The small family farm may have to go the way of the Dodo. We do need agriculture and if the most efficient way to deliver it is from a series of large corporations then so be it.
I thought that industrial farming was a bad thing and that for the good of the land and the benefit of animal welfare there should be smaller farming units run by people who actually care about their stake.
It's also about security of food supplies, there's nothing to stop Chinacorp buying the Agri-business that grows xx% of America's food. Individual farmers on the other hand would want to keep their land in their family.
This is why I proposed to bust up the contractors simultaneously. Doing this will require seed money to establish numerous new businesses or allow existing ones to diversify. Maybe Lockheed and Northrop would get into the commercial airliner game? That might be bad for Boeing but would probably be better for everyone else.
Otherwise I'm pretty sure the DOD can absorb a 20% cut and still remain functional in it's missions. We'd have to refocus some. Keep more troops home and rely more on prepositioning and fast sealift.
Lockheed and Northrop couldn't afford to get into the civil airliner game, that's why Boeing is the only US-based manufacturer of large commercial airliners. The reason why these companies have consolidated is to allow them to make the multi-billion dollar investment necessary to develop new weapon systems.
If you're going to reduce DOD costs by 20% it will require some combination of:
- Fewer people in the military - resulting in fewer employed people
- Less spending on equipment - resulting in a loss of jobs in the manufacturing sector
- Lower spending on services - resulting in job losses in the service sector
I always hear this argument. I'm not convinced. Major corporations need the stability and economy of societies with strong government social support.
The United States will get into very hot water if it attempts to tax, in the United States, the earnings of companies not based in the United States on operations not in the United States. In other words, the US cannot tax BMW's European earnings.
If that is the case then if the United States taxed the all the earnings of US based companies (for example GM's European earnings) then GM would be at a significant disadvantage if the US tax rates are higher (and if they're lower then BMW would already be trying to maximise the amount of income subject to United States taxes).
Actually it's much more complex than that. Tax havens are used to minimise tax.
The United States has no jurisdiction over overseas companies so if the local tax regime is tougher, Unites States companies would be disadvantaged.
From the money freed up from the cuts to the DOD and agriculture.
Oh, ending oil subsidies would be nice too.
Fair enough
Well right now they are dealing with more and more defaults. This might actually help the banks.
If it would help the banks, they'd already be doing it or putting pressure on the government to bring it about. Introducing grace periods means that there are loans which are not currently being repaid. How can this possibly benefit the banks ?
Maybe that isn't the right thing to replace it with. But what I do know is that the current paradigm is insane. Schools no longer teach they just prepare kids to pass the seemingly endless tests. As if they were the same thing.
It's nuts and needs to stop immediately before we screw up even more generations.
It's human nature. If you base performance on an objective measure then the people being judged by that objective measure will attempt to maximise their performance. So if it's test based (and I cannot see any other objective measure) then they'll teach to the test. In the UK, students are regularly tested by at least at 16 and 18 the performance is gauged by performance in national examinations. At least teaching to these tests will result in the transfer of some knowledge.
If the assessment is subjective (as is the case with an Ofsted inspection in the UK) then there is a risk that those being judged will seek to curry favour with those doing the judging and of course it also relies on the competence of the assessors.
IMO objective assessment based on the school's value-add is the least bad way of assessing performance
That is one possible side effect. Everything has it's price.
I find it amazing that people would be happy to restrict access to the upper echelons of democracy to the very wealthy. How about a European model where campaign expenditure is restricted ?
Very few infrastructure projects are actual boondoggles. Even ones that are much maligned like the Big Dig were actually net benefits to their communities once finished.
I can really only name one complete boondoogle off the top of my head, The Bay Bridge East Span replacement. For the price we're paying we could have retrofited the existing one and built an entirely new bridge parallel to the old one. Of course when they started building it over ten years ago no one knew that steel and concrete would triple in price thanks to demand in China.
I just know that a lot of major government-funded projects here in the UK have resulted in huge overspends. The ones I have been involved with have suffered from
- Inadequate project management - although to be fair there are a handful of people in the UK who could manage projects on that scale
- Terrible requirements gathering and management - the equivalent of wanting the road bridge being built to also be a tidal power station, rail bridge and a habitat for the lesser spotted whatchamacallit
- Contactors taking the goverment for a ride, my former employer Accenture are experts at this, taking £millions doing exactly as they are asked and delivering nothing useful, exploiting the previous two points
I don't know about that. We have companies building space delivery systems using the amount of money that Boeing probably spends on styrofoam coffee cups in any given year.
But they haven't delivered because they don't have the financial muscle to finish the certification.
The Airbus 380 programme is estimated to have cost 11 Billion Euros before the first plane flew:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airbus_A380
You need HUGE companies to support this kind of investment. One of the reasons why Boeing can still compete globally is because military programmes help to subsidise commercial aircraft development.
As a European, I'd love to see the United States' aerospace industry broken up because Airbus (and hence UK based manufacturing jobs) would be given a huge advantage, or at least a level playing field .