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Consumers wanted big vehicles so the big three made big vehicles. Consumers since the late 60's have had a choice between fuel efficient and big/fast cars. They didn't "get away" with it, they saw what the market wanted and delivered.What exactly do you want? If you socialize GM it will just keep producing cars people don't want or you could let the market decide if it will survive or fail and keep the firms that make the better cars.Socialized Healthcare, at least in America, is a joke. The people who are wealthy enough to afford healthcare (and the firms they work for) will pay the vast majority of the costs of socialized healthcare and then receive a worse plan than the one they have. Healthcare policy needs to be reformed so that plans can be affordable and so we don't have to pay for poor people's emergency room visits.
there is no reason why anyone should give a rats arse about "fundamental economic principals [sic]" if it means that eighty percent of the population holds a mere fifteen percent of net wealth, or that two million people had to file bankruptcy in one year because they got sick. the free market is essentially building a car without airbags, seatbelts or even bumpers, because anyone who crashes shouldn't have been there in the first place. naturally the guy in the 2.5 tonne SUV is going to be safer than the poor bastard in a pinto, but hey, its his fault for not being able to afford it, right? at least if he crashes over here he won't have to worry about paying for it.
Capitalism is the most economically efficient system possible with communism as the least efficient. This is an indisputable fact.
where does this wealth go?
Quote from: frogboy on April 18, 2009, 09:55:50 pmwhere does this wealth go?On a side note, what the hell is national dept for? I know what it is but it doesn't seem to effect anything. Look at the US, one of the richest if not the richest country in the world, has an epic amount of national dept. I believe its $30,000 per person now, for 300,000,000 people.
Chapter 2 Page 34 Economics Principles, Problems, and Policies 14th edition."Advocates of pure capitalism argue that such an economy promotes efficiency in the use of resources, stability of output and employment, and rapid economic growth. Hence, there is little or no need for government planning, control, or intervention."just for clarification this book was written during the cold war, they say "advocates" meaning people outside the (then) recently dissolved Soviet union and China.I can't be bothered right now to look for the info on communism but I specifically remember an economic law regarding that economic system.Also from wikipedia:"The central axiom of capitalism is that the best allocation of resources is achieved through consumers having free choice, and producers responding accordingly to meet collective consumer demand. This contrasts with planned economies in which the state directs what shall be produced. A consequence is the belief that privatization of previously state-provided services will tend to achieve a more efficient delivery thereof. Further implications are usually in favor of free trade, and abolition of subsidies."