02-13-2008, 10:57 AM | #1 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: NYC
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Inequality
I'm going to try to start what I hope will be a non-polemical thread here. Let's see if that can work.
The NY Times had an op-ed this week from a couple of economists that argued it's highly misleading to focus on income inequality. Here is a blurb from the op-ed that summarizes the argument: Quote:
1. Consumption comparisons are valid only in the short-term. Higher earners will presumably not spend many many times what lower earners will because, at a certain point, there's a limit to what you can spend on yourself. But the excess of the high-earner's earned income over the amount the high earner spends on consumption has to go somewhere, and where it goes is savings and investment. That means over the long term, even if there is not a large disparity in the people's short-run contentment, there is a disparity in wealth accumulation. Wealth provides (so far as I can tell) two things that income doesn't - first, it provides some degree of security that if something happens to adversely affect your earning capacity, you won't starve or lose your home. The other thing is it gives you the ability to direct its disposition - to your kids or to charity or wherever. To that extent, there is a value people get from wealth as a result of higher income that just can't be measured by looking at consumption. So, while I don't necessarily contest the thesis that consumption inequality is more relevant than income inequality, consumption inequality itself has problems as a measure of well-being because there are things it doesn't pick up. 2. Income inequality itself is misleading, primarily because the ways of calculating income are distorted by the tax system. Taxable income tends to be driven by what is reportable, but what is reportable does not align that well with what actually is paid to or for the benefit of the filer. The result is that reported taxable income tends to be much more unequal than actual compensation. So, for instance - just to take a very common item of compensation that isn't reported - a person who makes $30,000 but has $15,000 worth of health insurance paid by her employer does NOT make half what a person who is paid $60,000 and has the same coverage makes. The lower-paid person makes 60%, if there are no other non-wage items involved. But there of course are other non-wage items: for example, employer's social security contribution (which is capped), 401(k) income accumulation and/or matching (also capped), etc etc etc. These items will, on a percentage (not raw dollar) basis, boost low-earners' income much more than high earners'. Once you factor in all the compensation people get that isn't reportable -- which includes, for low earners, things like food stamps or heating subsidies -- the degree of real income inequality correspondingly gets reduced. (I can't remember where I saw the graphs on this, but they're out there.) Should this matter? It depends how you feel about economic inequality. If you think inequality is in and of itself a bad thing you'll think it's a problem that needs somehow to be fixed. If you think inequality is not necessarily a bad thing so long as it's linked to productive endeavors, you'll take a different view. But whichever school of thought you belong to, certainly it is in everyone's interest to have a handle on what the true scope of the issue is. That's where I think this NY Times article does a service - it gets us to thinking about what really makes people well-off or not. Comments? |
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02-13-2008, 11:38 AM | #2 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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i dont see the logic behind any argument that would replace data on income with data on consumption rates/levels--but i would have no problem with datasets that juxtaposed the two--the difference between the lines you might draw would be a nice image of credit and it's role--and that seems to me one level of what this question turns on, really: what to do and how to think about the pervasive role played by consumer credit in driving expenditures.
there's a second problem: the relation of these expenditure levels to the problems of structural inequality in the distribution of wealth is different, it seems to me: IF one were to replace data about income with data about consumption levels, it would have the effect of minimizing the appearance of economic inequality. but everyone would know--at least for a while--until they forgot about it--that nothing particular has actually changed about the distribution of wealth except what is now being used to index it. on this, the question seems to me not to be whether you imagine inequalities in the distribution of wealth to be a problem or not, but rather what statistics are to do, what they measure and why they measure it--and whether it is a good idea to be cavalier about switching indices in order to generate or reinforce ideological biais or for political advantage (think about the reagan redefinition of inflation rates by excluding from them what causes inflation rates to rise...what good has it done, beyond enabling reagan to say he "did something" about inflation)---if you think statistics are an extension of politics, then you'll land in one place on this--if you think that it's a good idea for policy-makers to have something approaching an accurate picture of the socio-economic realities they are supposed to administer/interact with, even if that picture poses problems--then you'd land in another. ========== as a counter to the edito quoted in the op, here's an editorial from this morning's ny times by robert reich. make of it what you will in general, but it sure raises problems for the op edito: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/13/opinion/13reich.html
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02-13-2008, 01:10 PM | #3 (permalink) |
Pissing in the cornflakes
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Its an interesting way to look at it, though I can see it being more of a way for a 'progressive' to justify more government confiscation of someones property. After all if you only consume two times as much you don't need to make 5 times as much, at least in some of their logic.
