anarchei:

Minimum Wage Business Realities

Why do some employers favor a raise in the minimum wage? Profit per employee plays a major role.

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Costco is doing what Amazon just did, trying to play an ignorant public to help make the market more hostile for their own competitors. 

Costco would love for the minimum wage to go up to a point that’s higher than the average starting pay of their competitors but below the starting pay at Costco. It has zero impact on Costco’s business model but will severely hurt the bottom line of others, like Walmart or Target.

Costco plays this off as if they are trying to help the people, in reality, they are aiming to hurt or even shutdown their competition, and they want to do this not through better business models but through legislation that comes from misguided economical theory based solely on emotions. 

Amazon did the same thing when it lobbied for an internet sales tax. Many people thought that, “Oh, it must be a legitimate tax if the biggest online retailer is lobbying for it!”. What these people didn’t realize is that Amazon is building local warehouses and would now have to pay local and state sales tax and they wanted the government to levy an Internet Sales Tax so that they could ensure that their competition, who don’t have local warehouses, would have to pay taxes just like Amazon. 

No one is better at playing politics than the CEOs of giant corporations. Always remember that and take what they say with a cargo container of salt. 

The Truth about Savings and Consumption

We regularly hear how important consumer spending is for the economy. The story goes like this: the more consumers spend, the more money circulates in the economy, which stimulates healthy job growth and profits. If people could be encouraged to go out and spend a little more of their paycheck, we’d all be better off.

Keynes went as far as to say that individuals saving their money may actually be hurting the economy, as saving reduces “aggregate demand” and therefore company revenue. Sounds troubling, doesn’t it?

Fear not. You aren’t actually hurting anyone by filling up your piggy bank. In fact, savings help the economy, as they make lending to productive entrepreneurs possible. The consumption that we enjoy is only made possible by prior production.

And that production is only made possible by savings.

For more resources about the economics of saving versus consuming, visit http://www.fee.org/the_freeman/detail/savings-fuel-for-an-economic-engine#axzz2SdcFUHti

Buying a Ferrari isn’t progress. Buying a better Ferrari is progress. 

Keynes died and left us with his long-run. — Murray Rothbard (via eltigrechico)

(via learnliberty)

Cotton Wars - NPR’s Planet Money

Did you know that the US Cotton industry gets the US taxpayers to subsidies all of their cotton so that their prices can stay competitive with the global market price? 

But that’s not enough because Brazil sued the US Cotton Industry and won. So the US Cotton Industry lobbied the Obama Administration and Clinton’s State Department and got them to pay the Brazilian Cotton Industry a $150 million dollars a year in subsidies so Brazil will look the other way. 

Doesn’t make sense? It shouldn’t, yet this is how the US agriculture industry works when it has to run on subsidies. 

Brazil now waits, smartly, while they collect our money. I assume they are just waiting for our government to go bust so they can go on growing cheap, coveted cotton and lead the industry. 

Paying workers to dig holes with spoons and fill them back in with forks and calling that productivity.

ArtistNPR - planet Money
TitleCotton Wars
What protectionism teaches us, is to do to ourselves in time of peace what enemies seek to do to us in time of war. — Henry George on Economic Protectionism through Legislation. 
Tariffs: restrictions placed on the importation of foreign goods for the protection of domestic producers, so as to enhance their profitability thus enabling them to pay the taxes necessary for the support of foreign aid programs which provide assistance to those nations which cannot sell their goods in this country. Butler Shaffer (via conza)

(via conza)

lalibertarienne:

crockadialtears:

dudeistlibertarian:

policygal:

The brilliant Dr. Sowell. This ain’t rocket science. 

I do love Thomas Sowell

And yet, we’re supposed to believe that free market economics isn’t a zero-sum game? {obnoxious laugh}

It’s fallacy to believe the economy is a zero-sum game. Thomas Sowell himself said:

The economy is not a zero-sum game where someone gains what others lose. The whole economy can lose when ill-considered policies gain political popularity and stifle economic growth.

Here is a better explanation from Freeman Online

What Adam Smith perceived, essentially, was first that “wealth” was not something static and given like gold, or, indeed, poker chips, but rather consisted of goods and services that could be created, and second that both parties to an economic exchange could improve their respective situations. This second perception is sharpened if we take seriously the truth ignored by those committing the fallacy of misplaced cost, namely, that the value of an economic good is not a mysterious quality somehow residing in the good but a relationship between an appraising mind and some object appraised.
If, in the absence of coercion, two individuals exchange goods or services, it can be only because each party to the exchange values, at least at the time of the exchange, what is obtained more than what is surrendered. Each anticipates enjoying a more valued situation by making the exchange than obtained before making the ex change. There are two winners, not one. This is a positive-sum, rather than a gem-sum game.

lalibertarienne:

crockadialtears:

dudeistlibertarian:

policygal:

The brilliant Dr. Sowell. This ain’t rocket science. 

