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Google Chairman on WhatsApp: $19 Bn For 50 People? Good For Them!

theodp writes "Speaking at an SXSW panel, Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt emphasized that Google is 'very, very worried' about the class tensions that underlie recent Bay Area protests, where high-salaried techies have driven up rents. 'Ninety-nine percent of people have seen no economic improvement over the last decade,' he said, adding that 'the data suggest that the problem gets worse' and will become the 'number one issue in democracies around the world.' Schmidt's solution to this displacement? Foster conditions — e.g., better education, looser immigration laws, and deregulation in strictly-controlled areas like energy and telecommunications — that encourage the creation of fast-growing startups ('gazelles') that generate lots of jobs. When interviewer Steven Levy noted 'gazelles' like the 50-employee WhatsApp which was acquired by Facebook for a reported $19 billion seem to lead to more inequality, Schmidt brushed aside the apparent contradiction. 'Let us celebrate capitalism,' the tax-us-if-you-can Schmidt said, opening his arms. '$19 billion for 50 people? Good for them.' Eric, meet Tom."

303 comments

  1. Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Their solutions are not focused on getting higher paying jobs for the "99%." They are focused on lowering the amount they have to pay for their own talent.

    Any time a company starts talking about deregulation and loosening immigration laws, it's french for "make our labor cheaper."

    1. Re:Read between the lines by rmdingler · · Score: 5, Funny

      Any time a company starts talking about deregulation and loosening immigration laws, it's french for "make our labor cheaper."

      Or Hindi.

      French programmers only work three hour days.

      --
      Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.

      Ernest Hemingway

    2. Re:Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Schmidt is a big friend of the "do as I say, not as I do crowd." They want higher taxes for everyone except themselves. Hypocrites.

    3. Re:Read between the lines by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Any time a company starts talking about deregulation and loosening immigration laws, it's french for "make our labor cheaper."

      Just curious, when they start talking about better education, what is that french for?

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    4. Re:Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A common opinion on Slashdot is that funding for STEM education is just a scam to get more STEM workers to cause downward pressure on their salaries. That seems a bit overly cynical to me, but it fits with the GP's point of view.

    5. Re:Read between the lines by lagomorpha2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Any time a company starts talking about deregulation and loosening immigration laws, it's french for "make our labor cheaper."

      Just curious, when they start talking about better education, what is that french for?

      It's one of those classic tricks where you make multiple suggestions and some of them are reasonable and a couple of them are offensive in the hope that the reasonableness of the reasonable suggestions cloaks the chutzpah the offensive suggestions.

    6. Re: Read between the lines by drfred79 · · Score: 1

      Let's follow the logical conclusion then. Lower wages, less barriers to entry in employment, higher qualified prospects. :Gasp: Sooner or later this could lead to the dreaded thought that people will stop being overworked and doing the job of two.

    7. Re:Read between the lines by mvdwege · · Score: 5, Interesting

      "Turn your schools into training camps for us"

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    8. Re:Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When they say "better education" what they mean is "more educated people in the workforce."

      More educated workers means more competition for jobs, means cheaper workers.

      Though coming from google who is known for over compensating it's workers (though not necessarily through direct financial means) it does seem odd, but then again, they get to be very selective about who works for them already.
      My read on the entire statement above is that Google wants "innovation machines" i.e. small companies that come up with big ideas that either succeed or fail, google will buy those that succeed, and those that fail will do so without Google having to spend a dime to try out the same idea.

    9. Re:Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's French for "we need more workers that come pre-equipped with a huge debt so they're more obedient". Clear enough? School = scam. Education is free, we have libraries and the web now.

    10. Re: Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How did you come to that conclusion?

      Lower wages - always good for business

      less barriers to entry in employment - more labor supply meaning they can overwork you even more and you better like it because your lucky to have a job.

      higher qualified prospects - See above except now it applies to even "skilled" positions, management excepted of course.

    11. Re:Read between the lines by ebno-10db · · Score: 4, Insightful

      when they start talking about better education, what is that french for?

      "Better education" is French for "red herring".

      Of course everybody wants better education, but that doesn't mean education is what's causing increased income disparity. It also doesn't mean poor education is the source of any supposed shortage of STEM workers. STEM people mostly come from the better educated range of our populace. There is no shortage of such people, and we have some of the best universities in the world to educate them. The actual education problem is with those who are not in the upper range. While praising Finnish education, and their results in international tests, they overlook that serving the less well performing students is the great emphasis of Finnish education.

      It's also a regional issue in the US. For example, Massachusetts if judged by itself ranks right up there with the vaunted Asian countries, and yes that includes poor kids in Boston and whatnot.

      Lastly, the nice thing about blaming education is that you can say that if we fix the education in this country, it will still take at least 10 years to bear fruit. Therefore we need interim measures, like increased H-1B quotas. Did you think it's a coincidence that pro-H-1B outfits like fwd.us are linked to silly things like "hour of code"?

    12. Re:Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Just curious, when they start talking about better education, what is that french for?"

      The same thing, making labor cheaper. If more people are intelligent enough to be engineers, then Google can pay their current engineers less and not have to use H1-B's to keep salaries down.

    13. Re: Read between the lines by rdelsambuco · · Score: 1

      They'll be doing the job of one at half the pay.

      --
      I comment occasionally so that I can mod others -1 overrated or -1 offtopic.
    14. Re:Read between the lines by ebno-10db · · Score: 5, Insightful

      On the bright side they actually write decent useful code during those three hours. France has higher hourly per capita productivity than the US. Their lower GDP per capita is because they work fewer hours. You can debate how many hours people should work (I actually lean towards US style) but there is no doubt that there is plenty of good work done in France.

      Full disclosure: I also like some of their moldy cheeses, but am adverse to a language that lacks consonants.

    15. Re:Read between the lines by JDG1980 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Just curious, when they start talking about better education, what is that french for?

      It's about blaming income inequality on teachers and schools rather than the 1%. And also about washing one's hands of any social responsibility for the well-being of the roughly 70% of Americans who don't have a college degree. (Not that a college degree guarantees middle-class success these days.)

    16. Re:Read between the lines by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Their solutions are not focused on getting higher paying jobs for the "99%." They are focused on lowering the amount they have to pay for their own talent.

      Any time a company starts talking about deregulation and loosening immigration laws, it's french for "make our labor cheaper."

      This, yes, this. Better education, yes, but Schmidt is just envious of Gates' success in turning a corporate drone curriculum into a national standard via Common Core. And deregulation, yes, but for energy and telecommunication? Those are the last industries that need deregulation, being natural monopolies. Deregulation of power companies (a natural monopoly) has been tried and was a massive failure. Frankly, I'm all in favor of looser immigration laws, but I suspect what Schmidt wants is more H1-B's, not more people that can compete for wages (and start their own companies) on a level playing field.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    17. Re: Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're doing enough work to cover two people, it's probably not because the company can't find a second person, but because they're getting two employee's worth of work for the price of one.

    18. Re:Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I have a college degree and I it won't even get me an interview at Wal-Mart.

      You could blame it on my resume, but Wal-Mart's application specifically says to turn it in by itself. The application itself has no open ended questions, so there is little to no room for personal discrepancy. I have friends who dropped out of high-school that use "you know" and curse words in every other sentence. I can only conclude that being an educated, articulate, observant, educated person makes you less employable in much of today's job market.

      In the modern USA, the dumber more ignorant you are the "cooler" and more employable you are. "I mean who wants to work with someone who talks like a fag and reads and shit you know?"

    19. Re:Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      He needs to keep Google stock investors poor so they can't afford guns when the bubble bursts.

      It's just ridiculous. Like bitcoin, I wish I had bought Google stock a few years ago and like bitcoin, I wouldn't touch it with a ten foot pole right now.

      Of course, at least Google won't be going out of business like FB.

    20. Re:Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      France has higher hourly per capita productivity than the US.

      Not true. Citation.

      1. Norway (75)
      2. Luxembourg (73)
      3. United States (67)
      4. Belgium (61)
      6. France (59)
      7. Germany (57)
      and so on...

      Those top three have not changed place in some time. France is up there, but the United States is over a dozen percent more productive. Norway is higher than the US by a similar margin.

    21. Re:Read between the lines by KingOfBLASH · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I moved to Europe from America and was shocked when *GASP* people didn't work 60 hour weeks, took 25 vacation days a year (yes 5 weeks!), in many cases worked on an 80% schedule, and *SHOCKING* enjoy a beer at lunch from time to time.

      Even more shocking, as far as I could tell, my colleagues in my new European office were as productive (or more so) than my American counterparts (doing the same job).

      Then I went to Asia and was AMAZED at the hours people work especially when I realized the amount of work actually getting done.

      The truth is, people can't work straight like robots. The more they work, the more small breaks they take during the day (my favorite time waster in america was the i'm-lonely-let's-have-a-meeting meeting). And if you are actually rested, you are much more productive.

    22. Re:Read between the lines by FuzzNugget · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's called the "anchoring effect"

    23. Re:Read between the lines by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      I keep saying the same about education. The rich can afford to take an incorrect career path, or predict that their career path will be... MBA so they can be an executive of daddy's company. The poor have to speculate on what's going to be hot in 4-6 years, shell out cash, and hopefully get a job. The businesses profit from this: They get a flooded market and can pay $40k salaries for skilled laborers because there's as many of those as there are McDonalds workers.

      If the public education system didn't make any effort to support people in getting vocational training, we'd be back to the days when programmers made $200k. Businesses would do better hiring an entrant for $40k and paying $160k/year for training... or hiring 3 entrants for $40k and paying $20k/year for their vocational education. They would want to raise these salaries to above cost: rather than $60k, they'd bump to $75k or thereabouts, so that other businesses would find it cheaper to pay $40k+$20k to train new entrants.