The real issue as I see it is 'so what?'. Outside of the handful of mega rich, the lifestyle of the wealthy is not a whole lot different than the middle class which isn't that much different from 'the poor'. There are people, actors, elite athletes, CEO's who will make more in a year than I will my entire life. So what? Does their wealth hurt me, or anyone else? As long as people are not unfairly being kept 'down' then it doesn't really matter what someone makes. When I see people starving in the streets, dying of curable diseases because they are refused treatment due to poverty, when hopelessness is due to the system not allowing hard work to succeed, then let me know.
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02-13-2008, 01:38 PM | #5 (permalink) | |
Pissing in the cornflakes
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When you are unable to become successful due to the system, then you have created a permanent underclass which is obviously not a desirable outcome. Interestingly while progressives want the fascist take over of the health care system by the government, I'd much rather see money spent on allowing intellectually qualified individuals be granted tuition for public colleges/universities. This is somewhat needed as so many highschools currently do not give you the skills you need to succeed.
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Agents of the enemies who hold office in our own government, who attempt to eliminate our "freedoms" and our "right to know" are posting among us, I fear.....on this very forum. - host Obama - Know a Man by the friends he keeps. |
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02-13-2008, 01:45 PM | #6 (permalink) |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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Maybe a better way to do this would be to set up different systems of comparison and label them. Some systems clearly do have inequalities in represented data and as such should be recognized as such, but that hardly means that all systems have the same equalities or that even all systems are unequal.
Yes, my solution does require that one learn new things *gasp*, but quite frankly, I believe that if one is to stay adequately informed it takes work. Edit: I'll add a rudimentary example of what I'm talking about. Once upon a time when Maths were in their infancy, people wanted to understand averages. The problem? There are different ways to calculate averages. Man 1 firmly believed that the best way was to present the usual average (4 + 4 + 6) ÷ 3 ~ 4.6 Man 2 firmly believed that the middle number was the average. ( 1, 2, 3, 4, 5) Man 3 absolutely believed the number that is repeated more often than any other is the average (1, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 5, 5, 6, 7, 8), and he was also sleeping with man 1's wife, but that's moot. What was done? Each was given a name—mean, median, and mode—and maths smiled. Last edited by Willravel; 02-13-2008 at 01:52 PM.. |
02-13-2008, 01:56 PM | #7 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: NYC
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One economics blogger whom I read frequently had the following question: why do we care about economic inequality but we don't care about inequality of things like sports ability, physical attractiveness, or height. Each of those can seriously affect a person's sense of self and well-being. For instance, I was always the kid picked last when teams got chosen up. It wasn't fun at all. Jocks tend to attract the most attention. Why isn't that something people get incensed about? Basic athletic ability isn't earned, it's something you're born with. Isn't this an unfair inequality? Why do we tolerate it? Or physical appearance - that one really is unearned.
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02-13-2008, 02:10 PM | #8 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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uh...because economic inequality has fuck all to do with arbitrary physical attributes like height.
it is a political question that follows from the way in which capitalism works. this is not rocket science. it is not a surprise. it is not news. and you can't collapse inequality in the capitalist context into some endless history of inequality if you want to say anything meaningful because the basis for it is fundamentally different--you know, generalized wage relations as over against ownership of the means of production concentrated in the hands of a particular social class (complicated by the stock and again by the transformations in stock ownership of the past 30 years in the states--but the point still basically holds) it's a bad analogy.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
02-13-2008, 02:16 PM | #9 (permalink) | ||
Pissing in the cornflakes
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http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/Careers/0...ple/index.html Quote:
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Agents of the enemies who hold office in our own government, who attempt to eliminate our "freedoms" and our "right to know" are posting among us, I fear.....on this very forum. - host Obama - Know a Man by the friends he keeps. |
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02-13-2008, 02:17 PM | #10 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: NYC
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the reason I'm raising these, roachboy, is because I want to try to get people to isolate what it is about inequality that bothers them (IF it bothers them). I thought that pointing to different kinds of unequal endowments would get people to articulate what is similar or different among the various kinds. Your post just restated a conclusion without analyzing.
