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by netinmate
2929 days ago
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You are right the economy is very complicated, but it seems that the only factor anyone discusses is what's good for the "consumer". I think the "consumer" is a really bad success criteria. I don't really care about what's good for the "consumer", I care about what's good for "the employee", highly skilled jobs, higher wages, and more jobs. These things can't be driven by lowering the cost to consumers, we'll get what we have now, more money flowing to the 1%, and the middle class being eliminated. |
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I care about what is good for everyone - employers, employees, the overall country, and the overall world (all these same people in other countries), on a long term sustainable basis.
Whenever one reads these threads, rarely does one encounter someone who's doing anything other than talking their book, or supporting their personal ideology of "how it should be", usually based on reading articles written by others that support their ideology.
I think all of us would be better off if after finishing writing a narrative or explanation that supports our personal ideology, we then turned around and tried to poke holes in it. It's child's play to rationalize why it's a win-win situation to outsource menial labor to 3rd world countries, but what happens when one of those third world countries happens to be a giant, populated by incredibly hard working and historically accomplished people, and a very smart government who remembers mistakes that were made in the past? What happens when this country isn't content being a dumb, low-margin manufacturer, and decides it wants to take over the entirety of the process including the design? Sure, the West currently still holds a lead in much of technology, but where does this bizarre idea come from that it will last forever? Because we're more "creative"? Is there strong evidence for this? And do you also happen to simultaneously hold the belief that the peoples of all nations and cultures are essentially the same (a paradox one commonly sees in liberal leaning technical communities)?
Part B of this rant would be the folly of optimizing for GDP, which is another complicated and potentially very dangerous mistake for what should be fairly obvious reasons. Or the recently popular notion that humanity's highest priority and morally imperative goal should be to normalize GDP and standard of living across all members of humanity on the planet. Different cultures optimize for different things, some things require more work to achieve, but that often means less time for family and leisure. That said, I'm also strongly opposed to certain countries messing things up for entire regions of the world for decades on end with no end in sight.
Life is a hell of a lot more complicated than you'd think it is, if all you had to go on was most people's personal perception of it.