      These entrants are the poor who can't afford college, who get government loans and then sit around with no jobs and crushing debt being poor. There are only so many rich kids to hire for menial labor as programmers, graphics artists, HTML technicians, Windows admins, and lower managers.

    24. Re:Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In addition, companies want smarter workers but don't want to pay for their education.

    25. Re:Read between the lines by The+Cat · · Score: 1

      Getting someone else to pay to train your employees.

    26. Re:Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sick of looking at this

      This day on slashdot has been stuck on 2/21 since, well, 2/21 i guess. What gives?

    27. Re:Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Full disclosure: I also like some of their moldy cheeses, but am adverse to a language that lacks consonants.

      Ah, yes, the french language. Why use one or two letters when four will do?

    28. Re:Read between the lines by cayenne8 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      His quote of:

      Schmidt's solution to this displacement? Foster conditions â" e.g., better education, looser immigration laws, and deregulation in strictly-controlled areas like energy and telecommunications

      Ok..how will loosening up immigration to allow foreign nationals to drive wages lower in pretty much all sectors help conditions?

      I was with him up until that part.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    29. Re:Read between the lines by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 0

      A common opinion on Slashdot is that funding for STEM education is just a scam to get more STEM workers to cause downward pressure on their salaries.

      Better STEM education may put downward pressure on the wages of existing STEM workers, but it would improve wages overall, by moving people into STEM that would otherwise work in lower paid occupations. So better STEM education would be good for America, but may be bad for a vested special interest group that includes many Slashdotters. So, just like everyone else, Slashdotters put their own narrow interests ahead of the common good. No surprise there.

    30. Re:Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      That article does not compare productivity, but GDP.

    31. Re:Read between the lines by James-NSC · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm a Visa holder, and even I don't get the need to loosen the immigration laws. I'd like to make things easier on myself, sure, but for American's seeing improving wages?? how is that anything but counter productive? Further, if they really wanted to help JQP, they would tie all wages to inflation (so they grow at the same rate, at minimum) and stop paying themselves 100's of times more than their lowest paid employee. Anyone who sits on a Scrooge McDuck stack of cash DOES NOT have your best interests in mind.

    32. Re:Read between the lines by LetterRip · · Score: 1

      Make our labor cheaper. If there is one application with adequate education for a job someone wishes to fill, the employee can have leverage for salary negotiation. If there are 1 million applicants, the employer can set the salary far lower.

      For employees the better the quality the average education, the lower the salary that education demands.

      The value of the education is more in a nations competitiveness with other nations. A nation can attract employers if it has lots of well educated people which increases productivity of the labor and drives the prices down for skilled labor.

    33. Re:Read between the lines by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 2

      buried.

      usual executive talk:

      "good thing, good thing, good thing, bad thing, good thing, good thing, good thing."

      you are not suppose to notice or think much about that single bad thing. its buried in there. but the bad thing is ALL that the talk or subject was about, in fact.

      we need more h1b's to work cheaply for us. that's all they ever say. the rest is 'feel good' bullshit that is not relevant.

      same old, same old. meet the new uber rich; same as the last uber rich.

      at this point, if eric extends his hands to shake yours, be careful: better count your fingers after you are done.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    34. Re:Read between the lines by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      A friend of mine- who's an executive- actually has a name for it. He calls it a shit sandwich. It's part of the training and part of the job to deliver them so well people eat them without noticing.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    35. Re:Read between the lines by AlphaWolf_HK · · Score: 1

      Well, look at the areas he wants to deregulate. It's been pretty well established recently that regulation is what is causing broadband prices to go up. Take for example the laws that forbid municipal broadband - that is a regulation. Google Fiber has been able to do what it does because they've been able to convince local governments to throw out regulation. That city called Overland Park tried to pull up some red tape, so Google left them, and now their politicians likely aren't going to last another election as a result.

      He's right: We need more local governments to remove legislative barriers to broadband deployment.

      --
      Careful with names containing L slashdot.org/~AiphaWolf_HK slashdot.org/~AlphaWoif_HK slashdot.org/~AiphaWoif_HK
    36. Re:Read between the lines by Junta · · Score: 1

      moving people into STEM that would otherwise work in lower paid occupations.

      While I can agree that the perspective is a bit protectionist, that would not pan out that way. Generally speaking, improving wages overall is either not going to happen, or happen because of inflation. While very rarely is something a zero sum game in economics, it also is the case that it doesn't at least somewhat behave like a zero sum situation. It's not necessarily a bad thing for society in general, but one should not pretend for a second that such moves would magically enable everyone to get six-figure standard of living.

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    37. Re:Read between the lines by ynp7 · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's unAmerican that we let Frenchmen work fewer hours, make more money, and live longer than us. Clearly our tactic of making fun of their laziness and pungent odors has failed. It's time for a race to the bottom of the time clock.

      Fuck Pierre and his 80%, I'll see you guys back at the office in June! Just in time to get things in order for my summer vacation.

    38. Re:Read between the lines by the_B0fh · · Score: 1

      You realize that you are *confirming* OP's point, right? Per capita is not the same as per capita her hour, or as OP says "hourly per capita productivity".

    39. Re:Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I take it you're like so many "college educated" people I meet who are complete idiots. That probably has nothing to do with you be unemployable, since most of those idiots can find jobs where they're paid too much to do jobs they're not very good at, but it is a widespread problem anyway.

    40. Re:Read between the lines by Thomas+Miconi · · Score: 1

      "Eric, meet Tom"?

      I'd rather say "Eric, meet Marie-Antoinette."

    41. Re:Read between the lines by davester666 · · Score: 1

      We need some unpaid interns to fetch coffee for us.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    42. Re:Read between the lines by clovis · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Or this, which agrees with ebbo-10db: http://www.stat.ee/64454

      I say neither chart is useful. It's just dividing the GDP by guesses at how many hours are worked by the people in each country. It really just tells us that some countries get their money in different ways than others.
      What we would want to know is how productive a worker is in comparable industries.
      Consider that Norway's economy has a huge component of production and export of natural resources (oil etc) while Luxembourg is almost all financial services and perhaps banking secrecy.
      There is no meaning in comparing the dollars produced by an Norway oil platform worker to that of a Luxembourg bank's US Treasury bond manager.
      I'm surprised France is as high as it is considering how much of its economy is based on agriculture. That is to say a high labor-low pay industry, and similarly for tourism.

    43. Re:Read between the lines by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      Managers know that you get diminishing returns on labor hours. But it's still economical to squeeze every last drop, if the employee is exempt from overtime.

    44. Re:Read between the lines by Khashishi · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't think most Slashdotters are against STEM education funding. What they are against, is the idea that America has a shortage of STEM students, so talent must be imported.

    45. Re: Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Increasing the supply of talent to drive the rates lower, I would assume.

    46. Re:Read between the lines by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      but am adverse to a language that lacks consonants

      I've heard that if you intersect french with hebrew you get silence.

      (if you know anything about the vowels and consonants of those languages, you'll get the joke).

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    47. Re:Read between the lines by tlambert · · Score: 1

      Managers know that you get diminishing returns on labor hours. But it's still economical to squeeze every last drop, if the employee is exempt from overtime.

      Even if they're not. The amount you give an employee as wages/salary is a fraction of what it costs the business to employ them at all.

      In truth, there would probably be a lot more people employed if it weren't for employers having to foot the bill for a lot of benefits, and the employees either paid for their own benefits, or the benefits came from the government and were funded by income taxes rather than employment taxes on the employer.

      Ironically, most benefits offered to employees are taxed as income these days, even though the original intent of benefits was to make your business a more desirable place to work than your competitors business. Now that these benefits have grown into unfunded government mandates, it's a lot cheaper to hire one person for 6 hours than it is to hire 2 for 30 hours each. Once you get down to 18 hours or less, so that the employment can't be counted as full time, and the mandates are no longer in effect, the employer can afford to hire more people again (and, in fact, it's better for the employer, since they get more work hours per $ when they don't have to pay for the unfunded mandates.

      So the U.S. has basically built a tax system that rewards employers for overworking salaried employees and underworking hourly employees.

    48. Re:Read between the lines by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 3, Insightful

      people didn't work 60 hour weeks

      I recently had an interview with a small company. we discusses hours and pay rates. the hiring manager said that its usual to work 60 hours a week and 'everyone in the bay area does that'. well, that's not quite true, but beside that, he was not willing to pay for such sacrifice.

      think about it: in US law, you are supposed to pay for hours up to 40/week if you are fulltime. beyond that, its considered overtime and should have 'time and a half' (except when you are this unfortunate class called 'exempt' but lets not talk about that right now, its too depressing a concept to bring up in this thread).

      now, 40 to 60 is 50% more time you put in. 1.5 people's job done by 1. the pay rate? LESS than I was making at my last 40/wk job.

      I told him that if you expect people to regularly (not on bursty periods, but day in and day out) put in 60 a week, you should pay that person better so that the personal LIFE TIME they give to you at least is rewarded with higher pay. there was silence on the phone. almost like I called his mother 'ugly'.

      more and more, this is the typical hiring manager and employer. they want more, they pay less and they act SHOCKED, that you ask them to pay for 1 and a half gallons of milk if they want to BUY one and a half gallons of milk. go into a store and offer to pay for one and walk out with two and see how far you get. but in employment, they fucked us over and they expect us to like it.

      the american 'salaried professional' is being screwed left right and center. I wonder when the pitchforks and fires will hit the streets? I hope it comes sooner rather than later.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    49. Re:Read between the lines by miroku000 · · Score: 1

      Lastly, the nice thing about blaming education is that you can say that if we fix the education in this country, it will still take at least 10 years to bear fruit. Therefore we need interim measures, like increased H-1B quotas. Did you think it's a coincidence that pro-H-1B outfits like fwd.us are linked to silly things like "hour of code"?