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02-14-2008, 03:51 AM | #11 (permalink) | |||||||||||||||||
Banned
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The unsuccessful 1936 Republican party presidential candidate, Alf Landon, and the next successful Republican candidate, President Dwight Eisehower. made remarkably similar statements, 15 years apart, related to progressive measures taken by government in the mid 1930's in response to the collapse of US economic activity: Quote:
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Isn't it fair, since "the people" demanded and paid for the TNEC investigations and reports on the distribution of power and wealth in the US, and the effect of monopolies, that, after nearly 67 years, all of the records gathered by the TNEC committee that do no involve personal, non-financial details, be unsealed and made available for public examination, especially considering that 1940 census data will be released to the public , two years from now? If inequity in wealth and power in the US is "not a problem", why would anyone argue for continuing to keep sealed, the records of the only in depth, congressional committee investigation, of the "non problem"? I can think of no better example than the following, to answer Ustwo's question: Quote:
In the 1920s, 30s, and 40s, a group of friends kept a close association, and conducted related business activities. The elder man in the group, ten to fifteen years senior to the others, managed to obtain the franchise, granted by the state government regulators, after the end of prohibition in 1933, to distribute liquor in Arizona, and eventually grew his business to a level that excluded all competition. If you operated a retail or an entertainment establishment in Arizona that sold liquor to the public, you had to buy from United Liquor. This same elder gentleman of this group, came to deal with the investors and principles who conceived of and built the initial modern casino hotels in Las Vegas. It is documented in a New Mexico state police investigation that the owner of Arizona's United Liquor distributors came to own the Transamerica race-wire, the sports betting, bookmaker's information service that originated with Al Capone's Chicago crime organization, and he was a principle in an <a href="http://209.85.165.104/search?q=cache:7T3uAEHe4yIJ:www.nevadaobserver.com/Reading%2520Room%2520Documents/Kefauver%2520Committee%2520-%2520Testimony%2520of%2520Louis%2520Wiener%2520(1950).htm+%22valley+national+bank%22+flamingo+siegel&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=4&gl=us">Arizona bank that loaned $2 million to the Mafia</a> principles who built the Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas in 1947.... Quote:
In 1946, two of the younger members of the group of friends described above, a pair of brothers, were employed as managers at United Liquor by Kemper Marley, and were arrested on federal liquor bootlegging violations, accused in testimony by another United Liquor manager, of altering nearly 1400 invoices of case sales of liquor, sold in cash transactions to unknown parties. Owner Marley was not charged, and James Hensley was found guilty and sentenced to 6 months in prison, suspended, while his older brother Eugene was convicted and served a one year prison sentence. Both brothers, along with 50 other United Liquor employees and the firm itslef, were tried on similar charges again in 1953, but were not convicted. Owner Marley was never charged. The two Hensley brothers, also in 1953, purchased the Ruidoso Downs, New Mexico horse racing track, lying to the racing commission about the participation of a 1/3 owner's stake partner in the purchase, a gambler not approved by the NM racing commission, named Clarence "Teak" Baldwin. James Hensley sold his stake in the track to brother Eugene in 1955, and became the owner of record of the Budweiser beer distributorship in Phoenix, allegedly thorough the aid of United Liquor owner Marley. In 1948, a man named Greenbaum who was a partner in the race-wire with Marley, was murdered in a gangland style "hit". Eugene Hensley entered into a long term food and beverage concession lease at Ruidoso downs with an Emprise Company of Buffalo, NY subsidiary. Eugene served a one year income tax evasion prison sentence in the 195os and was banned from his track by the NM Racing Commission, after he was convicted a second time of tax evasion, but before he served a five year prison sentence for the second offense. Eugene, in the late 1960s and still as principle stock holder of the race track, sold the track to a group financed by the still long term track concession leasee, the Jacob's company, Emprise subsidiary: http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpag...gewanted=print Quote:
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For both of you, have you ever considered, what if I am right? What if roachboy is right? What if, all of your lives, you have been concerned about the exact oppostite political activities and principles than those that are actually "the problem"? Last edited by host; 02-14-2008 at 03:57 AM.. |
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02-16-2008, 06:42 PM | #12 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: NYC
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host, please read the OP and stick with what the topic of discussion is here. You can start your own thread if you want to lecture people on topics you want to discuss.
