nadiatims Wrote:Icecream Wrote:I wasn't trying to be insulting here... you genuinely haven't told me what it is about your system that makes it better than other ones. You can incorporate the good aspects of capitalism like competition while making the system fairer overall and making sure that nobody falls beneath a certain standard of living. So what makes your way better than that? What would "better" mean in this context? Who does it benefit? Who does it hurt?
If you recall, I was suggesting a small government with very low taxation with a certain amount (with a strict per-capita cap) allocated towards maintaining domestic civil order, and a small amount as a safety net for the severely disabled, and for insurance against catastrophe for uninsured people below a certain income level (perhaps using a voucher system). A certain amount of surplus tax revenue could be saved for disaster relief and humanitarian causes, and the rest returned to the populace. The core principle of the law would be the protection of the individual against violence and coercion.
I would also add the economic freedom for individuals to use any currency of exchange they feel like using, to prevent monopoly control of the money supply and subsequent out of control money printing.
I don't think people are entitled to a pension or retirement at a certain age. If you want to live happily into old age, you should work hard, save, live healthy and treat your kids such that they'll want to look after you in old age.
Likewise, people shouldn't be entitled to study any old useless subject and have it paid for through taxation or debt.
Yes, i remember what you suggested. But you're still not telling me
why it is better.
Let's just assume for the sake of argument that you can get all of that out of a simple 5% income tax, which i'm really not sure is possible. (where are you pulling this figure from btw?)
So, we have no unemployment benefit, which means that anyone who can't find work starves to death. On a humanitarian basis, this is pretty bad, but also remembering that capitalism needs a pool of unemployed to fuel growth and keep wages down,
why is it better to have no unemployment benefit to help support people until they find a new job?
I disagree at the most basic level about pensions, so perhaps there isn't much to say here. I think everyone should be entitled to a pension, it seems like a basic human right to me. But let's talk on your terms. So, people who have worked hard, saved, lived healthily and treated their kids well deserve to have a pension. What kind of effects will result from this system? One obvious effect is that it will become rational to have more kids to make sure you can be supported. Given that the planet is already overpopulated, is this a good idea? What about those that didn't want children, or could not have them? What about those people who have worked hard all their lives and saved what they can, but their jobs did simply did not pay enough to provide a livable pension? What about those who cannot afford to save? (remembering that in your society there are many jobs that do not even pay a living wage to their workers). What about those who could not afford schooling, and so don't have any better chances, or went to low quality budget schools, and then found that other people were picked first for the higher paying jobs?
what makes your system so good that it is worth a ton of old people not having a basic standard of living, and starving and freezing to death?
There's no minimum wage in your society, and no guarantee of working conditions. As you say, introducing a minimum wage does have an effect on business. However, the effects on small business can be mitigated with other tax breaks, or top ups from the government and so on.
At the start of this thread i recommended a documentary about a rubbish collector in Indonesia. Did you happen to watch it? If not, it's here:
He works from early in the morning until after midnight collecting rubbish then sorting it for recycling. He doesn't make what i would call a living wage even so, and he's one of the lucky ones. Health and safety conditions are appalling. He has no pension, and can't afford to pay into one because it's pretty much hand to mouth living. Rubbish collectors like him can't unionise and demand higher wages because the population there is huge and there would be 100 people to replace him in about a second.
So, what happens if you introduce a minimum wage, and health and safety conditions here? Does it destroy the fabric of society? No. Two things could happen. One option is that people realise that actually, having their rubbish collected and sorted was worth paying somebody a living wage for after all, and simply buy one less gucci handbag a year to afford that. The other option is that they realise that having their rubbish collected wasn't worth paying someone else a living wage for, and they do it themselves instead. In the cases where people decide that the work wasn't valuable enough to pay someone a living wage, yes, that person becomes unemployed. But since they weren't providing a service that was very useful to humanity in the first place, at least that gives him the time to retrain as something that will be useful. (assuming that you have accessible education and unemployment benefits that is, and don't just leave them to starve.)