I do love Thomas Sowell

And yet, we’re supposed to believe that free market economics isn’t a zero-sum game? {obnoxious laugh}

It’s fallacy to believe the economy is a zero-sum game. Thomas Sowell himself said:

The economy is not a zero-sum game where someone gains what others lose. The whole economy can lose when ill-considered policies gain political popularity and stifle economic growth.

Here is a better explanation from Freeman Online

What Adam Smith perceived, essentially, was first that “wealth” was not something static and given like gold, or, indeed, poker chips, but rather consisted of goods and services that could be created, and second that both parties to an economic exchange could improve their respective situations. This second perception is sharpened if we take seriously the truth ignored by those committing the fallacy of misplaced cost, namely, that the value of an economic good is not a mysterious quality somehow residing in the good but a relationship between an appraising mind and some object appraised.

If, in the absence of coercion, two individuals exchange goods or services, it can be only because each party to the exchange values, at least at the time of the exchange, what is obtained more than what is surrendered. Each anticipates enjoying a more valued situation by making the exchange than obtained before making the ex change. There are two winners, not one. This is a positive-sum, rather than a gem-sum game.

Erik Brynjolfsson: The key to growth? Race with the machines.

Are machines taking our jobs? Sure. While this scares some ignorant politicians, it’s actually a good thing. Automation doesn’t mean that we will become obsolete or that we won’t have new ways to make a living. We need to embrace automation, not fear it. The better the machines, the more productive and better off we are… if we choose to be.

Further reading: “The Curse of Machinery” by Henry Hazlitt.

priceofliberty:

sugashane:

People who like the gold standard, how do you feel about asteroid mining? What happens when we bring 100,000 tons of gold and silver back from a space rock? What if we just bring 1,000 tons? Does this ruin the scarcity argument? 

Serious questions.

Ahahah I was JUST talking about this yesterday. It wouldn’t happen that they “just bring back 100,000 tons” of processed ore.

Suppose commercial asteroid mining DOES take off (lol) in the next few decades. How many companies and distinct crews do you think will actually be among the first wave of space prospectors? Honestly even today a space shuttle launch is still “a big deal” - the average citizen is still a little a mystified over what is perceived to be a relatively momentous occasion; space travel hasn’t become much of a way of life yet. Most of our launch-related action has to do with unmanned satellites, and even our manned crews still orbit the planet.

So my guess is that the first extraplanetary flights will also be lauded as a pretty big deal, especially if they’re done commercially (i.e., privately). I’d go so far as to say that the crews would even be seen as celebrities, having their fame in the media before the “fateful” journey to find new worlds (asteroids) ripe for the picking. The journey would take months, if not years, and don’t forget they’re still only strapped to an explosive propulsion system hurling them through space toward a destination of nothing but massive rocks - better hope they stick the landing!

I think you addressed it with the second point, “what if we just bring 1,000” tons? I think this would be the more likely scenario. The first (possibly only) commercial crew finally returns home safely and with cargo. I don’t think anyone is coming back with a massive heap of gold. But it could play out in so many different ways;

First we could see another ‘49 Gold Rush - the tiny specks of gold found in the initial cargo (even 100 tons) would be enough, I think, to provide incentive to the rest of the private space industry. Companies which previously manufacture launching rockets might consider expanding into the manned-flight sector (I am literally talking out of my ass because I why wouldn’t these industries be merged to begin with, I am just trying to illustrate a picture of industrial expansion, really). New companies would form up; seeing this gold - everyone would want a piece of what’s out there. You’d see it all over the media, stargazers and dreamy-eyed prospectors and entrepreneurs … everyone would want to go to the asteroid belt. The wealth coming back would trickle down immensely, as the booming space-faring industry would be competing to create the best, fastest, most efficient cargo and mining vessels. Leaps and bounds made in science and technology just to fuel the passion for gold.

Of course…the other thing which might happen: the Spanish Empire experienced similar circumstances when they visited the Americas. They were bringing back so much gold that they eventually destroyed their economy. It’s possible that we could see the same here. But as you already pointed out it’s definitely going to hinge on: how much and over how long. Bringing back the wealth won’t be a problem, creating wealth never is. But concentration of all that wealth invariably leads to economic disaster through devaluation. I’m excited though; I don’t think we’d see a Spanish collapse. I think the rise of the space-faring industry would create such an economic boom world-wide, that humanity would enter into a new Golden Age of wealth and prosperity. Like the industrial revolution with modern medicine times 100.  

I think my overall point is that it’s stupid to think that gold is ultra-scarce or that it can’t be debased or is safe from supply inflation and value loss. 

To address your other points, I think the main focus will be on bringing the rock into our orbit and leaving it there so it will be only a day or two away from Earth and smaller quantities would be mined and then that particular asteroid would be released once it’s been exhausted and we’ll wait for the next one. 

Here’s a decent interview with Neil deGrasse Tyson and Peter Diamandis (X-Prize and http://www.planetaryresources.com/) on Asteroid mining. They discuss the science and even the economics of such endeavors. 

Click: http://www.startalkradio.net/show/eureka-asteroid-mining/

Personally, I don’t care what our money is made, so long as it’s safe from debasement and functions as a global facilitator of trade.