The question was, what kinds of inequality matter and why. If you have something to say about it, do. Otherwise, please don't clutter up the thread. Last edited by loquitur; 02-16-2008 at 06:49 PM.. |
02-16-2008, 06:57 PM | #13 (permalink) |
has all her shots.
Location: Florida
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I think, in order to really assess the impact of 'comsumption,' there needs to be an allowance for the amount of 'consumption' that is done by the wealthy for them in the form of employment 'perks' and 'benefits' that the poor do not have privy to. This is not an unsubstantial number.
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02-16-2008, 07:16 PM | #14 (permalink) | |||||
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70 percent ownership of the entire wealth of the US by just ten percent of the population, is obscene, loquitur, and being the messenger of the incessant, well financed effort to dress it up, put lipstick on it in attempts to make it REASONABLE, is beneath you loquitur, beneath your intellect and your education, but here you are! Cox and Alm are stooges, they are long exposed as such: Quote:
The "certainty" of authors Cox and Alm in your OP article, strikes me as ridiculous, knowing what I know, and here is some of it, for you to consider: Quote:
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02-16-2008, 07:45 PM | #15 (permalink) |
peekaboo
Location: on the back, bitch
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Host, can't YOU just read what you're deriving your info from, quote bits and link the rest? My old eyes can't handle all that and if they could, my old brain wouldn't absorb it....
I can see where the numbers mentioned in the OP could come into play. Mr. H earns 1.5 million a year and buys 3 Mercedes. Mr. J earns 150,000 a year and buys 3 Toyotas Mr. X earns 50,000 a year and buys a used Volvo and 2 bicycles. It's all relative....the problem as I see it (as a usually struggling so-called middle classer), is that those that earn less don't get a break just because of that factor. If I want a Mercedes, I can't go to the dealer and say I'm paying X per cent because I only earn X dollars. That would balance things out a bit, but it ain't gonna happen. The op-ed makes sense. F'rinstance: Our weekly insurance payout is $105. The company owner's weekly payout is $105. But, he earns more, so the chunk isn't as huge for him, essentially making his disposable income larger. Same with things like cable, cell phone bills, etc. They might vary, but not in keeping with income, so that those of us on the lower end of the pay scale see less play money than those on the higher end, so of course, our ratios are much less. A friend of mine had a good analogy. He was told by his superiors that instead of overtime, he'd be given comp time for the extra hours. His response, "Yea, I'll just go into Home Depot and instead of cash, tell them I'm gonna pay them in comp time." |
02-16-2008, 08:19 PM | #18 (permalink) | |
Banned
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I believe that the very wealthy beisiege the rest of us with a strategy of funding lobbies, think tanks, a media blitz to convince enough of us to vote against our own best interests, which is to tax the shit out of the wealthiest one percent, as we did do well, into the early 1960's. Outside of the legalization and enforcement of collective bargaining rights of workers, nothing else has significantly helped to "level" the playing field between the wealthiest, and the rest of us. If you think that I am wrong, why do you think the records of the TNEC 1938to 1941 hearings and investigations into wealth and power in America, are still sealed? http://www.archives.gov/research/gui...roups/144.html Last edited by host; 02-16-2008 at 08:22 PM.. |
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02-16-2008, 08:27 PM | #19 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: NYC
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no, will, I didn't miss #6. I even chuckled a bit. I know your tongue was in your cheek, but it did touch on an aspect of what I'm trying to get at here. The question it raises is, "what are we measuring?"
Are we measuring people's happiness and well-being? Do we care about people having different amounts of physical things (of which money is the main one) because we think that money/things make them happy? And if that's the case, is there some other way of measuring happiness that is more reliable than the number of things people have? If that's NOT the case, why do we care about people having different numbers of physical things? Again: I'm trying to get at WHY economic inequality matters. Not that it should be ASSUMED it matters, but that the reasons should be articulated. I agree does matters at some level, but I suspect my level and reason differs from others'. Host, I'm ignoring your post now because you refuse to stick with the topic. You simply assume things and then berate me for not signing on to your assumption. That's not what this thread is about. |
02-16-2008, 08:32 PM | #20 (permalink) | |
Pissing in the cornflakes
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I don't think you really have an idea of what you are talking about. The wealthy pay pretty much all of the federal taxes as it is. You just want to punish them for being wealthy and steal it from them in the name of the people. Edit: Sorry loquitur I couldn't let it pass and I should have.... *zip*
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Agents of the enemies who hold office in our own government, who attempt to eliminate our "freedoms" and our "right to know" are posting among us, I fear.....on this very forum. - host Obama - Know a Man by the friends he keeps. |
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02-16-2008, 08:33 PM | #21 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: NYC
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re #13 - mixedmedia, you're right, but that's a measurement problem. I suspect that if you factored that in, the overall numbers would change somewhat, but the overall thesis that consumption disparities are less than income disparities would persist. As I said in the OP, I'm not sure that consumption is the relevant measure of economic well-being as distinct from income, and I'm not sure that income is either. It all depends on what we're really trying to evaluate: what kinds of disparities should we care about, and why. We can't sensibly answer the question of what (if anything) to do about disparities until we figure out why they are important.