      How do you arrive at "10 years"? Do you assume that education must be fixed in elementary school? Perhaps education needs to be fixed in high school, college or in grad school. H-1B quotas are only going to fix things 4 years faster than making college free in all STEM fields.

    50. Re:Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Foreign nationals will only drive wages lower if there are not enough new jobs to begin with. So that argument is a bit of a talking point that is great for people who do not understand all the variables and like Fox News.

      In very simple terms, what Schmidt is advocating is simple social-liberalism: if you stop messing around and trying to control the uncontrollable (e.g. immigration/emigration, some industries, etc) and actually focus on doing what is right for the people (i.e. educate them), you will get more companies popping up, more new ideas and hence more jobs and more economic growth.

    51. Re:Read between the lines by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      I certainly don't work 60 hours a week. I have coworkers who do, but I think this is of their own volition. Possibly they assume that they must work this long or else bad things happen, others are just workaholics. Granted they may be getting more done overall or getting a small amount more compensation, but I am not getting glares from anyone in management by not working on the weekends.

      Possibly workers may think that they need to get a set of tasks finished in a day but then they get sidetracked with meetings or unrelated problems, so at the end of the day they discover that the tasks aren't done and put in a few more hours. Whereas I just say that it's not done and I'll get to it tomorrow and go home.

      Most engineers or programmers in the Bay Area are paid by the job, not the hours (I'm not counting the IT techies who are hourly or on-call or whatever). Which means you get compensation without filling out hours or being paid by the amount of output you have. Thus they're not subject to the "40 hours a week" because no one ever tells them explicitly how many hours to work; if they can get their assignments done in 20 hours a week versus 60 then that's fine. However if they do get stuff done in 20 hours a week then management will sometimes start adding more projects.

      With most good companies you will get some times where there's a lot of work and stress, but then times when it's relatively lax and easy going, with most of the time being in-between. The problems come when every single week is crunch time and that's the sign of a bad company.

    52. Re:Read between the lines by lagomorpha2 · · Score: 1

      In addition, companies want smarter workers but don't want to pay for their education.

      Just smart enough to do the job, not smart enough to negotiate the salary they deserve.

    53. Re:Read between the lines by JeffAtl · · Score: 1

      You're friend didn't come up with that. It's pretty well known. The HBO show "Getting On" even had a segment on it a few weeks ago.

    54. Re:Read between the lines by JeffAtl · · Score: 1

      You're = Your

    55. Re:Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      URL put in text field if NSURL is the NSPasteboardWriter, expected the path

      If they're as productive, where are the gazillion dollar European companies?

    56. Re:Read between the lines by mattack2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      except when you are this unfortunate class called 'exempt' but lets not talk about that right now, its too depressing a concept to bring up in this thread

      I suspect most of the people reading this thread are exempt employees.

    57. Re:Read between the lines by KingOfBLASH · · Score: 1

      The key is people need to stand up for themselves. I once worked in a (soul sucking) job where everyone worked 60 hours a week. And I'd just get up and leave at 5 o'clock. "Sorry boss, my 8 hours is over." Now if something was going on and the building would burn down if I'd leave, I'd stay. But even then, when it got really late, I'd say "It's 8:00pm. I need to go home"

      While I did have a few angry chats from my boss about wtf I wasn't working at 19:00, it never showed up on my performance review, and I never got sent to HR because he knew, legally, he was in the wrong.

      If everyone did this bosses would HAVE to pay overtime, or employ 100% staff.

      Now the problem with the american worker today is most people don't have the cajones to stand up and say "No." Unfortunately this means even though you are legally protected to get overtime and not get overworked, you are at a distinct disadvantage. If everyone followed the rules, you should be able to tell your boss "well if I'm working 60 hours a week as a salary my salary should be 1.5x base" But you can't because there's always another joe out there willing to work for less.

    58. Re:Read between the lines by manu0601 · · Score: 1

      French programmers only work three hour days.

      And produce the same as you do in 8 hours?

    59. Re:Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That chart does no such thing. According to that chart Greece, Ireland, and Latvia have over double the productivity of France and nearly triple that of the US. You cite that, did not read it, and then go on to say the figures are worthless. Then modded up to +4 insightful. It is as if no one bothers to think or even try to learn something about the world.

    60. Re:Read between the lines by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      You're = Your

      Oh no, oh nooooooooo, don't tell that to anyone! :-)

    61. Re: Read between the lines by xkpe · · Score: 1

      Lower wages - always good for business

      That's not true if your economy relies on consumption, just look at what happen to some European countries when they decided to cut on salaries and benefits to overcome crisis, people had less money to spend, they were already in-debt to the limit, that led to a decrease in consumption resulting in a big percentage of companies closing down and a cyclic recession.

    62. Re:Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His quote of:

      Schmidt's solution to this displacement? Foster conditions â" e.g., better education, looser immigration laws, and deregulation in strictly-controlled areas like energy and telecommunications

      Ok..how will loosening up immigration to allow foreign nationals to drive wages lower in pretty much all sectors help conditions?

      I was with him up until that part.

      Ditto, he says one thing, then plans to do another.

    63. Re:Read between the lines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's called the "anchoring effect"

      Common and useful way to stuff pork into a bill, at least in American politics.

    64. Re:Read between the lines by Namarrgon · · Score: 1

      An interesting point I heard about income equality: pretty much everyone in this thread is in the 1%. The 99% are in the developing nations.

      We complain that the moneyed elite are exerting undue political influence to keep the money for themselves, yet from a global perspective, anti-immigration laws are doing the exact same thing. The western middle-class has had kind of a raw deal lately, but not nearly as raw as the bottom 6 billion. One could argue that outsourcing, even with low wages by western standards, still brings that extra income to the Indian workers etc, thus improving global equality.

      Of course there are still very valid points to be made about how those lower wages benefit the moneyed elite even further, but it's a start - and as money starts to flow towards developing nations, skills will improve, living standards will rise, and so will wages, equalising things further, at least for most people. In the meantime, we ourselves are probably better served by focusing on skill sets that aren't so easily replaced.

      --
      Why would anyone engrave "Elbereth"?
    65. Re:Read between the lines by clovis · · Score: 1

      That chart does no such thing. According to that chart Greece, Ireland, and Latvia have over double the productivity of France and nearly triple that of the US. You cite that, did not read it, and then go on to say the figures are worthless. Then modded up to +4 insightful. It is as if no one bothers to think or even try to learn something about the world.

      RE:

      That chart does no such thing

      That chart does no what such thing?
      I say the two charts conflict and that furthermore both charts are not useful for the comparison the OP we're responding to who said "France has higher hourly per capita productivity" and the person who essentially said "it's the opposite"

      I think that you fail at reading comprehension in regards to my post.
      I did read both charts and the original web sites (The Conference Board and stat.ee) that they are referenced from.
      I cite the second chart only to show how the two charts conflict. I said it agrees with ebbo-10db. AT NO PLACE DID I SAY THAT I AGREE WITH EITHER CHART NOR DID I AGREE WITH ebbo-10db.
      I am not ebbo-10db. That is a different person.

      RE:

      According to that chart Greece, Ireland, and Latvia have over double the productivity of France and nearly triple that of the US.

      Which is, of course, ridiculous and would be exactly my point if it were correct. I quote myself: "I say neither chart is useful."
      BTW, neither chart shows Greece, Ireland, Latvia having double/triple productivity over France/US. I can't see how you concluded that unless you had confused the chart that shows "change over previous year" with the productivity/hour charts. Your point is supported by Lativia's having 122 vs US 104.8 in 2009 in the 2005=100 relative chart (or similar years), but that's about 20%, not nearly 300%.

      FWIW, I thought for sure that someone would call me out for using Estonia's economic reports.
      For that reason, I suspect that you, AC, did not actually look at what I offered.

      BTW, The EU has their own web site http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.... for the same kind of tables with different numbers.

  2. Looser immigration by MikeRT · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It's well-established by now that one of the most significant factors in destroying the lives of the unskilled and semi-skilled workers across the country has been the influx of similar immigrants from around the world. Legal versus illegal, its immaterial. The invisible hand doesn't give a damn whether they hold a green card or not and giving legal status to the illegals won't suddenly drive wages up because their mere presence in the economy provides at least implicit price competition.

    Here's how you enact a sensible immigration policy. You crack down on the employers of illegals such that no one will hire them. You then offer a contingent amnesty to the illegals that allows them to come forward and face no charges if they leave the country of their own volition, and you even let them keep all of the money and property they've earned if they self-deport. Then, you only allow immigrants with provable skills to immigrate as singles or with their immediate family if they're married with children. None of this "let's bring the whole extended family" over. Grandma, the aunts and uncles and cousins have no business piggybacking on that green card. That's just a recipe for waking up one day and finding a large ethnic enclave in an American city (oh wait, that's precisely what's happened in many areas because of this, silly me).

    1. Re:Looser immigration by dasunt · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That's just a recipe for waking up one day and finding a large ethnic enclave in an American city (oh wait, that's precisely what's happened in many areas because of this, silly me).

      You say this like it's a problem.

      When my grandmother's grandfather first came to this country, they lived in a section of the city that was so heavily associated with immigrants from their part of the world that the main boulevard was nicknamed after one of their more disgusting habits. The immigrants had their own churches, frequently with non-English records. They had their own newspapers, frequently in their native language. They kept their own food, their own culture. They even had their own colleges.

      Now that section of the city is home to another large immigrant community, complete with their own newspapers, religious institutions, restaurants, etc. There's a different derogatory nickname for that same section of town, but the name is still a dig at the immigrants.

