Or drives them out. The Walmarts near where I live have a huge turnover.
Most retail stores do.
Or drives them out. The Walmarts near where I live have a huge turnover.
They wouldn't work there if it wasn't better than what they were otherwise doing.
If they want a better job, they need to develop more marketable skills. No one is entitled to a high wage from another person.
Not necessarily true. I see lots of people in jobs that are beneath their skills and education, particularly in this economy, though not exclusively. This is often more true of people who are older, it's much harder to find work appropriate to your skills if you're past 45, there is very real age bias in hiring.
When it comes to the job market, you have to look at both the supply of jobs and the demand for jobs to understand what is going on.
Story today that R.Paul jr is making presendential noises, so R Paul Sr might not run in 2012.
Y..ou want me to keep a track of their job postings? OK. (I'm actually tangenting off it, since really, I have little problem with Walmarts except their rotating shift structure. I mean, it's not the ANTICHRIST as posted upthread.)
Oh dear god. If he gets in, the US is totally done for.
Underemployment is common during economic downturns of course. However, it is still superior to being unemployed. Presumably a person who takes a position at Wal-Mart that they are overqualified for did not leave a better job to go there, rather, they took it because it is better than what they were otherwise doing, being unemployed. There is no requirement that they stay at Wal-Mart. They can look for a better job, and also pursue additional skills as well during their down time. A recession is a much better time to be a student than a recent graduate, so a person who was considering getting a master's degree may decide to do so for example.
Oh dear god. If he gets in, the US is totally done for.
Ron Paul bases his political views on sound economic theory.
He is a good man, but will be violently opposed by those who benefit from the State.
Again, developing more skills doesn't help everyone get jobs. Many people, particularly older people, find that getting work is difficult even in good financial times.
Ron Paul bases his political views on sound economic theory.
i think people who have read about the Gilded Age would disagree with Ron Paul.LMAO
And those who understand economic theory.
I think Ron Paul is the only one who does understand economic theory.
Violations of private property rights do not lead to beneficial outcomes.
Therefore Keynesianism is flawed at its core assumptions.
In order for Keynesianism to operate, it assumes that groups of people have a right to violate the property rights of other groups of people by using coercion.
Can you point out the part of Keynes' work that assumes that?
I don't deny that Keynesianism is flawed, but that's a new one on me.
I can give a basic counterexample, however... coercing funds from citizens for military protection. I think that has led to a very beneficial outcome, in that we have been able to protect ourselves from invasion reliably.
Do I think we should make a habit of taking private property, certainly not. But I think the example illustrates that property is not absolute.
I would furthermore add that anyone advocates a return to the gold standard has lost track of how the economy works. Heck even Adam Smith knew that gold <> wealth.
Sure.
Keynesianism assumes the government has the legitimate authority to engage in monetary stimulus and interest rate adjustments.
In order for the government to be able to accomplish these tasks, it by default, must have a monopoly of the money supply.
1. Coercion is necessary, through the implementation of fiat money laws, to force people to use the currency that government can then manipulate.
2. The manipulation of the money supply, through the "printing of money" by increasing debt levels, is tantamount to counterfeiting.
Counterfeiting itself is a violation of all money holders property rights, because the value of the money is stolen from all money holders. Those who get the new money first have "stolen" the value of those who get the new money last, since newly printed money still has the same value as the old money until it is spent into the economy.