Re: Crisis 2011 – Part I: The Other Shoe - Eric Janszen
The obvious part is to take actions that result in increasing production within the US. Since production = wealth, that's the only long-term solution.
Exactly what those steps should be is less obvious, but still reasonably straightforward; the US needs to become more competitive. Why did companies move to China in the first place? It wasn't just GATT and cheap labor.
Specific suggestions:
1. Radically reduce regulation
2. Remove legislative support for unions (no forced bargaining, etc)
3. Abolish the minimum wage
4. Drastically reduce government spending
5. Cut and simplify income taxes (personal & corporate), on the road to eliminating them entirely
6. Decrease the true cost of capital by encouraging saving (first step: have interest & dividend income be tax-free)
7. Eliminate taxes on capital: capital gains tax, inheritance tax, gift tax, property tax, etc.
8. Sell as many government assets to private parties as possible (privatization)
9. Eliminate all subsidies and other forms of tax or financial support that have encouraged companies to move offshore
10. Strictly enforce laws against fraud of all kinds
11. Privatize the education system
I realize this sounds like a third-world "austerity" program of some kind -- and perhaps that's partly what it is.
Government alone is not going to solve the problem. The best thing they can do is to get out of the way, to allow innovators, entrepreneurs and risk-takers to do their thing.
BTW, note that I'm suggesting what I think should be done, not what I think will be done; they are two very different things. In fact, what probably will be done is close to the opposite of what I'm suggesting, at least in the near term.
Originally posted by Chris Coles
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Exactly what those steps should be is less obvious, but still reasonably straightforward; the US needs to become more competitive. Why did companies move to China in the first place? It wasn't just GATT and cheap labor.
Specific suggestions:
1. Radically reduce regulation
2. Remove legislative support for unions (no forced bargaining, etc)
3. Abolish the minimum wage
4. Drastically reduce government spending
5. Cut and simplify income taxes (personal & corporate), on the road to eliminating them entirely
6. Decrease the true cost of capital by encouraging saving (first step: have interest & dividend income be tax-free)
7. Eliminate taxes on capital: capital gains tax, inheritance tax, gift tax, property tax, etc.
8. Sell as many government assets to private parties as possible (privatization)
9. Eliminate all subsidies and other forms of tax or financial support that have encouraged companies to move offshore
10. Strictly enforce laws against fraud of all kinds
11. Privatize the education system
I realize this sounds like a third-world "austerity" program of some kind -- and perhaps that's partly what it is.
Government alone is not going to solve the problem. The best thing they can do is to get out of the way, to allow innovators, entrepreneurs and risk-takers to do their thing.
BTW, note that I'm suggesting what I think should be done, not what I think will be done; they are two very different things. In fact, what probably will be done is close to the opposite of what I'm suggesting, at least in the near term.
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