If business isn't going to give wages, hire people and invest, how do they expect growth in their business?
Corps sitting on record cash - S&P 500 holding $1.5 TRILLION
It may be coincidence but yet again I'm seeing the largest customers for the company I work for delaying projects until "beginning of next year". yes, this happens every year but it seems like it plays out more-so during election years. Too much volatility and this year we have the fiscal cliff issue.
It may be coincidence but yet again I'm seeing the largest customers for the company I work for delaying projects until "beginning of next year". yes, this happens every year but it seems like it plays out more-so during election years. Too much volatility and this year we have the fiscal cliff issue.
Didn't Japan have an economic slowdown because there was not enough investment?lol @ "saving money is part of the problem" seriously? Maybe it's not part of the problem, maybe your understanding of how things work is the problem. Saving is a good thing, it's called thinking about the fucking future.
Didn't Japan have an economic slowdown because there was not enough investment?
If only a small fraction of families followed this example...
Most of the refineries are putting off maintenance, upgrades, and new project off until next year as well.
To which they should be held criminally liable.
Start putting the thugs in jail when their lack of proper maintenance cause the next fire and excuse for skyrocketing prices despite the fact gasoline os the number one export of the United States then watch how fast proper maintenance is done.
Seems also that investor are getting riled up over the fact that so much cash is being built up and not invested or given back in dividends.
The only way this is going to be solved is to use a combination of flat taxes and caps.
Income tax, 10% across the board, income cap at 1mil per year.
Property tax, 10% across the board, property cap at 100mil total assets. Anything over is taxed 100% value.
Sales tax, 10% across the board.
So then you're taxing earnings, ownership, and purchases. Those who have a lot, pay the most, those who have little, pay almost nothing.
I think this is where the problem is between the 2 parties.
We keep fighting about the wrong problem. One side says the rich doesn't pay enough, because they're rich, and even if they pay a lot, the rich is still rich and the poor is still poor. So they should pay even more to balance that out. The other side says the rich earned their wealth, they are already paying the most, if they keep having to pay more then they lose their incentive to be rich in this country and they will go elsewhere, leaving the poor to fend for themselves.
Sure both sides are valid. Its a conundrum.
So we just keep fighting by looking at the problem the same way, arguing over the exact same solutions over and over until we get nowhere.
So think outside the box. What else could we do that solves this?
I think the rich should have their incentive to become and stay rich. They succeed, they develop a standard of living, they are rewarded for their hard and strategic efforts. I think the poor need help. They just can't dig themselves out of it. Their education is lacking, there isn't much opportunity, they're stuck.
Let the less than rich want to get rich. Let them be rich. But don't let them HOARD the wealth. That's the problem. Once their wealth reaches that magnitude, its like a black hole, sucking in more wealth. In a company they could be making millions of dollars just in income, while the average staff member is making hardly anything. Then, as they have far surpassed what they need to maintain their standard of living, the wealth is tied up in various ways. We need that to be limited so they are forced to keep the wealth moving in the market. If we reduce the span between first quartile and third quartile of average wealth, I think everyone in general will be happier, still get their fair share, and keep the economy and government in a healthy state.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/companies-sitting-more-cash-ever-182240351.html
Seems like the fiscal cliff is the biggest blame. Seems also that investor are getting riled up over the fact that so much cash is being built up and not invested or given back in dividends.
If business isn't going to give wages, hire people and invest, how do they expect growth in their business?
It's a vicious cycle.