Pointgod wrote:Zonkerbl wrote:So... my Grandfather was a union organizer and a member of the American Communist Party.
Unions in Europe are political and represent classes. That's why you have a Labour Party in the UK.
Unions in the United States are purely economic. During the industrial revolution there were a lot of industries whose optimal technology enjoyed increasing returns to scale, meaning the optimal size of the factory is pretty large, so you employ a lot of workers, and because you're so large you get monopoly rents. So unions were a way of forcing the owners of the factory to share some of their monopoly rents with the workers. Despite not being political in purpose, the thing about monopoly rents is they very quickly convert into payments to lobbyists to preserve the rent, so you end up becoming political. So unions evolved into political representation for blue collar laborers.
Now we have globalization, which in theory is a very good thing - let China build all the cheap things and we'll build all the high tech things, we'll have a more tech-intensive economy and the country will make more money. And this happened. The problem is, globalization eroded all the monopoly profits that were being shared with the unions. The unions collapsed and all of a sudden blue collar workers didn't have representation any more, or jobs, or prospects for the future. The billionaires fill the vacuum and pass tax laws that seize money from the poor and hand it over to the rich. So all the benefits of globalization go to the billionaires. Not me - I'm pretty fricking wealthy (compared to my parents anyway) but my taxes are going up next year.
So as an economist I look at the political outcome of globalization and I wonder if it was worth being right. Our gini coefficients are the worst among developed countries.
As an economist you'll know more about the details, but from my opinion income equality in the US has less to do with globalization and more to do with the fact the fact that for some reason you insist on giving more money to millionaires and billionaires. If the US had a model similar to other developed countries you'd probably have a higher standard of living than some of these countries. Who would have thought that allowing corporations and billionaires to continue to horde their wealth instead of reinvesting it into the people would be a bad thing?
Its the carveouts... probably the same ones you support?