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Doesn't the caldor's employee deserve equal consideration as the US Steel employee? |
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They keep the currency pegged to the dollar. It does not float on the free market. The kinds of mechanisms that you identify are relevant only to a currency that floats, not to one that is pegged. In other words, you don't know what you are talking about. Quote:
And, yes, the US consumer would suffer. But why should we protect the "right" to buy a $30 DVD player from the effects of the free market (free market including a free currency market), any more than we should protect US jobs? I disagree with Ty's view about the need to protect people from the effect of the free market. But I don't think cheap consumer prices have any greater standing. |
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If artificially low costs driven by government policies are the issue, I disagree. Did every Repub on this board suddenly turn into a quasi-Communist? It's hard to understand why else you would all so admire Chinese monetary policy. |
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I'm not particularly concerned with who owns which company, unless a company owned by the Chinese military is buying IBM or something like that, and I'm not particulary concerned with protecting inefficient American companies, unless you're talking about getting rid of the traditional licensing and consumer-protection functions of state bar associations. |
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Socialism for the consumer, capitalism for the worker. |
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Once the US consumer madt this decision the "US worker wage premium" died. It was Joe Six Pack who killed Joe Sixpack- not Roger Smith. Ty- are you proposing tariffs on everything coming into the country so we can maintain the high wage jobs? I posted this 4 or 5 times now- they don't answer because they can't. |
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I am not proposing tariffs to make imports more expensive. I am proposing not engaging in "free trade" with countries that use government policies to reduce prices on exports -- whether that be dumping, unfair subsidies, or refusal to float currency despite a reasonably developed economy. I can answer, and did. Now, can you answer my question: If, say, France gave a 30% subsidy to every French company on all products exported to the US, and imposed a 30% tariff on all products imported from the US, would you say "Great! That benefits the US consumer! It makes wine cheaper, and think of all the jobs that we'll create with all that extra disposable income!"? |
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And if you're going to do things that benefit the country on the whole, but hurt certain populations, I think the government should be working to ameliorate the hit on those people. |
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