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Economy
In reply to the discussion: Weekend Economists: Spock Lives! March 6-8, 2015 [View all]Demeter
(85,373 posts)3. Robert Reich: How the Next Democratic Nominee Could Rescue America MANIFESTO!
http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/robert-reich-how-next-democratic-nominee-could-rescue-america?akid=12847.227380.ZoMS4V&rd=1&src=newsletter1032773&t=12
Its seed time for the 2016 presidential elections, when candidates try to figure out what they stand for and will run on. One thing seems reasonably clear. The Democratic nominee for president, whoever she may be, will campaign on reviving the American middle class. As will the Republican nominee, although the Republican nominees solution will almost certainly be warmed-over versions of George W. Bushs ownership society and Mitt Romneys opportunity society, both seeking to unleash the middle classs entrepreneurial energies by reducing taxes and regulations. Thats pretty much what weve heard from Republican hopefuls so far. As before, it will get us nowhere.
The Democratic nominee will just as surely call for easing the burdens on working parents through paid sick leave and paid family and medical leave, childcare, elder-care, a higher minimum wage, and perhaps also tax incentives for companies that share some of their profits with their employees. All this is fine, but it wont accomplish whats really needed. The big unknown is whether the Democratic nominee will also take on the moneyed interests the large Wall Street banks, big corporations, and richest Americans which have been responsible for the largest upward redistribution of income and wealth in modern American history...
(since the crash of 2008) the Street has been back to many of its old tricks. Its lobbyists are also busily rolling back the Dodd-Frank Act intended to prevent another crash. The Democratic candidate could condemn this, and go further, promising to resurrect the Glass-Steagall Act, once separating investment from commercial banking (until the Clinton administration joined with Republicans in repealing it in 1999). The candidate could also call for busting up Wall Streets biggest banks and thereafter limiting their size; imposing jail sentences on top executives who break the law; cracking down on insider trading; and, for good measure, enacting a small tax on all financial transactions in order to reduce speculation.
Another part of Americas upward redistribution has come in the form of corporate welfare, tax breaks and subsidies benefiting particular companies and industries (oil and gas, hedge-fund and private-equity, pharmaceuticals, big agriculture) for no other reason than they have the political clout to get them. Its also come in the guise of patents and trademarks that extend far beyond whats necessary for adequate returns on corporate investment, resulting, for example, in drug prices that are higher in America than in any other advanced nation. Its taken the form of monopoly power, generating outsize profits for certain companies (Monsanto, Pfizer, Comcast) along with high prices for consumers. And its come in the form of trade agreements that have greased the way for outsourcing American jobs abroad, thereby exerting downward pressure on American wages.
Not surprisingly, corporate profits now account for a largest percent of the total economy than they have in more than eight decades; and wages, the smallest percent in more than six. The candidate could demand an end to corporate welfare and excessive intellectual property protection, along with tougher antitrust enforcement against giant firms with unwarranted market power. And an end to trade agreements that take a big toll on wages of working-class Americans. The candidate could also propose true tax reform: higher corporate taxes, in order to finance investments in education and infrastructure; ending all deductions of executive pay in excess of $1 million; and cracking down on corporations that shift profits to countries with lower taxes. She (or he) could likewise demand higher taxes on Americas billionaires and multimillionaires, who have never been as wealthy, or taken home as high a percent of the nations total income and wealth, in order to finance an expanded Earned Income Tax Credit (a wage subsidy for low-income workers). Not the least, taking on the moneyed interests would necessitate limiting their future political power. Here, the candidate could promise to appoint Supreme Court justices committed to reversing Citizens United, push for public financing of elections, and demand full disclosure of all private sources of campaign funding.
THE ONLY THING ROBERT REICH FORGOT IS PUTTING AN END TO ENDLESS WAR...