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02-16-2008, 08:47 PM | #22 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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To get more to the point from my last post, maybe we should specify what we're specifically trying to show via the data. Because people are subjective regarding stats like this, it would be better to simply provide as much raw data as possible and then let people answer the questions you're asking on a person by person basis. I suspect that my measurement of financial happiness may be different than someone else's, and as such it'd be good for me to read data instead of conclusions made by people who have their own subjective conclusions. In my opinion economic inequality has to do with numerous factors, but starts at income per household, depending on location. Right now I'm in the 83k after taxes area, which would be great in many places, but is rather mid-range here in San Jose, even with the housing market in shambles. So when I want to get an updated informed opinion regarding economic inequality, I'd want access to localized incomes per household. |
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02-16-2008, 08:55 PM | #23 (permalink) |
Location: Washington DC
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Unfortunately, one of the best federal websites that lists all the best economic indicators in one place, EconomicIndicators.gov, is being shut down by the Bush administration next week due to "budgetary constraints".
Damn...how much does it cost to maintain a website...or why does Bush want to make it that much more difficult to find economic data?
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02-16-2008, 09:03 PM | #24 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: NYC
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Will, I extracted two words from your post - financial happiness - because I think they are very telling. The money isn't what makes you happy; you can't eat money or live in money or drive it. What the money does is let you get things that you think will make you happy. It's a tool or a proxy, it's not an end in itself.
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02-16-2008, 09:07 PM | #25 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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02-16-2008, 09:10 PM | #27 (permalink) | |
peekaboo
Location: on the back, bitch
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However, that welfare mom can vote, so that wealth/political power is dependent on that. It's only fair that the wealthiest pay more taxes. People have continuously for decades have touted that flat tax idea, where everyone just shells out, say, 25% of their income regardless. I hate this idea, think it's stupid. I like my tax deductions. My kids are tax deductions, my house is a tax deduction and I get a refund that goes back into the economy because I then buy shit I couldn't afford the preceding 11 months. Level the playing field? Last I knew, this wasn't a financially socialist country. The majority of the wealthy in the country worked for what they have, are frugal in many ways, are savvy investors and do their part to keep the economy going because that affects their lives, perhaps more than ours down here in the lower quarter. If you mean that, while I pay $105 for health coverage, they should pay $1050, that comes into play in other areas, primarily taxes. But, as I mentioned earlier, if that were to be the case, then I should be able to buy a new Mercedes for 10 grand. Some things are just unrealistic, no matter how you try to spin it. |
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02-16-2008, 09:19 PM | #28 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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I personally believe that happiness is more important than income because I've found that while material pursuits are fun they're ultimately unfulfilling compared to finding a place in life to he happy. That hardly means that my answer is the only answer, which gets back to my comment regarding subjectivity. Not everyone finds materialism unfulfilling as a core of existence. Some may actually find true happiness in it. That's why I believe in factual data for everyone so they can draw their own subjective conclusions. |
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02-17-2008, 08:00 AM | #29 (permalink) |
Asshole
Administrator
Location: Chicago
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Future posts that do not conform to the rules and topics set out in the OP will be deleted. The original poster has the right to set the rules and direction of the thread. Please abide by those, especially since you will expect the same in your own threads.
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02-17-2008, 08:26 AM | #30 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: NYC
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Will, I'm with you. Even if you stipulate that economic well-being is a relevant measure, neither income nor consumption by itself will capture that concept adequately.
