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#26 | |
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Scooby Newbie
Member#: 118781
Join Date: Jun 2006
Chapter/Region:
MAIC
Location: Washington, DC
Vehicle:2005 CTS-V Laser Red |
Quote:
Econ 101. When there is a shortage of qualified employees, this incentivizes companies to provide more for their workers in order to retain and attract the kind of talent they need to remain profitable. When there is a surplus of qualified employees (this certainly applies in the larger economy right now) this incentivizes companies to seek out the lowest cost labor it can find. Econ 201. In the case of modern capitalism, the worker is at a much greater disadvantage than capital, as the worker is far more constrained by things like borders, whereas capital is much freer to move about the globe in search of favorable conditions. Last edited by onelove221; 11-03-2009 at 02:29 PM. |
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#27 |
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Scooby Specialist
Member#: 138997
Join Date: Jan 2007
Chapter/Region:
MWSOC
Location: Ohio
Vehicle:1997 Impreza 2.2 AWD |
I'll sum up everything by saying this:
99% of people, if you give them more power or assemble them into a larger group with other people, they're just going to get greedier and more short sighted. Everybody is out for their own interests and only those interests that are right here right now, and our lack of foresight will be our downfall as a society. |
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#28 | |
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Scooby Newbie
Member#: 25256
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: The dumbest place in the world
Vehicle:Saab Viggen |
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#29 | |
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Scooby Newbie
Member#: 118781
Join Date: Jun 2006
Chapter/Region:
MAIC
Location: Washington, DC
Vehicle:2005 CTS-V Laser Red |
Quote:
What you just espoused is a common position of authoritarian governments througout history. You would fit right in in the Politburo of the PRC. Accepting the premise that self-interest is human, and recalling that one of the pillars of Keynesian economics is the concept of the worker as "rational man"; an economic actor whose principled self-interest is what drives him to compete and participate in the larger economy. On the other side, you have the corporation, a perpetual, legal "person" (in the eyes of the law) which is actually comprised of more than one individual, whose sole purpose is to provide profit for its owners. We also recall that the purpose of collective bargaining and organized labor, was and continues to be a way to provide indivduals with a democraticcally organized means with which to counter the negative actions of corporate entities. So remind us again, why individuals should not have the means to protect themselves from entities which are, by the very legal framework which allows them to exist, are going to be more powerful than any one person. And then you call tell us, on the one hand unions are distorting the market but why the corporation, as it is currently constituted is itself not a distortion of the free market. I eagerly await your response. Last edited by onelove221; 11-03-2009 at 02:26 PM. |
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#30 |
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Scooby Newbie
Member#: 25256
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: The dumbest place in the world
Vehicle:Saab Viggen |
very true, however, unions (or the general unionized workforce) has come full circle. they have traded one master for another; the union's governing body/president.
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#31 |
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Scooby Newbie
Member#: 95600
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Pittsburgh
Vehicle:2003 WRX wagon Silver |
JC if you know anything about the free market and economics tell me what happens when unemployment goes up.