Its seed time for the 2016 presidential elections, when candidates try to figure out what they stand for and will run on. One thing seems reasonably clear. The Democratic nominee for president, whoever she may be, will campaign on reviving the American middle class. As will the Republican nominee, although the Republican nominees solution will almost certainly be warmed-over versions of George W. Bushs ownership society and Mitt Romneys opportunity society, both seeking to unleash the middle classs entrepreneurial energies by reducing taxes and regulations. Thats pretty much what weve heard from Republican hopefuls so far. As before, it will get us nowhere.
The Democratic nominee will just as surely call for easing the burdens on working parents through paid sick leave and paid family and medical leave, childcare, elder-care, a higher minimum wage, and perhaps also tax incentives for companies that share some of their profits with their employees. All this is fine, but it wont accomplish whats really needed. The big unknown is whether the Democratic nominee will also take on the moneyed interests the large Wall Street banks, big corporations, and richest Americans which have been responsible for the largest upward redistribution of income and wealth in modern American history...
(since the crash of 2008) the Street has been back to many of its old tricks. Its lobbyists are also busily rolling back the Dodd-Frank Act intended to prevent another crash. The Democratic candidate could condemn this, and go further, promising to resurrect the Glass-Steagall Act, once separating investment from commercial banking (until the Clinton administration joined with Republicans in repealing it in 1999). The candidate could also call for busting up Wall Streets biggest banks and thereafter limiting their size; imposing jail sentences on top executives who break the law; cracking down on insider trading; and, for good measure, enacting a small tax on all financial transactions in order to reduce speculation.
Another part of Americas upward redistribution has come in the form of corporate welfare, tax breaks and subsidies benefiting particular companies and industries (oil and gas, hedge-fund and private-equity, pharmaceuticals, big agriculture) for no other reason than they have the political clout to get them. Its also come in the guise of patents and trademarks that extend far beyond whats necessary for adequate returns on corporate investment, resulting, for example, in drug prices that are higher in America than in any other advanced nation. Its taken the form of monopoly power, generating outsize profits for certain companies (Monsanto, Pfizer, Comcast) along with high prices for consumers. And its come in the form of trade agreements that have greased the way for outsourcing American jobs abroad, thereby exerting downward pressure on American wages.
Not surprisingly, corporate profits now account for a largest percent of the total economy than they have in more than eight decades; and wages, the smallest percent in more than six. The candidate could demand an end to corporate welfare and excessive intellectual property protection, along with tougher antitrust enforcement against giant firms with unwarranted market power. And an end to trade agreements that take a big toll on wages of working-class Americans. The candidate could also propose true tax reform: higher corporate taxes, in order to finance investments in education and infrastructure; ending all deductions of executive pay in excess of $1 million; and cracking down on corporations that shift profits to countries with lower taxes. She (or he) could likewise demand higher taxes on Americas billionaires and multimillionaires, who have never been as wealthy, or taken home as high a percent of the nations total income and wealth, in order to finance an expanded Earned Income Tax Credit (a wage subsidy for low-income workers). Not the least, taking on the moneyed interests would necessitate limiting their future political power. Here, the candidate could promise to appoint Supreme Court justices committed to reversing Citizens United, push for public financing of elections, and demand full disclosure of all private sources of campaign funding.
THE ONLY THING ROBERT REICH FORGOT IS PUTTING AN END TO ENDLESS WAR...
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Borrow or buy the Remastered Original Series and the 6 Original films and watch!
Demeter
Mar 2015
#15
QE Inventor: It’s EASY to Create Full-Blown Recovery, But Central Banks Chose to Make Banksters Rich
Demeter
Mar 2015
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It probably shouldn't surprise anyone that McCain would be posing with this guy.
MattSh
Mar 2015
#21
Real Life Calls. At least, it's almost up to freezing here! Things could be worse.
Demeter
Mar 2015
#44
they must have had to turn over an entire graveyard to come up with all those slugs
Demeter
Mar 2015
#50
I'm thinking any bankster's words are hollow at this point, what is ten times worst than no other
mother earth
Mar 2015
#63
It is all very much still a work in progress, and like us here, Europe must realize what happens
mother earth
Mar 2015
#64
Everyone is suffering from the same disease. Remember Ross Perot & the giant sucking sound?
mother earth
Mar 2015
#62