      The more things change, the more they stay the same...

      I see no cause for concern that the latest round of immigration will turn out any differently.

    2. Re:Looser immigration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      ...

      I see no cause for concern that the latest round of immigration will turn out any differently.

      I do.

      Now we don't expect immigrants to respect US culture or learn English, to the point of forcing students to remove shirts with US flags on them simply because such shirts would cause immigrant children or children of immigrants to resort to violence.

    3. Re:Looser immigration by Savage-Rabbit · · Score: 1

      It's well-established by now that one of the most significant factors in destroying the lives of the unskilled and semi-skilled workers across the country has been the influx of similar immigrants from around the world. Legal versus illegal, its immaterial. The invisible hand doesn't give a damn whether they hold a green card or not and giving legal status to the illegals won't suddenly drive wages up because their mere presence in the economy provides at least implicit price competition.

      Here's how you enact a sensible immigration policy. You crack down on the employers of illegals such that no one will hire them. You then offer a contingent amnesty to the illegals that allows them to come forward and face no charges if they leave the country of their own volition, and you even let them keep all of the money and property they've earned if they self-deport. Then, you only allow immigrants with provable skills to immigrate as singles or with their immediate family if they're married with children. None of this "let's bring the whole extended family" over. Grandma, the aunts and uncles and cousins have no business piggybacking on that green card. That's just a recipe for waking up one day and finding a large ethnic enclave in an American city (oh wait, that's precisely what's happened in many areas because of this, silly me).

      Obligatory: http://content.time.com/time/c...
      Not that your suggestions are terribly unreasonable but you are kind of taking an axe (or chainsaw) to the USA's "Nation of immigrants" founding epic.

      --
      Only to idiots, are orders laws.
      -- Henning von Tresckow
    4. Re:Looser immigration by ebno-10db · · Score: 3, Insightful

      you only allow immigrants with provable skills to immigrate

      Which provable skills? In terms of guest workers or even real immigrants, the problem is that which skills are "critically needed" are determined by politics, money (oops, redundant) and myth, rather than anything silly like objective facts. TPTB have been pushing the idea of a STEM shortage for decades, despite a complete lack of objective evidence. The obviously unbiased claims of tech CEO's and academicians are the only "evidence". The objective statistics say otherwise (that was even the conclusion of a study commissioned by congress during the tech boom - which of course did nothing to stop raising H-1B quotas).

    5. Re:Looser immigration by u38cg · · Score: 1, Troll

      It's well-established by now

      Except it isn't, except in the minds of racists like yourself (and no, claiming to not be a racist is not sufficient to actually not be a racist). There is plenty evidence to the contrary and the economic effects of migration are a second order effect to the tsunami of change unleashed by technological change. Good day to you.

      --
      [FUCK BETA]
    6. Re:Looser immigration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's well-established by now

      Except it isn't, except in the minds of racists like yourself (and no, claiming to not be a racist is not sufficient to actually not be a racist). There is plenty evidence to the contrary and the economic effects of migration are a second order effect to the tsunami of change unleashed by technological change. Good day to you.

      Says the guy from the UK.

    7. Re:Looser immigration by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve · · Score: 4, Informative

      Here's how you enact a sensible immigration policy. You crack down on the employers of illegals such that no one will hire them. You then offer a contingent amnesty to the illegals that allows them to come forward and face no charges if they leave the country of their own volition, and you even let them keep all of the money and property they've earned if they self-deport. Then, you only allow immigrants with provable skills to immigrate as singles or with their immediate family if they're married with children. None of this "let's bring the whole extended family" over. Grandma, the aunts and uncles and cousins have no business piggybacking on that green card. That's just a recipe for waking up one day and finding a large ethnic enclave in an American city (oh wait, that's precisely what's happened in many areas because of this, silly me).

      How's that Tea Party Kool Aid taste? Self-deporting will never work. I'll explain why. Some years ago I had a girlfriend who lived in a country that is not part of the Visa Waiver group of countries that don't need visas to come to the USA. I applied for a fiancee visa for her. I have some insight into how immigration really works in this country, although I do have to say that we ended up breaking up after my application was approved and she did not ever come to the USA. I've read stories about how legal immigrants can't get visas for family members to visit them because the truth is that at the consulates where US employees make the decisions, many applications get denied. The system is set up so that if visitors overstay a visa, the person who approved it gets held accountable and they may not be able to get promoted if it happens enough. There is no appeal process if your application is denied, so it's just easier in many cases to deny a request than to gamble that the person who gets the visa won't overstay. I've even heard of parents of legal immigrants where one got a visa to visit their legal immigrant child and one did not simply because they applied on different days and each parent talked to a different worker at the same US consulate. Also, the whole process of legally immigrating is ridiculously long. If anyone self-deports, they know that they may not ever be allowed back in. If the person who works on their case just doesn't like them, they can deny or delay the application and the applicant can do nothing (they have no rights as they are not US citizens).

    8. Re:Looser immigration by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Not that your suggestions are terribly unreasonable but you are kind of taking an axe (or chainsaw) to the USA's "Nation of immigrants" founding epic.

      I don't see it that way at all. What he's complaining about is not immigrants coming to the US, it's the new phenomenon where they come here and isolate themselves instead of becoming part of the great Melting Pot. Immigrants are a wonderful boon to the US in general, but when they isolate themselves and refuse to assimilate with the US culture, they end up nothing more than a slice of their origin country on a carved-out section of US soil. And that creates conflicts. There have even been stories of "honor killings" by father's whose children simply tried to live like mainstream Americans.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    9. Re:Looser immigration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Now we don't expect immigrants to respect US culture or learn English

      It's funny how the 19th-century nativists made exactly the same accusations.

    10. Re:Looser immigration by Alomex · · Score: 1

      It's well-established by now that one of the most significant factors in destroying the lives of the unskilled and semi-skilled workers across the country has been the influx of similar immigrants from around the world.

      [citation needed]

      Seriously, last time I checked the literature (and I did check the literature rather than blow air out of my ass) immigration had a rather small role in that. It was the opening of borders and trade agreements to goods that caused the collapsed of unskilled labor wages.

    11. Re:Looser immigration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now we don't expect immigrants to respect US culture or learn English

      It's funny how the 19th-century nativists made exactly the same accusations.

      Got any court opinions from that time that support the suppression of free speech via threats of violence from immigrant populations?

      Yeah, right. You don't.

    12. Re:Looser immigration by invid · · Score: 1

      Just wait until the foreigners start building robots to immigrate into America for them. Then we'll be in trouble.

      --
      The Moore-Murphy Law: The number of things that will go wrong will double every 2 years.
    13. Re:Looser immigration by loonycyborg · · Score: 1

      Don't worry. It's only matter of time before average salary and working conditions will become even worse than in most other countries and immigration stops. It's a self-regulating process, you see :P

      Besides, cost of living in US is higher so it's only matter of time before those immigrants figure out that they're being ripped off and will become as demanding as the rest of americans.

    14. Re:Looser immigration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed, the court opinions from that time support the suppression of free speech via threats of violence from nativist populations.

    15. Re:Looser immigration by gander666 · · Score: 1

      Damn. Wish I had mod points to give you for this.

      Immigration policy has been seriously broken since the 60's and all the "Do it the legal way" folks have no idea how hard, or long of a process that is.

      Here is a green card roadmap that describes how convoluted the legal route is.

      --
      Suppose you were an idiot and suppose you were a member of Congress ... but I repeat myself. - Mark T
    16. Re:Looser immigration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's almost like the school has a responsibility to provide a safe atmosphere for the students. They weren't told to remove their shirts because they had American flags on them. They were told to remove those shirts to prevent the inevitable violence that they would cause. If you can't see why that is a good thing for the school to do, then you probably shouldn't have kids. If you already have kids, please place them with a family member of yours that isn't incapable of grasping simple concepts. If you don't have kids, please don't have them.

    17. Re:Looser immigration by The+Cat · · Score: 1

      Do you know how convoluted the legal route is for getting an SBA loan?

      By your logic, it should be perfectly acceptable for the loan manager to commit bank fraud to fund SBA loans without the proper paperwork.

      How would that work out for us? See 2007 and 2008 for an example.

    18. Re:Looser immigration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not that your suggestions are terribly unreasonable but you are kind of taking an axe (or chainsaw) to the USA's "Nation of immigrants" founding epic.

      I don't see it that way at all. What he's complaining about is not immigrants coming to the US, it's the new phenomenon where they come here and isolate themselves instead of becoming part of the great Melting Pot.

      I seem to recall reading that similar complaints were made about the large influx of Irish and German immigrants more than a century ago. The more things change, the more they stay the same.

    19. Re:Looser immigration by spire3661 · · Score: 0

      And why is that my concern? It will be as hard as WE AS A NATION decide it to be. Did you ever think WE DONT WANT TO MAKE IT EASY?

      --
      Good-bye
    20. Re:Looser immigration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did your grandmother's grandfather get Social Security, affirmative action, unemployment, health care, schooling, etc. benefits at the cost of all of the taxpayers? For the public schools, was taxpayer money spent to provide classes in their native languages?

      This is the one thing people in favor of open immigration always seem to forget: someone has to pay for all of those benefits for people who are never going to be a net contributor to society. You like those illegal immigrants so much, you pay for them. I'll be more than happy to pay more for goods and services produced not using illegal immigrant labor.

      And this is coming from a non-white person whose parents immigrated to this country as college-educated professionals and paid taxes their entire careers. When I entered the schooling system, I did not speak one word of English and was given no special help or classes. It was either learn it or keep flunking until I figured things out.

