Food is not unaffordable. Spending habits have changed. People eat out to much and purchases too much junk. Check out
food at home price changes and you will see my point in the categories. Transportation in regards to vehicle purchases has all but cratered to no growth year over year. I haven't really delved into medical expenses but that leads me to something.
Food is unaffordable. But the trend towards eating out and eating processed food started in the 1950s. So let's not pretend it is some kind of new phenomenon. And I don't do much of either. I taught myself how to cook and garden. (Thank you internet) Both of which make a pretty good dent into how much I spend on groceries. I trade tomatoes etc with my neighbor for eggs and jam they make from my fruit trees. But it's not just the processed junk that has gone up in price, fresh produce can be ridiculously expensive. especially when it's off season. Then it's a choice between grotesquely overpriced produce that is so so or overpriced process crap.
Sorry if I implied you don't discuss things in good faith. We probably don't see eye to eye on everything but I enjoy your perspective. I don't think either party really wants to tackle the debt situation. But they both approach it in different ways. To be charitable, Republicans want to lower the burden of surplus earners, Democrats want to supplement the burden of deficit earners.
Yeah, that is being charitable.
While I don't agree with the idea of trickle down, I do think there is a difference in letting people keep more of the money they earn and giving money to those that didn't earn enough.
I would rather not tax the rich more. I would much rather the rest of society did better. Not just the middle class, but America's poor and elderly. What has been a continuing reality is that workers have grown more and more obsolete and making less because of huge leaps in productivity. Yet the benefit gains from that productivity goes to fewer and fewer people. This idea that it is better to let the rich keep all the resources and sacrifice the rest of the world is not good. Not even for the rich. (At least in the long term) They're just inviting a revolution.
One of the first things they teach in Economics is that it is the study of the allocation of resources. It is the study of choices. Where we invest our resources. And the effects of those choices have on the future. This massive imbalance of wealth and income has led to boutique industries that cater to the wealthy to do well. But it has also led to the death of industries that marketed itself to the masses.
Maybe you have forgotten K Mart, Sears and JC Penny.
Let me give you some examples. Baseball and Football stadiums today are smaller than they use to be and much of those stadiums is dedicated to luxury suites. I use to buy season tickets to the Seahawks and probably see 10 to 15 Ms games each year. Now I do neither. I simply cannot afford them any more. The days of Joe Six Pack at a sporting event is ancient history.
I mentioned the exorbitant cost of a new car today. What difference does it make if sales have cratered if they're not selling affordable cars to the masses? Where is today's Model A or T that was sold to the masses or the cheap Ford Pinto or Mustang? They made crappy cars back then. But at least they were affordable.
More and more companies are chasing the wealthy's dollars. High dollar, high profit sales are more attractive than high volume lower profit sales.
I would love to buy a new truck. But the prices for them are insane. I don't need a luxury truck. I would be thrilled to buy a stripped down new truck. But they don't make those any more. I know, because I have looked high and low for one.
My neighbor bought a new truck a couple of years ago. No kidding, it was 6 figures.
If income and wealth was greater dispersed in the US. Industries would manufacture for the middle class and the poor could afford to buy it used.
Then there has been the rise of the investor class and the demise of anyone without the resources to be a part of it.
There is no excuse that Fortune 500 CEO today make on average 200 times what their employees earn. In the 1950s, it was a tenth of that. There is no excuse that corporate executives buy and fly private jets or buy super yachts.
There is no excuse that a country as rich as the United States has even a fraction the number of homeless people we have. There is no excuse that we have ignored our infrastructure for the last five decades.
Letting the rich keep more of their income when we view the results holistically is the definition of insanity. IMV, there is only one reasonable choice. Either corporations sigificantly increase the incomes of their employees or government supplements incomes by taxing the rich significantly more. Neither of which are acceptable to most of the wealthy and the GOP
When it comes to addressing housing costs, I would start with nationwide changes in zoning. We cannot make affordable housing in our metropolitan cities with the restrictive zoning laws that don't allow for higher residential density. There are too many NIMBY laws.
Most politicians ignore how much this plays into unaffordable housing. Or they understand it well enough to know that creating affordable housing threatens the value of people's homes/nest egg.
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