Entries Tagged 'Economics and Investing' ↓

Demise of the Rich American

If you have a yard full of orange trees, lemon trees, and lime trees, and the lemons and limes had all been picked, which fruit would be left?

Thanks to whatever group you care to name and blame, the “limes” and “lemons,” i.e., the middle classes and the poor, are fast losing ground in this century. Their demise began in the last century when capitalism began to take a global turn in earnest.

In this century we can expect to see continuing unemployment, cuts in programs for the poor, and wage decreases due to union-busting, the coming inflation, and pressure from the unemployed who increasingly will be cut off from unemployment compensation.

And there is an imminent threat to the rich too.

This week Columbia University economist Jeffrey Sachs wrote an article for the Financial Times titled, “Stop this race to the bottom on corporate tax“. Sachs points out that the dominance and mobility of global capitalism is pushing the US and other countries into a race for the bottom when it comes to corporate taxes and loopholes for taxes on the rich.

Says Sachs, “The problem [with this race to the bottom] is that both the US and UK are aiming to do the impossible: run a modern, high-technology, prosperous 21st-century knowledge economy without the requisite tax base…” Continue reading →

Why States Are in Trouble – Five Reasons

If you listen to MSNBC and FOX news on TV, you hear two very different stories about the state budgets. According to FOX, the states are in danger of bankruptcy. The situation is dire. We must DO SOMETHING NOW! According to MSNBC, at least when it comes to Wisconsin, Rachel Maddow and others will tell you that there is no state budget problem.

Who’s right? NEITHER!

(1) State pension funds followed banks into the same boat

Many state pension funds did the same thing that banks did. Continue reading →

Murdoch’s Media Lies Again… And Again. Let Me Count the Ways…

Were you “punk’d” by the Screaming Headline, Democrats to End Union Standoff in the Wall Street Journal on Monday March 7th, 2011?  I was, and surely I knew better. I’ve been watching how Murdoch’s Wall Street Journal spins the news for the past two years.

No, I don’t use the New York Times or Huffington Post as a reality check of the Journal. I use the Financial Times from London, England. The Financial Times often covers the same stories as the Wall Street Journal, but it does so quite differently. Let’s look at three cases in point.

WSJ‘s deception through the wording of headlines

Continue reading →