    21. Re:Looser immigration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's almost like the school has a responsibility to provide a safe atmosphere for the students. They weren't told to remove their shirts because they had American flags on them. They were told to remove those shirts to prevent the inevitable violence that they would cause. If you can't see why that is a good thing for the school to do, then you probably shouldn't have kids. If you already have kids, please place them with a family member of yours that isn't incapable of grasping simple concepts. If you don't have kids, please don't have them.

      Wait.

      Wearing a shirt with a US flag on it is cause for violence? It seems the kids were willing to take that chance, but the school wouldn't let them.

      So we have immigrant populations threatening violence for wearing a US flag - IN A US SCHOOL - and you don't see a problem with the immigrant populations behaving that way?

      Would it be proper for US citizens to emigrate to Argentina and beat up schoolkids displaying the Argentinian flag?

      Thank you so much for helping to make my point from earlier that the US does have a significant problem with current immigration.

    22. Re:Looser immigration by Xest · · Score: 2

      You say it like this is a new thing though. It's not.

      For reference, look at the distaste of kids of some Jewish immigrants falling in love with and/or marrying non-Jews and how that has ended in a similar manner in decades gone by.

      The problem has always been there, but fringe cases of parents carrying out honour killings are just that - fringe cases that make headlines. I agree it's sick, I agree it's a problem, I agree it needs to be dealt with, but it's not new.

      It's not a coincidence that parts of America are a little Irish, Italian, or French - it's just they've been that way so long people have learnt to accept it. Hell, I swear St. Patricks day is more vibrantly celebrated in parts of America than it is much of Ireland nowadays even but do people complain about those damn Irish refusing to fit in? Italian-American gangster killings were as much an export of the ideas of the Italian mafia to the US in the 30s as Pakistani honour killings are today. Different eras, different problems, but same underlying issue - integration takes time.

    23. Re:Looser immigration by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      It's almost like the school has a responsibility to provide a safe atmosphere for the students. They weren't told to remove their shirts because they had American flags on them. They were told to remove those shirts to prevent the inevitable violence that they would cause. If you can't see why that is a good thing for the school to do, then you probably shouldn't have kids. If you already have kids, please place them with a family member of yours that isn't incapable of grasping simple concepts. If you don't have kids, please don't have them.

      Err....why weren't they throwing out the students that were threatening violence against the students wanting merely to wear shirts displaying the flag of the country everyone fucking has a foot in at the time??

      They punished the wrong students.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    24. Re:Looser immigration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its funny you would say this when you yourself are a result of immigrant families who were either deported or ran away from their home country a few hundred years ago. And i will bet that your forefathers did this because they were looking for a better life!

      Now when we do the same you have the gall to object?? WOW!!

    25. Re:Looser immigration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hmm you must have a forefather called KickingBird. Oh wait its not! stfu you immigrant!

    26. Re:Looser immigration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Talk for your self.

    27. Re:Looser immigration by west · · Score: 1

      > You say it like this is a new thing though. It's not.

      Where are my mod points when I need them?

      +1 Insightful

    28. Re:Looser immigration by chihowa · · Score: 1

      Honestly, I think any sort of skill at all would do. People holding a college degree or certification of mastery of some skilled labor or anything else would be a positive addition to our society. We're probably fine in the "people who can push a broom" category, though. It would only involve normalizing our immigration policies to those of most other countries. Intra-EU aside, most other countries aren't falling all over themselves to get as many of the unskilled, "immediately dependent on the state or crime" class of immigrants as possible.

      This is (one of the reasons) why the idea of amnesty for current illegal immigrants is so backwards. Highly motivated people with money and PhDs take many years and tens of thousands of dollars to (sometimes unsuccessfully) get citizenship, but people with no skills, money, or education slip across a border (thus breaking laws in their first steps on US soil) and we'd give citizenship to them? Exactly what sort of society are we trying to build here?

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
    29. Re:Looser immigration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is a bad thing. Ever heard of a little thing called nationalism? An ethnic group identifies more with "its own kind" rather than the country as a whole. German nationalism lead to Hitler. Irish nationalism lead to the Feinian raids. Black nationalism is excused by members of Congress.

      Left-wing groups correctly excoriate nationalism by the majority, but rarely oppose nationalism by a minority. The fact is the world would be better off if people tried to assimilate into the countries in which they lived.

    30. Re:Looser immigration by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      You want less immigrants? Then spend more on foreign aid. If you can improve the lives of people abroad, maybe they won't come here.

      You'd rather build walls? Walls leak, and walls break when we smash them. If you don't want to live in a global society, then stop importing stuff, and stop traveling, because that just adds holes in your walls.

      Why do you care about the poor unskilled and semi-skilled workers across the country more than poor skilled immigrants? Are you one of them? Is it because they look more like you?

    31. Re:Looser immigration by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      Dude, that's what's awesome about it. Chinatown is awesome. So is Latino town. How boring would it be if everyone acted all Western European.

    32. Re:Looser immigration by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Dude, that's what's awesome about it. Chinatown is awesome. So is Latino town. How boring would it be if everyone acted all Western European.

      Oh, I agree with that (never been to Chinatown in SF, but Chinatown in DC is fun). But it's difficult to describe the difference between integrated cultures, like Chinatown, and isolated cultures, like we're starting to see. There are places here where I would probably enjoy shopping, but they make you feel unwelcome and there's no common language (I speak English, German, and some broken French but the clerks either don't understand any of them or pretend like they don't).

      When I visit a foreign country, I at least make some attempt to follow the customs. If you're here in my country, you should at least make an effort to tolerate ours.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    33. Re:Looser immigration by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      When I look at the American immigration debate, this topic practically never gets up. It's 95% about illegals (and even then most people think "Mexicans"), and 5% about outsourcing and H1Bs. The legal immigration track is not discussed at all.

      So no, you as a nation have not decided it. It's not even the politicians that have decided it for you. It's the bureaucrats.

      Whether you want it to be easy or hard is another matter, but the barriers should at least be sensible - i.e. they should select people for some meaningful positive traits, or discriminate against some meaningful negative traits. Randomly denying applications because the immigration officer had a headache is not useful to anyone.

    34. Re:Looser immigration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "illegal immigrants actually contribute more to public coffers in taxes than they cost in social services"

      Are illegal immigrants allowed to work officially? If not, how is it even possible to know how much taxes they pay?

  3. BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Eric Schmidt is full of it.

    1. Re:BS by StripedCow · · Score: 1

      Eric Schmidt: there's no reason to have any secrets.

      Just the kind of friend you would trust with your secrets.

      --
      If Pandora's box is destined to be opened, *I* want to be the one to open it.
    2. Re:BS by gnupun · · Score: 1

      Didn't Google pay over a billion to buy YouTube?

    3. Re:BS by bberens · · Score: 1

      Surveillance shouldn't bother you if you're not hiding anything. And since nothing can be hidden from Google, nothing is bothering you.

      --
      Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
  4. Google talking out of their asses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How very uncommon. What is needed is people starting to educate others that it is unwise to put all of your private data in the hands of others. Especially don't place your data in the hands of fucking Google.

  5. Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Rich0 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Tech startups don't create the kinds of jobs that the 99% actually need. Oh, sure, many of them will eventually hire one secretary, and will pay into their building's contract for one part-time janitor.

    As pointed out in the WhatsApp example, most tech startups employ a dozen or so high-skill kids at low wages. In most cases they then work for 5 years and lose their jobs, not having really made much of anything. The ones that make the papers are the ones where the kids become millionaires. They then grow into 20-50 person firms that never really hire anybody who isn't technically skilled. As modern companies they don't have the kinds of legacy processes that involve heavy manpower. If they sell widgets then they do the design with a few local employees, send the manufacture to Asia, and then warehouse the goods in some 3PL company that puts part-timers lacking benefits through a meat grinder to get packages shipped (those companies create jobs for sure, but as few as they can possibly manage at low pay and they're anything but desirable jobs).

    I think startups are important for the economy, but not because they create jobs.

    I think we need to get past the model where the typical person is employed by a private company. Private companies just don't need the sorts of skills that the typical person has. Nobody wants to hire an average programmer (at least, not at US wages), or an average marketer, etc. Today we have hyper-specialization and if you're in the top 1% of whatever you do you'll have a job for life, and if not you'll be lucky to ever have a job. We're still in transition, but all the trends are there.

    We life in a country which has a huge economy, and yet tons of people who are unemployed. And yet, our roads and bridges are falling apart. Just tax a small bit of the wealth flowing through the country and give people part-time jobs fixing potholes or whatever. When we run out of those they can fix bridges, dig trenches for municipal broadband, and so on.

    You'll never hear businesses lobbying for that, however, because then they might actually have to pay their janitors a living wage to keep them. I'm not suggesting private enterprise is evil/bad/etc, but ultimately these companies are not stewards of the public interest. Let's run the economy in a way that actually allows people who are unemployable to survive, and which helps the private economy as well. After all, wouldn't better transportation in the Bay Area help companies like Google?

    1. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nice post

    2. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 2, Informative

      And yet, our roads and bridges are falling apart. Just tax a small bit of the wealth flowing through the country and give people part-time jobs fixing potholes or whatever.

      We already tax a small bit of the wealth flowing through the country to fix roads and bridges. They're called "gasoline taxes" and "road use taxes".

      And we already pay people (full time! none of this part time crap) to fix potholes and other issues with the roads.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    3. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Third+Position · · Score: 3, Informative

      Private companies just don't need the sorts of skills that the typical person has. Nobody wants to hire an average programmer (at least, not at US wages), or an average marketer, etc. Today we have hyper-specialization and if you're in the top 1% of whatever you do you'll have a job for life, and if not you'll be lucky to ever have a job. We're still in transition, but all the trends are there.

