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In reply to the discussion: Why I defend NAFTA on DU, in four charts [View all]4Q2u2
(1,406 posts)106. But their worth has nothing to do with destructive ability
Size of these degenerate behemoths is the problem not their worth. Job losses due to these mergers will probably never again be realized, but one of the main reasons for that stank ridden bailout was, "Too Big to Fail". Well make them smaller and stay out of the tax coffers.
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What? You aren't overly-impressed with a power-point oblique Rah-Rah for TPP? nt
99th_Monkey
Jan 2015
#5
I'm "meh" on the TPP because I think we've already picked the low-hanging fruit there
Recursion
Jan 2015
#10
If we are doing something BLINDLY since no one but the 600 Corporations have been
sabrina 1
Jan 2015
#29
Please consider this observation to counter this utter bullshit on NAFTA...
MrMickeysMom
Jan 2015
#123
So, am I wrong that unemployment went down, while median wages went up? (nt)
Recursion
Jan 2015
#124
"We had already been loosing the manufacturing industries by then late 1980's. NAFTA and GATT
pampango
Jan 2015
#168
"We have actually been losing manufacturing jobs since the since the late 1970's"
NewDeal_Dem
Jan 2015
#212
I'm not sure what you mean by 'appear to' peak. These are BLS statistics, so I guess it -did-
NewDeal_Dem
Jan 2015
#237
Reagan expanded the Carter administration's efforts to decontrol and deregulate the economy.
NewDeal_Dem
Jan 2015
#289
"Diversified" in inputs or outputs? Because as you point out most of the inputs are going away
Recursion
Jan 2015
#14
The VAT works very well in Germany and Austria. They fund all sorts of socially positive programs
JDPriestly
Jan 2015
#230
One of the reasons I oppose the trade agreements is that we have no strategy here in America
JDPriestly
Jan 2015
#232
there's no surplus value in robots. also, the corporate tax rate in germany is about 30%.
NewDeal_Dem
Jan 2015
#290
Why do we a trade deficit while Germany with stronger unions and similar wages has a trade surplus?
pampango
Jan 2015
#67
I was responding to a post about our "our horrible, horrendous, awful, spectacularly outrageous
pampango
Jan 2015
#145
I would like to think we could learn, but the basic philosophy of so many in our country is
JDPriestly
Jan 2015
#280
Manufacturing -is- magical, and it's because of manufacturing that we employ fewer farmhands today.
NewDeal_Dem
Jan 2015
#214
Our very large corporations, banks and farming enterprises need to be broken up.
JDPriestly
Jan 2015
#55
If the charts are not directly related to NAFTA, then why use these charts to defend it?
arcane1
Jan 2015
#157
Charts on wages, employment and family income are not relevant to debate on NAFTA?
pampango
Jan 2015
#170
Relevance is a different story. The OP said these charts are not directly related to NAFTA.
arcane1
Jan 2015
#173
Indeed, they are only reflective of the wages, employment levels and family incomes after NAFTA.
pampango
Jan 2015
#175
NAFTA would have worked a lot better if we had not simultaneously pushed MFN status for China
Algernon Moncrieff
Jan 2015
#21
So if NAFTA's destructive tendencies and it's positive contributions cancel each other out...
bluesbassman
Jan 2015
#50
Excellent point. It was the internet bubble which delayed the effects of NAFTA
still_one
Jan 2015
#131
So the technology boom caused manufacturing jobs and wages to increase during Clinton's time.
pampango
Jan 2015
#201
David Simon is also puzzingly convinced that the War on Drugs isn't a racial issue
Recursion
Jan 2015
#88
Right, but they prove it's impossible that NAFTA caused either job losses or wage decreases
Recursion
Jan 2015
#37
You mean "fewer", and I'm not talking about the last 60 years, I'm talking about the last 20.
Spider Jerusalem
Jan 2015
#47
Well, no. Factories had the option of automating or moving to Mexico and then to China
Recursion
Jan 2015
#48
That's massively increasing their living standards from what they were, don't forget that part.
Donald Ian Rankin
Jan 2015
#178
The bottom 75% did get richer. Is that worth nothing to a liberal? Or is it, "If I'm not richer,
pampango
Jan 2015
#196
AFAIK, for people to go from $1/hour to $15/hour they have to go through $2/hr, $5/hr and so on.
pampango
Jan 2015
#286
I hope DU gets tired of calling Recursion a right-winger, when they're obviously not.
Donald Ian Rankin
Jan 2015
#177
Don't you just hate charts? And people who don't agree you about everything? n/t
pampango
Jan 2015
#197
Before trying to grammar pedant, make sure you understand basic grammar.
Donald Ian Rankin
Jan 2015
#295
One should probably read the link before asserting that it proves one's case. n/t
Gormy Cuss
Jan 2015
#296
The National Alliance for Protecting the People's Food and Health is not impressed
Art_from_Ark
Jan 2015
#250
Krugman’s over-confident answers to his own questions proved to be mostly wrong...
MrMickeysMom
Jan 2015
#142
Interesting article, but it assumes that its readers agree on some underlying assumptions
bhikkhu
Jan 2015
#218
You forgot: Manufacturing employment grew after NAFTA until Bush; Democrats are more pro-trade than
pampango
Jan 2015
#65
So when a really good position is presented on something few know much about look at the recs to
kelliekat44
Jan 2015
#68
So, umm... what's funny about that? I missed my grandfather's funeral because I was stationed here
Recursion
Jan 2015
#80
I'll have to wait for "a really good position" to be presented to answer that.
MrMickeysMom
Jan 2015
#143
Yes, thanks. I did so after reading this post. Mostly the usual suspects.
closeupready
Jan 2015
#138
He's right. We really need to stop fighting the last war. NAFTA delivered what was promised.
Recursion
Jan 2015
#87
Thanks to NAFTA, Indiana lost it last remaining bio degradable cellophane factory
B Calm
Jan 2015
#100
Those tax cuts were suppose to make them more competitive in the NAFTA marketplace, LOL.
B Calm
Jan 2015
#114
Yes! Glad you remember...seems like all this is being shoved down the rabbit hole.
Lars39
Jan 2015
#121
Or rickety tables for a permanent yard sale-flea market on an empty lot on Main Street...
Lars39
Jan 2015
#198
In other words, rigorous statistical data or anecdotal evidence? N.T.
Donald Ian Rankin
Jan 2015
#179
Because they're what's important: do people have jobs, and are those jobs making money for them?
Recursion
Jan 2015
#238
WRT your final paragraph, NAFTA may have been a 'good idea,' but labor
KingCharlemagne
Jan 2015
#158
How much of that do you think is attributable to NAFTA, vs other things that happened at the time?
DanTex
Jan 2015
#166
Tell me, why the need to relentlessly push right wing points of view here?
LondonReign2
Jan 2015
#182
Well said. "we'll never get into the necessary policy discussions as long as the MSM leads with
pampango
Jan 2015
#256
Nobody claims that the economic gains of the Clinton era are "proof" that NAFTA was a disaster.
DanTex
Jan 2015
#264
NAFTA did not 'destroy manufacturing jobs in the US' while Clinton was in office. Then
pampango
Jan 2015
#269