Who's a better candidate?
Quote from: Meta Cognition on July 03, 2015, 06:24:29 PMJeb Bushaw hell no
Jeb Bush
Jeb Bush, I'd say. More moderate than the likes of Walker, with some decent economic advisors and, AFAIK, policy proposals. Clinton is essentially in the same boat, although she comes with the surcharge of being Clinton.
i'll be back
Quote macroprudential FUCK YOUTHAT'S NOT A REAL WORDIT CANT BEYOU'RE FUCKING WITH ME
macroprudential
>being against trade unionsOpinion disregarded.
The workers deserve more than what they're getting. America is run by less than 100 people, all who are going to make more money than they'll be able to spend in ten lifetimes. That's downright wrong. Labor unions are the only groups with enough guts to actually challenge our corporate overlords.
The American Society of Civil Engineer's uses the Department of Transportation's "red list" to support their analysis of infrastructural well-being (which is hardly impartial), and it's essentially a dishonest attempt at mincing with the words "structurally deficient". People usually take it to mean "dangerous", when in fact all it means is not up to current construction standards. Most of the things on the DOT's list were simply built prior to an increase in said standards.
Sanders also seems interested in infrastructural projects exactly for growth and jobs. Despite the fact there is very little evidence to suggest that infrastructure does promote growth when considered in a neoclassical model, and New Keynesian models only find a moderate positive effect for highway spending over the medium-run.
Reversing climate change:No real content to these proposals either. Exactly how does Sanders want to induce this paradigm shift to sustainable energy? Given his priors, it will probably be a combination of regulation and subsidies which are pretty much universally considered to be inefficient when compared to a Pigouvian excise tax on the production and importation of goods.
Growing the trade unions:I'm actually going to endorse Clinton on this issue. Allow work councils to represent labour over trade unions. Trade unions are monolithic beasts who too often act like the people they claim to be protecting workers against.
Raising the minimum wage:I've dealt with this before; wage subsidies are a much better solution to poverty, minimum wages are pretty ineffectual actually and have demonstrable long-run negative consequences on employment growth. The idea of a living wage is incredibly stupid, and probably doublespeak for a $15 MW. If we can't have an expansion of EITC, I'd support a $10 MW, but $15 is fucking lunacy.
Making college affordable for all:I don't even know where this is coming from, really. There's very little evidence for credit constraints; the issue stems from the fact that tuition loans can't be dealt with via bankruptcy. If anything, the US is producing too many people with degrees.
Protecting the most vulnerable Americans:Again, less meat and more problems. Strengthening social security is just a short-term cover-up to a long-term problem which isn't going to disappear by throwing more and more money at it. Certain population dynamics make it an unsustainable system (seriously, why the fuck are you giving welfare to well-off seniors?). Current CBO projections put soc-sec as running out of money in 2033. It's essentially just a redistributive tax; what the US needs to do is start transitioning to mandatory, private retirement funds.
Real tax reform:This is pretty much all shit. There isn't any kind of consensus on whether or not income inequality has increased in the US
Consensus on corporation tax does exist, and they're fucking terrible. Corporation taxes should be abolished, outright. They are paid mostly by labour in the long-run, in the form of lower wages and are ridiculously distortionary. The abolition of corporation taxes in the US would have myriad benefits, including greater investment, higher output, wage growth, higher savings and an expanded tax base. It would, quite clearly, result in a Pareto improvement and provide significant welfare benefits for future generations.
Quote from: Verbatim on July 03, 2015, 06:22:29 PMWho's a better candidate?Jeb Bush, I'd say.
i wanna know what you think of elizabeth warren
Is he related to Colonel Sanders?