      We life in a country which has a huge economy, and yet tons of people who are unemployed.

      Oddly enough, a libertarian economist, Tyler Cowan, wrote a book that agrees with you. Average is Over.

      --
      American Third Position
      Finally, a real choice!
    4. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by njnnja · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Today we have hyper-specialization and if you're in the top 1% of whatever you do you'll have a job for life, and if not you'll be lucky to ever have a job. We're still in transition, but all the trends are there.

      We life in a country which has a huge economy, and yet tons of people who are unemployed. And yet, our roads and bridges are falling apart. Just tax a small bit of the wealth flowing through the country and give people part-time jobs fixing potholes or whatever. When we run out of those they can fix bridges, dig trenches for municipal broadband, and so on.

      I agree that this appears to be occurring but it is because the top 1% (in all sorts of professions - entertainment and media, mobile startups, finance, etc) are able to use technology to leverage their talents in ways not possible before, in order to reach more and more people. By reaching more people, they are able to make more money.

      However, note that the infrastructure that they use is still not free (and probably never will be). The cost of building and maintaining the network needs to be borne by somebody. And a lot of that network building and maintenance is done by guys with hardhats climbing cell phone towers. A lot of the $19 billion valuation of Whats App is due to the hard work of those guys making a basic middle class wage. If Verizon or AT&T wasn't paying them, Whats App would have to, and then Whats App is not a 50 person company, but rather a 50,050 person company.

      So the trick is to get the money from the 1% who use the leverage to the 99% who build the tools that the 1% use. Maybe Whats App (Facebook) should be responsible for paying a big bonus to the people who work on the towers. It would surely encourage more young people to become skilled tradesmen who could improve our cellular network. Heaven knows we need more/better cell towers more than we need another app writing software firm.

    5. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Tech startups don't create the kinds of jobs that the 99% actually need. ...

      I think startups are important for the economy, but not because they create jobs.

      ...

      You're ignoring non-tech startups, for example bakeries or restaurants. Those do create jobs for all kinds of people, skilled and unskilled.

      We life in a country which has a huge economy, and yet tons of people who are unemployed. And yet, our roads and bridges are falling apart. Just tax a small bit of the wealth flowing through the country and give people part-time jobs fixing potholes or whatever. When we run out of those they can fix bridges, dig trenches for municipal broadband, and so on.

      WHAT?!?!?!

      Fully 41% of the US GDP is government spending. "Tax a small bit of the wealth flowing through the country"?!?!? The government is already 41% of the entire economy and you think they don't already "tax a small bit of the wealth"?

      What country do you live in?

      It ain't the US.

      You might think the government needs to raise taxes, you might thing the government needs to lower taxes.

      But do you really live in a fantasy world where you think they don't already "tax a small bit"?!?!?

      And just TRY to allowing the government to force unemployed people to show up to government work camps to collect their dole. OMG the "progressives" would shit their pants.

    6. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by conquistadorst · · Score: 2

      Tech startups don't create the kinds of jobs that the 99% actually need. Oh, sure, many of them will eventually hire one secretary, and will pay into their building's contract for one part-time janitor.

      I have to admit that saying they're jobs we don't need sounds a bit misguided. Who says? Why wouldn't they be? Are you suggesting we shouldn't have a technical work force? That's what it sounds like... but if I were to guess how you'd respond if asked that, you'd say that's not what you're trying to say at all.

      That being said, technology already permeates every industry. Even service, manufacturing, construction, and it continues to increase more and more every year. There's a growing need (and gap) in tuning our workforce to be more technical. Hence the growing calls for pushing math, science, and technology in schools. While there will always be a need for blue collar jobs like manufacturing/construction/service for the foreseeable future, those won't last in the same state as they do today either. So it's kind of inevitable. And in reference to exporting those jobs exported oversees, you probably already know the same jobs would only be a 100th in size over here because of the automation we'd employ.

      As for taxes in my opinion, we already have a sliding scale that almost works OK. If we could eliminate some "loopholes" - first being special treatment on specific types of income like dividends and capital gains and instead treat them as ordinary income - second eliminate all interest deductions including mortgage interest. I believe those changes alone (allowing for no exceptions) we'd fix 80% of our tax problems and also simplify taxes for everyone across the board.

    7. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by StandardCell · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Aggregating $19B in wealth in the hands of 50 people plus a handful of investors is indeed not the way to create jobs. It slows down the flow of money within the broader economy. I'm sure those $20M homes in Woodside and Los Altos Hills and Seacliff are worth every penny.

      These megadeals also have the effect of creating a startup lottery environment where anyone can put together a ten page business plan and the "trend du jour" and try to make out like bandits. This is what led to the first dotcom crash and will also eventually lead to the second crash at some point. Anyone who makes an alternative to this content with having the user watch ads in the background every ten app starts will murder Whatsapp because $0 is cheaper than $1.

      I think it's also important to note that Eric Schmidt wholeheartedly approves of this deal because I suspect he thinks it's to the ultimate detriment of Facebook, and a blessing \for Google in some ways. Much like unbridled immigration is to existing workers in this country for his business.

    8. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So why are the roads and bridges broken?

    9. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by ebno-10db · · Score: 3, Interesting

      As for taxes in my opinion, we already have a sliding scale that almost works OK.

      That's true, if you only look at federal income tax. Look at all federal, state and local taxes, and you have a different picture. Estimates vary a bit, but at best total taxes are only very slightly progressive. Other estimates say they're regressive.

    10. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by bondsbw · · Score: 1

      Providing jobs for the unskilled is not the problem with our economy. There are plenty of people who have the skills, the education, and/or past experience. Many have to settle for jobs that don't have anything to do with those skills.

      As for the unskilled, I would say they have it better in this economy than someone who has skills but is looking for a job that doesn't need them. An MBA provides little or no value compared to an unskilled worker when applying for a job as a waiter, janitor, etc. And most MBAs don't want to work for the same wages as unskilled labor and they won't be as excited about the job opportunity.

      And besides, once an unskilled person is hired, they become skilled quickly (else they won't be on the job long). Now that person has a better chance at getting another waiter/janitor job than anyone else, including the MBA.

      This is why there is talk of the education bubble bursting soon. Too many skilled laborers and not enough skilled jobs.

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    11. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      We already tax a small bit of the wealth flowing through the country to fix roads and bridges. They're called "gasoline taxes" and "road use taxes".

      And neither gasoline taxes nor road use taxes are sufficient to pay for the roads. You can have a balkanized network of toll roads that would cripple commerce and personal travel alike, you can raise fuel taxes to european levels which is probably the fairest approach, or you can have what we have here where money from the general fund is spent on interstate highway maintenance. Of course, that could be done at the state level rather than the federal level, which would prevent states like California with the most miles of road, the most vehicles, and the most vehicle-miles traveled (due to having the largest population and lots of livable land area) having shitty roads while also having to subsidize the roads in other states. Mostly red states, they talk big about personal responsibility but they don't actually believe in that shit.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    12. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      The government purchasing process is so corrupt and wasteful that projects can only involve minimal work and massive profits. To actually get something of value done would require a stupendous level of funding, would make more sense to start fresh building a transportation network on Mars

    13. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Gryle · · Score: 1

      And just TRY to allowing the government to force unemployed people to show up to government work camps to collect their dole. OMG the "progressives" would shit their pants.

      Which is unfortunate because I've long thought the Civilian Conservation Corps is an excellent model for unemployment benefits for the able-bodied. Interestingly there are a handful of similar state-run programs in California and Washington but these are generally limited to the 18-25 age-group. I think with a certain amount of "leave days" for job fairs and the like it would be an excellent program for Congress to resurrect. However I can see someone screaming about exploitation of minorities as they have a disproportionately high unemployment rate nationwide (12.6% unemployment as opposed to the 5.7% national average).

      --
      Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not entirely sure about the universe - Einstein
    14. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Given the amount of borrowing the government does in order to fund its spending you really can't make the argument that since they spend so much they must tax so much.

    15. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nor can one make the argument that just because the government borrows they must not tax.

      The tax burden in the US is about 25% of the GDP. Significantly more than "tax a small bit of the wealth", no?

    16. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Sure, maybe that's why I didn't make that argument.

      I also didn't argue that they weren't already taxing more than a small bit of the wealth. Just that the logic used to argue that point was flawed.

    17. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by ebno-10db · · Score: 1

      Another thing that's supposed to be great about the USA is lack of censorship, even of the non-government variety. An example of the latter is what modding the PP down to -1. I disagree with much of it, but it's not flamebait or a troll. "Hyper-socialist nonsense" may be a little over the top, but it's tolerable given that the rest of the post is concrete criticisms.

      Here is the PP quoted in full in my attempt to overcome censorship.

      Good luck with all of that hyper-socialist nonsense that you are preaching, I was born in a country that had it, USSR, I am glad it fell apart and I would never live in another one like that and you are turning USA into one. No amount of pot-hole and bridge repairs will reduce your trade imbalance, which is, by the way, the real indicator of health of your economy in the age of fake GPD and inflation numbers.

      Your trade deficit is around 500 Billion / year and has been there for decades now, you are not paying for things you are getting in the US of A, your suggestion will only worsen the trade imbalance, pot-hole repairs cannot be exported in exchange for all those manufactured goods you are importing for FREE (free, because it's all vendor financed, thus the giant debt).

      Anyway, as I said, good luck with your ideas. They have been proven completely false and harmful time and again, but I guess they don't actually teach real history any longer (if they ever did).

      P.S. Looking forward to having my complaints about the mods modded down. Censors have no sense of irony.

