Julio3000
<B>A Chip Off the Old Rock</B>
Why?
Because it's a gross oversimplification.
I assume you mean income? The US ranks 2nd in the world in PPP, trailing only Luxembourg. It may surprise you that the US is substantially larger than Luxembourg. The US destroys similarly sized countries in average income earnings
I meant, specifically, that pay was one thing notably absent from her list of things that a majority of workers were satisfied with. I mean, that seems like a pretty glaring absence.
I'm not really sure how PPP is relevant here. And, buddy, for someone who likes to denigrate others for lack of understanding of economics, you ought to know better than to use average income as a meaningful measure in this conversation.
Track worker incomes with worker productivity (and, for fun, throw in corporate profitability) for a few decades and see if you can't find something to chew on. Bottom line is--shouldn't we be doing better?
I don't think we have a capitalistic economy... and certainly, have gotten less so over the last few decades. But I will say that freer economies likes ours allow for unhealthy habits, and free markets allow for an enormous abundance of food and access to things that other countries don't enjoy.
So why do those numbers lag against other wealthy countries? Infant mortality, particularly. That's just one tiny corner of this question. Do the wealthy in America live longer than the poor? Shouldn't the technological advances and innovation in our relatively freer system lead to better outcomes compared to peer nations? Why don't they?
Maybe a bit of a hyperbole... but it's certainly not silly and really a testament to how far we have come. There's been lots of research on this topic, if you're open to reading about it
No, it's unequivocally silly. It's devoid of context and lacks any kind of relative grounding. And the further back you take it, the sillier it is.
I mean, it's unequivocally true that we have access to consumer goods and technologies that previous generations didn't. Sure. But try telling a debt-ridden working class person that they're better off than an aristocrat from 50 years ago because they have a supercomputer in their pocket and more than one television.