But if well-being is what we think is the relevant determinant, then income inequality or perhaps even wealth inequality, is not a particularly important factor. Some people are miserable even with all the doodads in the world, others are happy even in a hut. Different people are different - they have different abilities, different needs, different desires. My own feeling on this is that we should care if people have a roof over their heads, clothes on their bodies and basic nutrition, but not whether they have a home that isn't as nice as someone else's, clothes that aren't as fancy or food that isn't as sumptuous. |
02-17-2008, 08:52 AM | #31 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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but if you want to talk about well-being, then (again) the problem arises of what that means.
one could consider well-being as relational, in the sense that a measure of well-being can refer to system criteria. this would imply that the overall socio-economic context matters when you try to think about how particular social positions define themselves. this seems axiomatic. i am bewildered by claims to the contrary. they don't make any fucking sense. it doesn't matter that they are consistent with conservative political views--except in that it functions as a little demonstration--as if any were needed--that those economic views make no sense either. another--which is being argued for in the op, and which continues to be argued for--to the extent that refusing to consider basic questions can be confused with argument---would treat well-being as entirely subjective. this would be the "how do you feel today" index. "are you feeling ok?" "how many of you feel ok?" these are fundamentally different. without stipulating "relative to what" any measure is meaningless. and this before you get to the rat's nest: (a) how you'd go about *measuring* "well-being"--which is self-evidently linked to how you define the term... and even worse (b) how you'd go about distinguishing "well-being" from a reflection of ideological factors. by the last point, i basically mean is--for example---if we live in a consumer culture in which every commodity is pitched at potential buyers as a gateway to happiness at one level or another, then an overall effect of the range of such pitches is to imply--continually--that you, the consumer--are happy--but in such a way that this happiness can be perfected and that perfectedness is always one commodity away--that this opens onto an infinite series is irrelevant. but you see the problem: well-being can be a function of what an old french communist party intello-type called interpellation: that is of the way in which you, spectator, are positioned by the way in which data that passes through a particular instituted space (advertising and its relay systems). so the sense of well-being can measure nothing more than the subjective sense of adjustedness to norms which are derived from the cumulative effect of advertising--in which case an index can measure nothing meaningful beyond the efficacy of advertising. this loops back around onto the question of what you think economic data is supposed to do. if you expect it to provide an accurate image of the system, then "well-being"--particularly a subjective notion of it--is close to worthless. but if you think economic data is an extension of political ideology, then it can fit right into the affective circle-jerk at the center of conservative economic theory--and this because data about the actual world is secondary for most of us--the folk who exercise power may or may not need it--but you and i definitely dont need it.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite Last edited by roachboy; 02-17-2008 at 09:05 AM.. Reason: snarkiness removal machine |
02-17-2008, 10:23 AM | #32 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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Liq - I do see what you're saying and I agree, which is why it'd be important to actually see how "happiness" stacks up against income. Once one could get a decent comparo going, then we could say "money doesn't mean happiness" or "30% of people above x income are happy".
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02-17-2008, 03:23 PM | #34 (permalink) | |
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I posted challenges to the NY Times article in your OP, and of it's authors, and of every endorsement you made about that article in your OP. Your response indicated that you were not interested in discussing the validity of the OP article, because, somewhere after the OP was posted, a new restriction mandated the discussion to be solely about feelings. Last edited by host; 02-17-2008 at 03:26 PM.. |
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02-17-2008, 04:14 PM | #35 (permalink) |
has all her shots.
Location: Florida
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What the hell does one's happiness have to do with their ability to pay the rent, the power bill, the car payment, etc.? The crux of income equality is not, 'oh, poor Mr. Jones' car isn't nearly as nice as rich Mr. Potter's. Poor Mr. Jones.' It's 'poor Mr. Jones is having to make the choice this month between paying his car payment and feeding his kids while rich Mr. Potter doesn't even have to pay for his car (or his gas or his car washes or his car repair, for that matter) because it's part of his 'income.'
If people can't even conceive that the problem is not not being able to buy the nicest things, but in fact not being able to afford to even subsist within the societal framework that has been provided for us without making hard choices every month then you don't have any business having this discussion. No material things do not buy happiness. And not being able to pay your bills every month does not necessarily rob you of happiness. Therefore 'happiness' as a factor in determining the fairness of the ever-widening income disparity in this country is a moot point. And a frigging weird one, too...in my opinion.
