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Terrible idea, there shouldn't even be a minimum wage. Free market bitches
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Terrible idea, there shouldn't even be a minimum wage. Free market bitches
Terrible idea, there shouldn't even be a minimum wage. Free market bitches
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You want to know why the developed world enjoys the benefits of capitalism? Because it's been exploiting the rest of the world for centuries, even pre-capitalist days.
Dependancy and World Systems Theory - Gunder Frank
Here's a left-field idea. Rather than taxing the super-rich more (which I don't disagree with, by the way), how about ensuring that the lowest paid worker within a company must be paid a set percentage (per hour based on a 40-hour week) of the highest paid (i.e. CEO). That way, if the CEO wants to pay themselves a ridiculously high salary, they have to increase the amount they pay their employees. It could be extended to executive payouts - all employees would have to receive a lump sum representing a % of any payout given to board members as a golden handshake.
Probably too difficult to enact in practice, but it would make for a fairer distribution of wealth within an organisation based on labour provided.
I dont think anyone in Australia necessarily deserves more than 500G a year, whatever the job. But I dont cry about it either, if Gina has all that money, well I guess she earnt it.
I'm fine with this as long as we also disband the police force, defence force etc as well.
Then I can just literally steal from the rich, instead of wanting to just tax them a bit more.
Without buying into the lefty/righty argument, can the rich then shoot you in the face while you're trying to do that because they can actually afford a proper weapon, then just leave you in the gutter for the slaves they employ to wash you down the gutter?
But then, judging by your posts, you're a sub 50k earner who watches a lot of ACA and reads a Murdoch rag. You fight on behalf of the super-rich because you're stupid enough to think you'll be one of them one day.
Very little. The point I'm making is that free university education, whilst it sounds good, is regressive. In order to pay for it, you need to tax higher, and that tax is borne (directly or indirectly) by all in society, including those at the bottom of the socio-economic ladder. There have been numerous studies into tertiary education funding, looking at public and private benefits, and there are substantial public benefits, which is why it is largely government funded (a domestic student pays roughly 30% of the cost, deferred to HECS, the rest is paid by the government), however there are also large private benefits (the 10-12% I mentioned earlier), making university education a massive private gain in NPV terms.What would happen to our current skilled workers if we made education free? Not sure what point you're trying to make.
On the topic of university education, in particular free education. Free university is not all it is cracked up to be. Simply put, it is one of the most regressive policies available to a government, as it results in unskilled workers subsidising those with a tertiary education (who earn a premium of around 10-12% on those who only finish high school in Australia).
The biggest driving force behind the Celtic Tiger was debt, and lax lending.it works extremely well in ireland. after sustained decades of investment in education, which included three free years of university education for everyone, it was seen as one of the driving forces behind the celtic tiger which resulted in a highly skilled workforce.
Very little. The point I'm making is that free university education, whilst it sounds good, is regressive. In order to pay for it, you need to tax higher, and that tax is borne (directly or indirectly) by all in society, including those at the bottom of the socio-economic ladder. There have been numerous studies into tertiary education funding, looking at public and private benefits, and there are substantial public benefits, which is why it is largely government funded (a domestic student pays roughly 30% of the cost, deferred to HECS, the rest is paid by the government), however there are also large private benefits (the 10-12% I mentioned earlier), making university education a massive private gain in NPV terms.
In a simple analogy, free university education results in McDonalds workers paying for lawyers to go to uni.