha Kid
Advertising could be more effective by being unregulated. Smoking might become healthy again — Kenosha Kid
The idea is that you want to simplify processes, that is, individualize them
— synthesis
Nope, still missing a link I'm afraid. Simplify, yes. Indiviualise...? That's neither the same as simplify, nor does is relate in any way that I can see to 'simplify' Making each individual person solve the problem for themselves might simplify a problem or it might not, it really has no intrinsic bearing at all of the complexity of the problem solving task. — Isaac
Joe Blow is in a much better position to ascertain the needs for himself and his family than is a politician attempting to make the same decisions for a million of his closest friends and neighbors.
— synthesis
Maybe (though I wouldn't always agree), but we're talking about the needs of a future generation here, not Joe Blow and his wife. Why would he be any better judge of that than the (hopefully well-informed) politician? — Isaac
As mentioned above, I bet the people in Reykjavík are a little more careful these days when doing their banking. This is a wonderful thing. I know that people in the U.S. could seem to care less who they bank with...not such a good thing.
— synthesis
Well, giving people a choice between caution and recklessness is what I'm arguing for. There's no point people being careful if they don't have much choice. Either way, Iceland is an example of how bad things can get when the system is left to its own devices, not how robust the system is. — Kenosha Kid
It is the government interfering in the markets that makes capitalism inefficient. If nothing else, and despite the fact that is human beings at the controls, it is a very efficient system.
— synthesis
That ideology was presumably what your Iceland example was supposed to demonstrate. That didn't work.
The alternative is to make the remaining population so stupid that they'll keep buying the same shit over and over again with the increased wages they're getting form a better employment market... — Kenosha Kid
What would be an interesting consequence of this hypothetical is that unless all the industry leaders got together at some big s.p.e.c.t.r.e-style conference to set this year's stupidity targets, then the process, as an organic one, would eventually undermine their own intentions. — Isaac
Millgram (of obedience study fame) had a really interesting way of looking at issues like these (the system undermining its own existence). He posited that our economic society has become sufficiently complex that no individual can clearly see the bigger picture of what success in their particular job is actually for. The consequence being that each individual can quite vociferously pursue a take which actually undermines their own position simply because their task (and more importantly their reward structure) is couched in small-picture terms, yet the consequences of their success at it affects the big picture. — Isaac
Do you think everybody should succeed? — synthesis
That's just the way people are. No system is going to root that out [and as it turns out, the people who chose themselves to be the saviors always end up being more corrupt than the original thieves]. — synthesis
The best chance we seem to have is in allowing people the opportunity to do the best they can for themselves and their families. — synthesis
What I said was think more people try to escape from socialist states than move to them. — NOS4A2
The best chance we seem to have is in allowing people the opportunity to do the best they can for themselves and their families.
— synthesis
Which necessitates allowing people to choose security over short-term profit. Removing their ability to choose by limiting their choices to the worst possible does not chime with the above sentiment. — Kenosha Kid
I don't know so well the UK educational system to comment that.Yes, I'm only speaking of the UK where free higher education was replaced first by low-cost education at the end of the century, then by high-cost education ten years ago, over a period when house prices inflated 200%. I think the trends in other countries should be compared, but then by virtue of being other countries, different factors will weigh in. — Kenosha Kid
Are there numbers for people trying to leave? Canada is pretty socialist. Is there a mass exodus or are Canadians restrained?
