|
|
|
|
|
by seec
259 days ago
|
|
This happens because of bad incentives. Since the welfare state is on the spot to pick up the tabs via unemployment benefits they would rather have industries keep paying for as a long as possible even if it means killing the goose that laid the golden eggs in the long run. But all of this is largely amplified by globalisation. The welfare is not compatible with a world where companies can decide to set up shop somewhere else in the world to benefit from cheaper labour cost and lower regulations and still being able to sell their stuff in the market they somewhat destroyed. It ends up strengthening the state because workers defer to it and ask it to foot the bill. This all ends up being a vicious cycle where over time the state because massively obese and nothing moves because almost everything is dependent on it to some extent. Now to be fair it is absurd that companies are allowed to make so much profit and keep most of it, not redistributing to the workers who are actually contributing the most. But it all starts with bad regulations and incentives. Companies cannot be expected to compete with foreign imports that benefit from much lower costs in every dimension, that is just unfair competition. Free markets are an illusion that only benefits those at the top and this is largely where the problem lies. If imports were to be taxed appropriately, there would be less reasons to delocalize and the job market would be much more competitive for the demand side, rendering the layoff problem mostly moot. Who cares about benefits/compensation if the next job is right there? |
|