We don't even need to talk about big business or rich people exploiting workers here though; what not having a minimum wage acheives is a race to the bottom as people try to provide services to the ever poorer people at the bottom. Let's take another example from a different episode of that show... pagpag.
(from 45:00). In the Philippines there are people who provide the service of going round rubbish bins and taking the half eaten remains of food from fast food restaurants, washing it, recooking it, then reselling it. If you have a minimum wage, this kind of business simply does not exist. People are forced to do this kind of thing because there is no minimum wage and no unemployment benefits.
why then, is it not better to have a minimum wage, and then find out which services are actually beneficial enough to humanity to pay a living wage? If genuinely useful small businesses are affected, other methods can help with that. But if a service is just not beneficial enough to humanity to provide a living wage, why should anyone have to do that job? How can you even call it a job?
nadiatims Wrote:You seem to have a very one dimensional view of capitalists as monocle wearing monopoly men who violently trample over workers. If you're a plumber or freelance designer or translator or whatever else and you invest your savings in tools or pay others to help you achieve more for less then you are a capitalist. The use of violence and coercion is not part of capitalism.
Violence and coercion occurs when individuals or groups believe for some reason or other that their means justify the ends (it doesn't) and when the groups or individuals believe they can outsource their personal responsibility to fight for their own freedom to some greater power (which then screws them over).
I brought up one specific problem with capitalism. I don't have a problem with plumbers as long as they don't employ someone else and then steal the value of their employee's labour. Even fixing this one problem still leaves you with a bunch of other problems, such as those Imaam faces (nobody is stealing the value of his labour, it's simply that his labour is judged to be practically worthless due to there being too many potential workers). So, i don't think that fixing it would fix everything.
My view of capitalism isn't particularly one dimensional, i think. It's not like "capitalism BAD" without any reasoning. There are parts of capitalism that work well, and parts that don't, and i support regulation where there's a part that isn't working so well. That seems a whole lot less one dimensional to me than assuming that everything that results from capitalism is a good and that we don't need any regulation at all.
nadiatims Wrote:Icecream Wrote:Does the government compensate you for potential loss of earnings from that decision? No. It simply tells you that you can't keep slaves any more, because it's exploitation, which is illegal.
That is why I suggest freedom of the individual against violence or coercion as the principle right. Obviously enslaving someone violates those rights.
What about when somebody is desperate enough that they are willing to sell themselves into slavery just to ensure their family doesn't starve? Is that freedom?
nadiatims Wrote:Icecream Wrote:In a democracy, that kind of coercion is legitimised by the majority of the population having voted for them.
So at the end of the day, you think it's legitimate for the majority to screw over the individual. You know it's fine if you think that way, but at least be honest with yourself. And don't be surprised when those who don't think that way fight back by offshoring their capital, or displaying general disdain for the sheeple.
Firstly, you are assuming that this kind of situation is only a problem for governments, which it isn't. Haven't you ever heard of people who stand in the way of a shiny new shopping centre being built? If people refuse compensation and there is enough money to be made, eventually, the thugs are sent in to do a little "convincing". There's no society in which we can all have our own way all of the time, because space and resources aren't infinite. We have to compromise.
I do beleive that there are some circumstances where the rights of the majority come before the rights of the individual, yeah. It's an inherant part of democracy, and i can't see an option which is better than that, either. I don't beleive that humans have the right to unrestricted wealth, especially unrestricted wealth that is derived from exploitative and unfair methods. And i don't believe we have the right to take what we want from the earth without considering the consequences, and giving back.
Do you really consider that your right to not be taxed is more important than somebody else's right to not starve to death? Because that seems incredibly selfish to me. If it is that, i guess it does come down to f*** u got mine after all.
nadiatims Wrote:Icecream Wrote:There is nothing to prevent a communist government being democratically elected and having exactly the same kind of mandate a capitalist government does to impose whatever it was elected for.
Sure, but then it wouldn't be a communist system.
?? huh?!
p.s. thanks for the links, i'll start watching them now.
Edited: 2012-09-30, 8:56 am