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Most people go through life dreading they'll have a traumatic experience. Freaks were born with their trauma. They've already passed their test in life. They're aristocrats. - Diane Arbus PESSIMISM, n. A philosophy forced upon the convictions of the observer by the disheartening prevalence of the optimist with his scarecrow hope and his unsightly smile. - Ambrose Bierce |
02-17-2008, 05:28 PM | #36 (permalink) | |
Living in a Warmer Insanity
Super Moderator
Location: Yucatan, Mexico
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After reading through it a couple things stuck in my head. One, it's really hard to be happy if you're worried you might end up living in your car in the near future, even harder if you think you might not even have a car for shelter. Basically there's a level of income needed simply to survive on a day to day basis, without it happiness is not really an option. And two, having a shit load of money does not make you happy. Having more and more material things will not bring you happiness. In fact the study basically said really wealthy people tend to be less happy then the middle class.
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I used to drink to drown my sorrows, but the damned things have learned how to swim- Frida Kahlo Vice President Starkizzer Fan Club |
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02-17-2008, 08:11 PM | #37 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: NYC
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Actually, MM, if you look at what I was saying, I was positing that there is a level of income below which we should be concerned about the person. In a rich society like ours everyone should have access to basic nutrition, clothing and shelter. But if a person's basic needs are taken care of, then no, I don't think income inequality in and of itself is a problem.
At some point, railing against the "rich" is just plain and simple envy, which is a poisonous emotion, more for the person who has it than that person's target. And then there is the question of how you define "rich" - I have yet to get a coherent definition from the redistributionists that amounts to anything other than "someone who has more than I do." And bear in mind that that works both ways: there are people who have less than you who would want some of what YOU have, too. To them, YOU'RE rich. Whatever principle you might articulate to justify taking stuff away from people who have more than you merely because they have it can also be used to justify taking stuff away from you. Where I'm going with this is here: at least in this country, simple inequality of income in and of itself is not a bad thing, unless the inequality came about because of theft or some other kind of bad conduct. If you're talking about ancien regime France, or Tsarist Russia, with a hereditary and useless aristocracy, that's one thing. But that's not this country. Most wealth in this country is earned. Yes, there is a luck element - there always is - but it doesn't explain all the disparities even remotely. I have yet to hear an explanation of why simple inequality of income, in and of itself, is something we have to somehow "fix", when there are so many other unequal endowments people have that no one seems to be interested in fixing. Some people happen to be very good at making money. Other people, like me, are good at other things. So? |
02-17-2008, 08:51 PM | #38 (permalink) | |
Pissing in the cornflakes
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Do you mean the ability to work for them, or the ability to have them regardless?
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Agents of the enemies who hold office in our own government, who attempt to eliminate our "freedoms" and our "right to know" are posting among us, I fear.....on this very forum. - host Obama - Know a Man by the friends he keeps. |
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02-17-2008, 09:31 PM | #39 (permalink) | |
peekaboo
Location: on the back, bitch
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A few years back, the news magazine, 20/20 did a report on poverty in the US. They visited what was, at the time, the poorest area in the country-a neighborhood in the Bronx. In visiting apartments, they found VCR's, microwave ovens, color tvs among sparsely furnished dilapidated apartments. When the article quoted in the OP speaks about the spending disparity lessening among the income groups, this is what they mean. To bring it further into perspective, a personal anecdote: I just completed our tax report. After deductions, our income came to just over $21k( $15k alone was the mortgage interest deduction). We are a family of four. Our monthly bills are over $3,000. 12x3 is more than 21k, obviously. Yet, I am typing this on a brand new Dell, taking photos with two DSLR's, we have two more computers, a total of 7 digital cameras, 3 cell phones, a house and two cars less than 10 years old. By any standard, we would be considered, at best, lower middle class. The net income puts us at poverty level, but we probably have more than some people that have much more income. Are we hurting monetarily? We were. Our credit card debt is about $15K and isn't going down very quickly. Are we happy with our lot? Yep. Does one have to do with the other? To an extent. It's no fun being in deep debt. It weighs heavily on everything, controls everything you do or attempt to do. Are we happier than those who are wealthy? Don't know, don't care. Perhaps the editorial felt that those on the lower scale of income were on the higher scale of consumption in some mistaken belief that things bring contentment? That's where that data is useless to an observer. Without reasoning behind the disparities, no one can say what makes a group happier as a rule than not. Hope that made sense. |
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02-17-2008, 09:51 PM | #40 (permalink) | ||
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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