markg wrote:
Cavey wrote:
<Sigh>
I'd love to know where I said trickle down economics yields an "ideal society", or anything like it. Now that is indeed 'fucking mental'; not so much putting words into my mouth, but an entire fucking novel.
Anyway, enough, this road leads to madness. Sadly I've enough to worry about now, without frustrating and futile distractions.
As incredible as you might find it my post wasn't meant solely for you. It was more a comment on the road we seem to be on with less and less government.
Sorry, I thought we were having a discussion; your previous post to this one was very much directed at me, sorry I'm sure! Besides which, I'd love to know who these 'other' people are who think trickle down economics yields an ideal society; I've never even heard the most hardened, unreformed Thatcherite (or indeed Thatcher herself) make such a ludicrous claim.
As for less and less 'government', well, you'll note Kishore Mahbubani's view, (Dean of the Lee Kuan Yew School of
Public Policy at the National University of Singapore), in that piece I posted earlier:
'...The reason for Asia's success is through implementation of important reforms - free-market economics, meritocracy, rule of law and others - and these reforms do much to raise the living standards in Asia, Mahbubani wrote. "In China, for example, since initiating market reforms, more than 600 million people have been rescued from absolute poverty," ...'Note 'free market' and 'meritocracy' - the very antithesis of 'government' in the context you're referring to - and the direct, measurable, empirically demonstrable 'seismic shift' creation of 600,000,000 new middle class in just a few short years (with super-low levels of regulation, welfare, taxation, health & safety, employment rights, environmental controls, employment and wage controls, unionisation etc all unthinkable in the UK), set to rise to a "lucky few" of 1,750,000,000 in the next 5 years? Still, what does the likes of him know.
Well, personally speaking, I have to say I tend to give the likes of his opinions in these matters rather more weight than frothings on the internet that were demonstrably outmoded at the close of the 1970s, although if I say so myself, I've been saying this same basic stuff for the last 20 years, including the last 10 on this very forum and WoS preceding it.
This is not to say, of course, that I wouldn't want to see a beautiful, utopian, perfect society as much as the next man - but I know, as a grownup, that given basic, immutable human nature, it ain't gonna happen. So then, rather than rail uselessly and impotently against these traits (e.g. Socialism), causing great harm through unintended consequences in the process, I recognise the need for politics/policy that not only acknowledge this reality, but actually tries to harness it, and turn it to the advantage of as many people as possible - precisely via the 'trickle down effect' and a whole host of other stuff besides, most notably increased economic activity, efficiency and productivity. (Most especially those who are prepared to work hard, even if for the *entirely selfish* reasons of wanting to improve relative to their peers, yearning for the best for them and their families, to have as much of their own money that they have earned in their hand as possible and/or the latest car or other consumer goods).
_________________
Beware of gavia articulata oculos...
Dr Lave wrote:
Of course, he's normally wrong but
interestingly wrong