    18. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eric Schmidt's speech was amusing! This coming from a person who runs a monopolistic company, that's in no way trustworthy , and nowhere near "being an open company". They have followed the same path FB has, with unannounced dumbfounding changes not because it benefits users but benefits there bottom line and if they continue on the path they are going to end up doomed as FB has started to become.

      He me crack up when he said "this is capitalism"!!

    19. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by ebno-10db · · Score: 1

      In response to the GP: I completely agree about the US trade deficit, but pothole and bridge repair can be important there. The US really does have a rotting infrastructure, which makes it more difficult to do business efficiently. That's why it's important for less developed countries to improve their infrastructure. What's the point of making products efficiently if they're difficult or expensive to ship?

    20. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by dkf · · Score: 1

      And neither gasoline taxes nor road use taxes are sufficient to pay for the roads.

      Anything that's actually fair should be proportional to the damage caused to the roads by the vehicle, so that's approximately the first power of the distance traveled and the fourth power of the axle weight. (I think.) Expect the road haulage industry to be utterly against any form of fairness, despite the fact that they objectively cause the majority of problems (due to miles travelled and weight moved).

      --
      "Little does he know, but there is no 'I' in 'Idiot'!"
    21. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by MouseTheLuckyDog · · Score: 1

      You do realize that "Small bit of wealth" is at least six times as much as "big oil" is making in profits? Probably a lot more.

    22. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Threni · · Score: 1

      Say, you don't think he read that book first, and then posted?

    23. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      Just tax a small bit of the wealth flowing through the country and give people part-time jobs fixing potholes or whatever.

      Why the make-work? Just go with basic income where everybody gets a check that's enough for food, shelter and other necessities, with no means testing or anything. If you want a bigger house or flashier car or a lawn greener than the neighbors', then you can go out and get a job (profit motive) to supplement your income beyond this. But you still take the "or die" factor out of employment.

    24. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by bigpat · · Score: 1

      Obamacare is in effect a big regressive tax on middle income families.

    25. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by rockmuelle · · Score: 1

      I think you nailed it in calling out that Eric Schmidt realizes this was a very bad move for Facebook and shows that Facebook is not really competition. "Good for them" is simply a way of saying that these guys made out like bandits at someone else's expense.

      Facebook can only pull off a few more of these big deals before their cash is gone and their stock is worthless. If they have to do this every time a new startup starts to take users away (which seems to be what really happened with WhatsApp - losing everyone but the US to another messaging platform couldn't have been good for FB), they'll be out of money and equity quicker than you can launch a startup at SXSW.

      Eric Schmidt knows this and hance can easily laugh it off. I'm sure Eric also knows what Facebook's actual user base is (hint: there's no way it's anywhere near 1B people, some simple top-down modeling should be enough to convince anyone that there is no way 1/7 of the world's population is actively using FB, kinda like when the Oscars used to claim 1B viewers). WhatsApp was probably just the confirmation he needed to write off Facebook as a competitor.

      Ok... hopefully that's all the DST-sleep-deprivation ranting I'll do today...

      -Chris

    26. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      We life in a country which has a huge economy, and yet tons of people who are unemployed. And yet, our roads and bridges are falling apart. Just tax a small bit of the wealth flowing through the country and give people part-time jobs fixing potholes or whatever. When we run out of those they can fix bridges, dig trenches for municipal broadband, and so on.

      Sure, we should do a lot more to repair our infrastructure - and we should hire more people to do it. However, the various Governments already take in over 20% of the GDP for taxes, surely that is enough to get the jobs done? More taxes isn't the answer - Government realizing it has a responsibility to actually maintain the infrastructure it taxed to build, and taxes to maintain (for example, the US Federal Government makes money - positive cash flow - on its gas taxes relative to its expenditures on road maintenance and highway construction)), is the key.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    27. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      We already tax a small bit of the wealth flowing through the country to fix roads and bridges. They're called "gasoline taxes" and "road use taxes".

      And neither gasoline taxes nor road use taxes are sufficient to pay for the roads.

      Per the Federal Bureau of Transportation Statistics, roads and cars more than pay their fair share; in fact, the taxes raised not only cover roads but also airplane and train passenger costs (the former being lightly subsidized per passenger mile; the latter being heavily subsidized per passenger mile).

      Cars and trucks more than pay their way; it's just that tax dollars are fungible and the various Governments know people will NOT stop driving, so that's a fixed tax base that can be increasingly levied against - and the extra funds can be spent in other places where there can be more political gain as compared to economic gain.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    28. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Another thing that's supposed to be great about the USA is lack of censorship, even of the non-government variety. An example of the latter is what modding the PP down to -1.

      Nonsense, as comrade roman_mir has often taught us, a private individual should be free to discriminate all he wants. People discriminate all the time

      Slashdot is a private site owned and run by private individuals who deemed its moderation system acceptable. They're visited by private individuals who use the moderation system.

      People are free to discriminate against roman_mir via their mods. If you or roman_mir don't like it, go find another site to post on, or make your own. Comrade roman's hyper-socialist remark is spot on, and it's talking about people like YOU, who obviously wants government to point guns at moderator's heads and dictate to them how to mod!

    29. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Nope, but the link is appreciated all the same. :) I had no doubt I wasn't the first to think what I said though.

    30. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      You know, some start-ups do succeed and become middling or large companies.

    31. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      I'm suggesting taxing a bit more. Government is 41% of the GDP right now. If private industry is only going to employ 10% of the population, then it stands to reason that government will ultimately be the other 90%. That sounds crazy, but it might work perfectly fine.

    32. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Tech startups don't create the kinds of jobs that the 99% actually need. Oh, sure, many of them will eventually hire one secretary, and will pay into their building's contract for one part-time janitor.

      I have to admit that saying they're jobs we don't need sounds a bit misguided. Who says? Why wouldn't they be? Are you suggesting we shouldn't have a technical work force? That's what it sounds like... but if I were to guess how you'd respond if asked that, you'd say that's not what you're trying to say at all.

      It isn't. :)

      I'm not saying the jobs aren't needed. They just aren't the kind of jobs the "99%" need.

      When you talk about the "need" for a job there are two perspectives people tend to have:
      1. The job needs doing, which is why a company wants to hire somebody. Obviously the company wouldn't be hiring somebody they didn't need, and if the economy didn't need the service being performed they wouldn't be willing to pay for it. I think this is the sense you were talking about.
      2. Somebody needs a job to put food on the table. This is the sense I was talking about. We have an economic model where people are expected to work, and thus there is interest in doing things that stimulate the creation of jobs so that they have jobs to do.

      I'm all for stimulating the economy when #1 is the driver. However, I don't know that private industry is the right solution for #2. Sure, take action when it actually works, but investing a billion dollars in a company so that it can hire 14 people (of which only 1 wouldn't otherwise find a job elsewhere) just isn't an effective way to do #2.

      If the economy otherwise benefits from stimulating that company, then by all means do it. I think it is in the national interest to create self-driving cars - it would have huge benefits to everybody. However, on the whole it would probably destroy many more jobs than it creates. So, funding self-driving cars to accomplish #2 is dumb. On the other hand, not funding self-driving cars because it doesn't accomplish #2 is also dumb.

      Bottom line is that we should fund development of capabilities because it makes sense for society to have those capabilities. The creation of jobs per-se shouldn't be the driver for stimulating the economy. If we run out of work to give to people then just pay them to stay home until a need for them to do something comes up.

    33. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      As for the unskilled, I would say they have it better in this economy than someone who has skills but is looking for a job that doesn't need them.

      I'm not sure that either are better off. Unskilled jobs do not pay a living wage for the most part, so people with them are hardly better-off. Sure, they're better off than the homeless, but that's about it.

      My point is that we shouldn't be focused on creating jobs so much as maximizing the economy. Feeding people and running the economy are two different things.

    34. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Your trade deficit is around 500 Billion / year and has been there for decades now, you are not paying for things you are getting in the US of A, your suggestion will only worsen the trade imbalance, pot-hole repairs cannot be exported in exchange for all those manufactured goods you are importing for FREE (free, because it's all vendor financed, thus the giant debt).

      So, how is getting free stuff bad?

      Trade imbalance just means that the US is getting tangible goods and services in exchange for little pieces of paper. Down the road maybe people stop accepting those pieces of paper. If that happens the US will just declare them worthless, and people will just have to buy their toys locally.

      The solution to the trade deficit is tariffs so that people buy things locally in the first place.

      So, all the trade deficit does is lets the US citizen get lots of free stuff for a decade before the party ends and we have to start paying for our toys.

      I think socialism is basically inevitable. Sooner or later if you don't feed poor people they tend to start revolting. The nature of specialization is eliminating the need for as many jobs - it used to take 50% of the population just to grow food. Now one combine can do the job of 1000 people. That isn't a bad thing - it is just progress. That doesn't mean that we stop feeding everybody.

    35. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      So now giving someone who is unemployed a job ... suddenly becomes discrimination? Thats just fucked up.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    36. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by SvnLyrBrto · · Score: 1

      Tech startups don't create the kinds of jobs that the 99% actually need. Oh, sure, many of them will eventually hire one secretary, and will pay into their building's contract for one part-time janitor.

      That is demonstrably untrue. Both the US Census and the IRS publish income data; so it's not too hard to find where the 1% actually starts. Granted, the data is subject to interpretation. But even with the lower estimates, the bulk of workers fall soundly into the 99%.

      According to whatsmypercent.com, the 1% starts at an annual income of $506,553. The New York Times shows the 1% starting at "just" $383,001. (The latter is nationwide aggregate. The NY Times tool actually lets you select via state, or even metro area. The the Bay Area, for example, you'd have to clear $558,046 before leaving the bottom 99%.)

      The handful who win the IPO jackpot notwithstanding; I'm pretty sure your average tech worker is not cleating half a million a year, even in the Bay Area.

