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Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0

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Re: Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0

Pretty entertaining that the Plutocrats now have managed to convince the planet that Health Care Inflation isn't an increase in ones cost of living.

What a world.

Relative cost of living to all of the other expenses, not necessarily, assuming that all other costs inflate by a relative percentage. Nominal cost, of course it's an increase. They've been pushing for inflation since the creation of the Federal Reserve, all in an effort to encourage the movement of wealth. People are starting to become wise to it, so now the manipulation starts to try to dumb down the people again.

Of course, there are some of us that are used to a rising cost of living by not increasing revenues or deductions, such as how NYS's income tax standard deduction didn't increase for 20 years. :mad:
 
Re: Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0

When publicity leads to bad outcomes

NBCWashington ‏@nbcwashington 8pm ET
DEVELOPING: Nevada orders fantasy sports sites like DraftKings and FanDuel to shut down http://nbc4dc.com/vV63Pi3
 
Re: Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0

As if that's not a rather obvious kowtow to the gaming lobby...

Yes, but that doesn't soften the point Nevada has with regards to their state laws. The sites are clearly gaming/gambling sites - turn $35 into $2,000,000 by winning your bracket(s) is what I keep seeing on that one commercial. If that's not the working definition of gambling, then I don't know what is.
 
Re: Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0

Excellent article on ways to address income inequality based on some pioneering research.

[A] 36-year-old India-born economist [Raj Chetty] has a different explanation [for the shrinking middle class]: Bad neighborhoods and bad teachers rob poor children of the chance to climb into the middle class.

His solution? Help the children and their families move to better neighborhoods.

His research finds that upward mobility depends on government policies, a position common among Democrats, as well as on neighborhood churches and two-parent families, as Republicans contend.

“Chetty’s work challenges preconceived notions on both sides” of the political divide....

Mr. Chetty and the economists he works with tackle problems that seem intractable, and offer hopeful prescriptions. Consider economic inequality—the income spread between rich, middle-class and poor. Mr. Chetty addresses the issue indirectly. He examines income mobility, which he defines as the ability to rise from the lowest 20th percentile of income distribution to the top 80th percentile in one generation. Climbing that ladder is more important than ever, he says, because the distance between the economic classes is greater than in the past .

By analyzing tax records of families in 741 geographic districts, he pinpoints hotbeds of opportunity....High-mobility metro areas have a combination of greater economic and racial integration, better schools and a smaller fraction of single-parent families than lower-mobility areas....“The strongest predictors of upward mobility are measures of family structure,” Mr. Chetty said.

His [two-pronged] proposal: move poor children to high-mobility communities and remove the impediments to mobility in poor-performing neighborhoods.

“The view that we’ll fix the American dream at the national level is probably not the right way to look at the problem,” he said.

Different solutions work in different parts of the country depending upon situations and circumstances unique to each part of the country. A federalist solution not a federal solution?
 
Re: Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0

Excellent article on ways to address income inequality based on some pioneering research.



Different solutions work in different parts of the country depending upon situations and circumstances unique to each part of the country. A federalist solution not a federal solution?

How dare you mention scale to a socialist! After all, it works in Europe... :rolleyes:
 
Re: Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0

Just watched a cricket match from India where the Man of the Match got a check for 1,000 rupees.

That's $15.40 US.
 
Re: Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0

Not him. The captain of the Indian squad makes $30 million US from sponsorship. Kohli is not in his class, but he makes a lot of $$ and has a very good looking girlfriend

Was going to say... top players usually get top dollar. There's no such thing as a "salary cap" outside North America. Sometimes you can get away with a good player working for peanuts, but it's not that often.
 
Re: Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0

Not him. The captain of the Indian squad makes $30 million US from sponsorship. Kohli is not in his class, but he makes a lot of $$ and has a very good looking girlfriend

Ah. Didn't know we were talking about national team professionals.
 
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