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#32 | |
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Scooby Newbie
Member#: 118781
Join Date: Jun 2006
Chapter/Region:
MAIC
Location: Washington, DC
Vehicle:2005 CTS-V Laser Red |
Quote:
I'm all for having a rational discussion about how to reform both unions AND corporations to benefit larger society. What you are describing (and what I have no problem acknowledging) is a pervesion of unions, in which a corporatized union managment rather than utilizing labor to produce goods and services, have instead funnelled the rent (in the Riccardian sense) it collects from its member wages into benefits for an elite group of labor executives. Unions aren't all bad, nor are corporations. The problem is corruption. |
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#33 | ||||||
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NASIOC Supporter
Member#: 692
Join Date: Dec 1999
Location: RS25.com
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But the reality is an unskilled worker in China can live a full and rich life under the same working conditions than an unskilled American worker can for a much lower cost. I agree that labor laws in developing countries need to be reformed and working conditions increased but don't kid yourself into thinking that will create cost parity with the US, or even be close.Quote:
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#34 | |
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Scooby Newbie
Member#: 25256
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: The dumbest place in the world
Vehicle:Saab Viggen |
Quote:
out of curiosity, are you skeptical of the existence of this corrupt union model? |
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#35 | |
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Scooby Newbie
Member#: 95600
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Pittsburgh
Vehicle:2003 WRX wagon Silver |
Quote:
Anyway I apologize for the prior posts tone, as I wasn't trying to imply you did not know about lesser bargaining power of workers in times of high unemployment. I just do not think a lot of people in general actually think these things through. |
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#36 | |
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Scooby Specialist
Member#: 138997
Join Date: Jan 2007
Chapter/Region:
MWSOC
Location: Ohio
Vehicle:1997 Impreza 2.2 AWD |
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#37 | ||||||||||
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Scooby Newbie
Member#: 118781
Join Date: Jun 2006
Chapter/Region:
MAIC
Location: Washington, DC
Vehicle:2005 CTS-V Laser Red |
:sigh:
So many bad arguments, so little time. Let's start here. Quote:
Sorry, this doesn't even pass the laugh test. You cannot have a prosperous, stable economy without producing tangible goods that are of value to your fellow man. Quote:
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Assuming the college enrollment statitics are accurate, it's obvious that lots of people prefer would prefer NOT to live that way for 30 years if they can help it, even if it means deferring a good income right out of high school in order to invest in the the benefits provided by a post secondary education. Quote:
The Germans (and other Europeans) did a similar job with better design and better percieved quality to the extent that consumers were often willing to pay a premium for their products. Neither one of these scenarios applies to China, which cannot compete on quality and only gains market share through pricing - a feat which they accomplish by refusing to let their currency exchange rate float on the world markets, instead as a directive of Chinese state policy, its value is ALWAYS artificially constrained to be a fraction of the US Dollar. To put it simply, the quality of BYD sucks, and I wish China luck in growing its domestic market to the point that it can consume COMAC's initial offerings as I can forsee a few pretty horrific crashes in their future. Quote:
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Does this full, rich life include worker protections (e.g. OSHA)? Or access to representative democracy? Or the freedom to organize if he so chooses? Or the ability to relocate? Does he even have the right to anything resembling due process of law as we understand it in the West? And do his employers have to comply with the environmental laws that prevent corporations in the West from completely despoiling the commons? The answer to these questions, in case you didn't know is NO. Quote:
Cost Parity. This would then force companies and workers to compete on quality & innovation vs. labor cost arbitrage. Quote:
Undercut that base, by say oh, I don't know; enacting policies which lead to their unemployment or which cause a reduction in their buying power, and you damage the very market you need to sell your products to. This is not rocket science. I believe the saying is "So goes the middle class goes America" Last edited by onelove221; 11-04-2009 at 12:03 PM. |
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#38 |
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Scooby Specialist
Member#: 138997
Join Date: Jan 2007
Chapter/Region:
MWSOC
Location: Ohio
Vehicle:1997 Impreza 2.2 AWD |
No **** it's not rocket science. Rocket science is actually interesting.
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#39 | |
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Scooby Newbie
Member#: 118781
Join Date: Jun 2006
Chapter/Region:
MAIC
Location: Washington, DC
Vehicle:2005 CTS-V Laser Red |
Quote:
I however, am more sympathetic to the worker, in spite of their corrupt leadership, than I am to the executive class which has too often run a company into the ground and then used the unions as a scapegoat for poor management, shoddy product planning and outright incompetence. I'm thinking of Cerebus' tenure as owners of Chrysler as one glaring example. Ford and Chrylser are both UAW shops. One faced bankruptcy and needed federal assistance to be able to put itself in a position where it was worth purchasing by foreign investors, while the other rejected federal assistance and just turned a $1B profit. One is also known for poor quality products (Chrysler) while the other is competitive with global brands (Ford) from a quality perspective. In both cases, I think the difference lay in the corporate management and the quality of union representation. Last edited by onelove221; 11-03-2009 at 04:11 PM. |
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#40 |
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Scooby Specialist
Member#: 158043
Join Date: Aug 2007
Chapter/Region:
RMIC
Location: SLC
Vehicle:old 97 GC stage 9.5 Will sale $75k Pm offers |
Hope the government got some of their money back.
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#41 |
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Scooby Specialist
Member#: 9481
Join Date: Aug 2001
Chapter/Region:
South East
Location: Want to drive on a racetrack?
