Economists on the RUN

Discussion in 'Economics' started by bone, Jul 17, 2020.

  1. piezoe

    piezoe

    Trade IS good! But not for everyone in all places and times. Sadly, U.S. Trade policy is currently being decided by a man, who seems to only hear echoes, doesn't read, and obviously understands little at a cerebral level. He's not helping.

    Globalization is inevitable. We can't stop it, nor should we want to. For nations, the trick is to participate in the natural course of globalization so as to bring aggregate benefit to an entire economy. That's difficult, but I'm confident it's doable. Although we have made mistakes, with good leadership we won't repeat them. We can, and will, do much better going forward. We must anticipate which components of our economy will be affected adversely by trade agreements and prepare in advance to mitigate adverse effects.* Going forward, we can continue to participate in globalization and do it either badly or well, but attempting to create a closed economy in a world of open economies will not only be impossible but a disastrous mistake as well.

    ________________
    *This implies that there will be necessary changes in public education. Change doesn't come easily to most of us; highly competent leadership is needed to to overcome inevitable resistance.

    Recognizing that, with notable exceptions, the most competent to lead in technical matters often have no appetite for the political arena, we won't succeed in making the necessary changes without the forming of effective political and technical alliances.

    [Two excellent examples of "notable exceptions," referred to above, would be: a) Daniel Patrick Moynihan (deceased), an expert in history and sociology, and in particular on the Soviet economy; b) Elizabeth Warren, an expert on U.S. bankruptcy law, and certain areas of finance. Moynihan was also a consummate politician, as is Elizabeth warren today. Another two excellent examples, drawn from earlier times, would be John Adams and Thomas Jefferson.]
     
    #11     Jul 22, 2020
    SunTrader likes this.
  2. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    TLDR, especially the annoying strike-thru section, but if Krugman now thinks globalization is wrong .... he is now wrong.

    This world is truly upside when far right and far left agree on something.
     
    #12     Jul 22, 2020
  3. keesa

    keesa

    I don't think Germany has more capable workers than US. We have enough tech kids to fill the private companies. Blame the underperformance to the oversized unions. And Germany has problem of aging popultion and shortage of labors, that is why they opened the flood gate and let in a million refugees.

     
    #13     Jul 22, 2020
  4. themickey

    themickey

    That's right, ya shouldn't whinge when being ripped off.
     
    #14     Jul 22, 2020
  5. apdxyk

    apdxyk

    German skill training and retraining practices are second to none.
     
    #15     Jul 22, 2020
    Ayn Rand and SunTrader like this.
  6. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    So how do you determine this? Their unions are probably as old as the country. Why suddenly now are they a problem?
     
    #16     Jul 23, 2020
  7. zdreg

    zdreg

    It is the public sector unions that are ruining the US.
     
    #17     Jul 23, 2020
  8. d08

    d08

    US needs to compete like Germany, on the high end products. It already is of course but that needs to increase. On the lower end products, there's too many competitors, I don't see how US would be able to do anything.

    US companies seem to have massive overhead, which isn't necessary for the core business at all. Overpaid lawyers, CEOs that are paid more than anywhere else, too many marketing people (gotta do those woke posts on Twitter, that's a job!).
     
    #18     Jul 23, 2020
    Ayn Rand and bone like this.
  9. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    Their post, which I replied to, was about Germany.

    Meanwhile MAGA is doing a fine job ruining this country.
     
    #19     Jul 23, 2020
  10. bone

    bone

    They are no doubt responsible for the current state of affairs making it just about impossible for local governments to fire bad police officers. This is a bit off topic but it is a truth.
     
    #20     Jul 23, 2020