Can the American worker compete with developing countries if he/she has to earn $5,000 a year just to pay for to cover farm subsidies, health care for the old and the poor, and the war in Iraq? That’s the question today from Harvard’s Philip Greenspun, who certainly has a point of view on the subject:
Given that a fairly well educated worker in China can be employed for $5,000 per year, it is tough to understand how the American economy is sustainable unless we believe that our workers are vastly better educated than Chinese workers.
Let’s not forget that the working slobs are soon to be taxed another $1 trillion to bail out real estate and mortgage speculators.
Greenspun also refutes this week’s New York Times editorial, which called for a mortgage foreclosure prevention plan.
…in many cities today, house-price declines are so severe that potential buyers are staying on the sidelines, fearful of further collapse. The result is declines that are deeper than need be to restore affordability. That’s everyone’s problem, because as long as house prices continue to fall, the financial system will remain unsettled and the economy will not revive.
Are we staring into the reality that something — our “standard of living,” perhaps? — has to give? If so, what is it?
Discuss