Vehicle:just PM me for more |
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#42 | |||||||||
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NASIOC Supporter
Member#: 692
Join Date: Dec 1999
Location: RS25.com
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No worries, it's just the internet it's hard to read tone on way or the other. ![]() Quote:
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#43 | ||||||
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Scooby Newbie
Member#: 118781
Join Date: Jun 2006
Chapter/Region:
MAIC
Location: Washington, DC
Vehicle:2005 CTS-V Laser Red |
Quote:
How so? Please explain how unions are subsidizing jobs, using the accurate definition of the word subsidy. No offense, but this seems like a pointless use of jargon to me. Quote:
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As I've illustrated and as you've sort of agreed, you can have unions and make good products or make crappy products. It's all in the management. Quote:
It's not just the absence of labor regulation, it is the absence of ALL the factors that make the West free modern, industrialized and democratic. Once you correct for the gaming of currency exchange rates, I guarantee you that a democratic China that even remotely approached having the same human rights, civil rights, worker rights, labor protections and regulatory environment as the West would most certainly approach wage parity with the West. The free markets are being distorted by unchecked wage arbitrage and the white elephant that is human/worker rights in the developing world. Correct for these factors and all manufacturers would have to compete on is quality, efficiency and innnovation - as it should be. Unfortunately, no one in the executive class of arbitrageurs wishes to have wage parity because that means less profit for them. Quote:
Remember, at the dawn of the industrial revolution it was the US that was the cheap source of labor compared to Europe. Of course we also took a much more difficult path than China is, by increasing our own standards of living, we created internal demand for our increasing productive capacity. It wasn't until our prime competition; industrialized Europe, destroyed itself with two World Wars that we were able to wholly justify building up even more export capability. Quote:
My point is that the problem is not the unions. The problem is with how our manufacturing sector has been managed and executive culture in general. Unions came into being to combat the exploitative nature of corporations in the early industrial period of the West. Since then, we've seen the installation of a regulatory structure to prevent the type of egregious abuses commited by employers that were commonplace in the 19th and early 20th centuries, but the unions still represent a bulwark, a floor if you would, for the kind of wages, benefits and treatment workers would expect, even in non-union shops. The math is out there...once you correct for pension and health care obligations of the Big Three and their unionized workforces, the cost to build a car is pretty much equivalent to what other non-union foreign manufacturers incur. Moreover, the very threat of an organized workforce is what compels non-union shops to offer wages that are competetive (once again corrected for non-wage obligations and regional cost of living factors) with unionized companies. Now, we can talk about union corruption and how best to reform it, but I can guarantee that in the absence of a strong, organized labor force, corporations are empowered to drive labor costs to the point that a middle class will simply not ever develop amongst its workers. For every UAW giving organized labor a black eye, there's a Walmart acting as a shining example of why unions exist in the first place. PS, I'd also like to thank you for keeping the discussion civil. I shall try to follow your example and I encourage other NASIOCers to take note and do the same. Last edited by onelove221; 11-04-2009 at 11:11 AM. |
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#44 | |
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Scooby Newbie
Member#: 95600
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Pittsburgh
Vehicle:2003 WRX wagon Silver |
Quote:
Basically my point of view is this. By law the company (if publicly traded) represents the interests of many stockholders. Management is rewarded for increasing stock prices, everything is going toward that goal. Unions are the only thing representing the workers in these low skill situations. If part of the profit doesn't go to the line workers to pay them decently then part of our tax dollars will go to pay for medicaid. That is why Walmart is fighting healthcare reform. Right now they can count on the taxpayers to take care of the workers that they choose not to take care of. That is not an efficient way to do things from an overall economic perspective IMO. Now on an entirely separate point, you have the whole argument about whether we should be trying to retain these low skilled manufacturing jobs or not. That is a different argument IMO. |
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#45 |
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Scooby Specialist
Member#: 171611
Join Date: Feb 2008
Chapter/Region:
BAIC
Location: SF Bay Area [East Bay]
Vehicle:07 WRXLimited+VF43 Crystal Grey Metallic |
sooooooo, how about that new Mustang?
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#46 |
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Scooby Newbie
Member#: 227396
Join Date: Oct 2009
Chapter/Region:
NESIC
Location: metro-west, MA
Vehicle:2009 wrx spark silver |
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