- #421
czelaya
- 43
- 5
JDoolin said:I differ in opinion on this. You are giving up too easily. For a government by the people, and for the people, there is no greater imperative than transparency. The people must KNOW what their government is doing in detail so that we may make the appropriate choices when election time is coming around.
By eliminating lobbying and protectionist laws you eliminate special privileges to any groups. I agree completely on transparency for the government on its actions. However, when it comes to markets, government shouldn't dictate how private entities should do business. Let consumers decide that.
JDoolin said:Transparency is important, because we must know WHY these companies are stagnant. We must know why their competitors are not stagnant. Do you think America is the only country in the world who subsidizes their industries? We have a level of transparency in this country that informs us of how much the companies are getting, and how it's being used. That is a good thing. We should also be aware of how much their competitors are being subsidized.
This is where we differ. Governments and the general public shouldn't know why companies become stagnant. That's for markets to decide. Companies, for the most part, become stagnant because they don't evolve with consumer’s needs(think of GM engineering gas guzzling automobiles or Sega developing a game console that is difficult for game developers to code). Businesses become stagnant because consumer decides it's not in their best interest to purchase what they are selling. We shouldn't be subsidizing private industries. This gives an unfair advantage to those subsidized industries and further leads to moral hazard (which GM has already clearly shown). If a company can't compete than it deserves to go out of business. Tax payers money going to a select few subsidized industries is a vote we are all forced to pay into for the carelessness of the few.
JDoolin said:I am happy to see GM getting subsidized because it means more American jobs but that was in the BILLIONS of dollars. Solyndra got subsidized for a half a billion dollars, and from what I've heard, by the time they got their factories up, somehow the market was already mysteriously flooded with the patented product they intended to sell, and they could not match the price.
That's an astonishing statement. This isn't the first time GM has been bailed out, and they have been bailed out previously for the same reasons-mismanagement of assets. They created automobiles that were substandard compared to competitors and they deliberately did so. They didn't invest into newer engine technologies (DOCH, SOHC, variable valve timing, and so forth) that a large segment of the automobile industry was already adapting. Honda and Toyota literally had 4 cylinders, at one time, that were producing as much horsepower as GM V8's. GM created automobiles that were cheaply made and didn't have the reliability that many of their competitors had. Clearly they deserved to go out of business. Why did they act so recklessly? Because they could be bailed by the tax payers. That's not capitalism. That's pure corporatism. The GM bailouts is advocating reckless behavior and punishing responsibility.
My first automobile was Chevrolet Berretta which was an awful automobile with horrific gas mileage and had an interior that was falling apart after 2 years of use. In the case for GM, I made a vote never to purchase a car by such a careless corporation. I wasn't the only one and a majority of Americans did as well. They lost money because they produced an inferior product. If they go out of business who losses? A minority of Americans who have invested interest in GM. However, because of their lobbying efforts, WE ALL WERE FORCED TO HELP A CARELESS COMPANY.
Sorry. What I meant is that currently we have corporatism. A union with government and a select few companies that creates an unfair advantage in industry. Eliminate it.JDoolin said:I'm not entirely sure what you mean there.