Socialism is the political process of reallocating the proceeds. — synthesis
The bigger the group, the more standardized the solutions. Not so great. — synthesis
if everybody pretty much takes care of themselves, you don't have to worry about taking care of the needs of a future generation. — synthesis
Do you really believe that you know what's better for everybody else? — synthesis
Nobody is forcing anybody to do anything. — synthesis
Perhaps we have different conceptions of “socialism”. I’m speaking of countries, past and present, that explicitly or actively seek to achieve socialism, like Venezuela or Cuba or North Korea. When you say “socialism” do you mean state intervention? — NOS4A2
What do you think about the nationalisation of land and lending of land like what exists in Singapore? — Judaka
Or advocating for a smart tax system and economic redistribution system which allows the many to benefit from our increasingly efficient productivity capacity? — Judaka
People say Socialism exists in Canada and the Scandinavian countries and it does but what actually exists is a mixed economy. Instead of saying "Capitalism is the problem and Socialism is the solution", which leads one to the conclusion that for example, Canada might be trying to abolish Capitalism and replace it with Socialism. It'd be better to talk about what industries or services are mixed and basically, where Capitalism is screwing the average citizen and it might be better for the government to provide an alternative. — Judaka
Singapore has a declining birth rate too, yet boasts a 90% homeownership rate ... Hungary and Romania have the highest rates of homeownership in Europe, at 91% and 95% but have birth rates of 1.55 and 1.76 respectively. — Judaka
Culturally speaking, millennials need to use their 20s at university, building up their career, the average age of having a first child has increased in the majority of developed countries and by five years or more since the 1960s. If your first child is later then the expectation of it being likely to have fewer children is logical. — Judaka
While I think economic security could dissuade individuals from starting families, across the board, it does not appear to be the cause or a solution for low birth rates because if it was, why would the US and Sweden have similar birth rates? — Judaka
One million Polish immigrant workers coming to the UK alongside other EU immigrant do have an effect and building new homes likely hasn't kept pace with the demand. — ssu
Distribution of ownership is all about how to allocate the proceeds. If the people broadly own the means of production (socialism) the proceeds of production are allocated to them broadly. If only a small fraction own everything (capitalism) then all the proceeds go to them and only further entrench their stranglehold on the market.
Capitalism is not a free market. — Pfhorrest
The bigger the group, the more standardized the solutions. Not so great.
— synthesis
People didn't come up with unified governance for a laugh. They came up with it to resolve conflicting individual solutions, so you're simplistic conclusion that standardized solutions are less well-adapted to each individual is just trivially true, and irrelevant unless you tackle the problem of conflict between the solutions of particular individuals with regards to shared or disputed resources - which is all government is ever about anyway. — Isaac
"If everybody pretty much takes care of themselves, you don't have to worry about taking care of the needs of a future generation.
— synthesis
Again, this simply doesn't follow. You've provided no evidence at all that this is the case. what is it about everybody currently living taking care of themselves which somehow magically takes care of the needs of generations yet to come?
If you just be polite and clean up after ourselves, future generations will take care of themselves. Leaving them with our debt is the ultimate douche-bag move.
— "Isaac
"Do you really believe that you know what's better for everybody else?
— synthesis
Yes. Within my field of expertise, anyway. What makes you think individuals have some sort of clairvoyance telling them what's best for them in the future. I'm genuinely baffled as to how you might think, for example, that a theatre director knows what taxation regime best promotes sustainable growth, or an accountant knows what fuel ratio produces the least long-term change in the earth's atmospheric conditions. Why on earth would they? — "Isaac
Nobody is forcing anybody to do anything.
— synthesis
You seem to be in an odd admixture of simultaneously arguing for and against choice. Total freedom is great, as long as it's exactly the amount of freedom people currently have now. — Kenosha Kid
That's why "they" hated Trump. He wasn't for sale. — synthesis
They can actually figure things out and don't really need any more experts to screw things up. — synthesis
People in power care about one thing and one thing only...can they do business with you! You really think they could care less about all the other nonsense. These are the scum of the earth...all of them!That's why "they" hated Trump. He wasn't for sale.
— synthesis
No, they hated Trump because they couldn't trust him to sit the right way round on a toilet, let alone run a country. — Isaac
"They can actually figure things out and don't really need any more experts to screw things up.
— synthesis
So you think ordinary people can figure out climate science, agricultural subsidies, interest rates... Let's see. As an ordinary person, without looking anything up or consulting an expert in any way, what do you think we should alter the fiscal
mandate to reduce cyclically adjusted public sector net borrowing to? What do you think we should do about talik methane emissions? — "Isaac
So "socialist" means "officially socialist at some point in its history irrespective of what it is now" sort of thing? Well then the aforementioned eastern European countries aren't socialist either. There has, for instance, never been an officially socialist country called the Czech Republic. Czechoslovakia, yes.
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