      --
      Imagine all the people...
    37. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      I support basic income. However, I think there is also value in giving people things to do.

      I'm not big on make-work for its own sake. Paying one person to dig ditches and another to fill them is pointless waste.

      However, if we can give people something to do and fix our rotting infrastructure at the same time, all the better. I wouldn't suggest doing the job in a way that is less safe or less competent just to involve fewer skilled laborers. Make use of what you can.

      I wouldn't make people with arthritis dig ditches or face starvation. Heck, I wouldn't ask anybody to dig a ditch that could be better dug with a backhoe either.

    38. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      However, the various Governments already take in over 20% of the GDP for taxes, surely that is enough to get the jobs done?

      It all depends on your standards. If you want a space elevator it might cost a bit more - to use an extreme example.

      I think the scale of government needs to be reactive. It needs to get done the things that are worth doing if nobody else is willing to do them. One of those things is ensuring that everybody has the essentials of life. If private industry only employs 10% of the population, then the government is going to have to fund the other 90%, which means some pretty hefty taxes.

      However, none of this should be viewed as being against private industry. Indeed, I think that we should meddle less with private industry - let them get the job done in the most efficient way possible without any regard to how many people become unemployed. Often our policies saddle companies with needless expense simply because we use companies as an inefficient social welfare system. Instead we should run welfare efficiently, and let companies be run efficiently.

    39. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, 70% of Federal Government spending is simply checks to others, it's already redistributing income (over $2 trillion a year) at a massive rate. I fear if it continues, more and more jobs will simply move overseas - and thus the vicious cycle continues.

      What I would do is the following:

      - Set the personal income tax rate to 20% - that includes income taxes and SSI/FICA. Flat - even for everyone, no deductions. Make the US personal income tax system simple, easy, and attractive - you know EXACTLY how much you're going to pay, right up front.

      - Zero out the corporate income tax. 0%. Become the ultimate tax haven for every company in the world. Manufacturing, financial, IT - no one has a 0% tax rate, except the US.

      Focus on doing what you can to grow the economy and build jobs here, rather than trying to simply pay people to not work. It's what we're doing now (70% of Federal spending), and it's not working.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    40. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Expect the road haulage industry to be utterly against any form of fairness, despite the fact that they objectively cause the majority of problems (due to miles travelled and weight moved).

      As much as I enjoy driving, I have spoken out on this very issue in this and other fora time and again, and I agree. We need more rail, and less trucks. Ideally eventually PRT could replace all but everything else. I would prefer to live in a world without tire dust. I don't mind some off-road tomfoolery but this whole notion of driving around on rubber tires on asphalt roads is ridiculous.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    41. Re:Startups Aren't Really Job-Creators In Practice by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Ok, make it the 90% then. :)

  6. Economics of envy by LordLucless · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When interviewer Steven Levy noted 'gazelles' like the 50-employee WhatsApp which was acquired by Facebook for a reported $19 billion seem to lead to more inequality, Schmidt brushed aside the apparent contradiction.

    50 people getting a split of $19b is seen as a bad thing because it "increases inequality". Why? Would the rest of the area be better off if those 50 people were still poor? It was a transfer of wealth from Facebook's war chest to 50 individuals - the money wasn't taken from the rest of the population. Surely the measure of increasing prosperity should be how much your buying power has grown, rather than the fact that someone down the street's buying power increased more than yours.

    --
    Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    1. Re:Economics of envy by MrL0G1C · · Score: 2, Insightful

      50 people getting a split of $19b is seen as a bad thing because it "increases inequality". Why?

      That statement is beyond dim, do you not understand what the definition of inequality is?

      How many decades of there being no "trickle-down effect" do you need?

      Let me put it simply, rich people redistribute wealth from poor people to rich people by getting them to create goods and services for the lowest wage that they can get away with and the profits get paid to rich shareholders and directors.

      Inequality is some people being substantially more wealthy than others.

      --
      Waterfox - a Firefox fork with legacy extension support, security updates and better privacy by default.
    2. Re:Economics of envy by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      That statement is beyond dim, do you not understand what the definition of inequality is?

      I'm the dim one, when apparently you cannot perform basic comprehension. I was questioning why 50 poor people getting rich was considered a bad thing, not why it was considered inequality.

      How many decades of there being no "trickle-down effect"....profits get paid to rich shareholders and directors.

      Blah, blah, blah, off-topic ranting on "trickle-down" economics that has nothing to do with what I posted. I guess a keyword in my post must have tripped a spinal reflex, or something.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    3. Re:Economics of envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > How many decades of there being no "trickle-down effect" do you need?

      How about just one? What do you think rich people do with their money? Swim in it?

    4. Re:Economics of envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Buying power is a meassure of the ability of everyone in the locality to purchase goods and services.

      If somone in my locality is suddenly able to out bid me on everything, my buying power has gone down.

      It's also called gentrification...

    5. Re:Economics of envy by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      You're going to have to explain for us stupid people.

      How does transferring $19 billion from Facebook to 50 people with less money that Facebook possibly increase inequality?

      The richer party now has less. The poorer parties now have more. Isn't that a decrease in inequality?

    6. Re:Economics of envy by bondsbw · · Score: 1

      And suppose they do.

      The answer then seems simple: if you're going to regulate the rich, do so in a way that encourages them to spend. Don't just take their money because you assume they don't spend.

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    7. Re:Economics of envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, putting "increasing inequality" in sarcastoquotes and then just saying "why?" made it appear that you were questioning whether or not this in fact increases inequality. You can only measure "basic comprehension" against writing that's actually somewhat clearly worded. Try dropping the quotes when you're not actually quoting someone.

    8. Re:Economics of envy by Vitriol+Angst · · Score: 2

      That was the argument for the past 40 years. And all boats have not lifted.

      The entire problem is not represented with overpaying for a little software company and a few individuals getting the benefit. The problem is constantly rewarding the rewarded. People with opportunity and education do creative things because it is rewarding and make choices based on rewards available.

      We just need to transfer wealth from those with a lot to everyone else -- like we did when America was the greatest economic power and had the best education.

      --
      >>"ad space available -- low rates!!!"
    9. Re:Economics of envy by bondsbw · · Score: 1

      Because math is too hard.

      And the same people who cry about such "inequality" tend to be the most vocal about gambling. Somehow, the poor giving up anywhere from $1 to $100 (or more), so that one person can be added to the 1%, is their definition of true equality.

      I take it back. It's not about math, it's mostly about polarizing politics that cause people to believe a lot of stupid things because they want to be identified with a few ideals. (The same applies on the other side of the aisle too... don't think I'm just picking on one group.)

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    10. Re:Economics of envy by Vitriol+Angst · · Score: 1

      This "Economics of Envy" title really pisses me off. What a smug point of view. The people who are doing great with the current system, will be really surprised one day when a rich person has to hire mercenaries with machine guns to protect their home. Escort their kids to private schools in bullet proof cars.

      Other countries that have a huge wealth inequality do experience "trickle down" but it's usually as a ransom payment to return a loved one unharmed. There is buying and selling of guns and bullet proof cars as well to stimulate the economy.

      Use all your economic matrixes or reasoned arguments. Blame problems on lax whatever or "the kids these days." The mob almost went extinct for a time but now we've got large street gangs and I suppose organized crime will be coming back because the justice system doesn't work for the "average" citizen. You remove those "overpaid union jobs" and -- surprise, surprise you get street gangs. "People shouldn't have kids if they can't afford it." Yeah, that's easy talk and not reality -- less money usually means more kids all over the planet.

      The fact is, for most people, the standard of living and opportunity is going down. The Gazelles are fine to get a windfall -- the problem isn't in the horse trading. Of course the problem isn't just ONE issue of people making a lot of money in a company purchase. It's a lot of big money chasing big money and none of it helping the vast majority who will never be part of the Gazelle lottery.

      There's an easy solution to this, or we can continue listening the Libertarian principles as if we all haven't heard these tropes since Adam Smith rolled over in his grave for hackneyed economics tailored to the rich. Someone will make a profit selling guns and one day someone will get one stuck in their face and all their intellectual arguments on how "this should be working great for you, young school kid with a record and no future -- maybe you haven't heard about being motivated, staying in school and getting your company bought by Facebook?" That of course, will get you shot as well as mugged, but good luck with that.

      --
      >>"ad space available -- low rates!!!"
    11. Re:Economics of envy by crashumbc · · Score: 1

      Build super yachts, and waste it on things that do VERY little to help the economy.

      They buy a 1 billion yacht from a company that employs barely 50 people. Of course 49 of those people earn low wages and the owners of the super yacht company keep 99% of the profits.

      So the "wealth" doesn't actually go anywhere or do anything it just gets pass around from one extremely rich person to another...

    12. Re:Economics of envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because that $19 billion isn't in the hands of one person (regardless of how many times people assert that "corporations are people"). It's in the hands of all the shareholders of Facebook, most of whom are no richer than the 50 WhatsApp employees were to begin with.

    13. Re:Economics of envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When interviewer Steven Levy noted 'gazelles' like the 50-employee WhatsApp which was acquired by Facebook for a reported $19 billion seem to lead to more inequality, Schmidt brushed aside the apparent contradiction.

      50 people getting a split of $19b is seen as a bad thing because it "increases inequality". Why?

      Exactly, it's the gazelle companies that bring great things to the whole world, which for now we'll just say is the United States.

    14. Re:Economics of envy by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      If that's how you are going to account for it, then how much did facebook's shares go down in price due to this purchase?

    15. Re:Economics of envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      facebook's shares

      Right, only rich people own stock.

      Excuse me, I'm going to polish my monocle, if you know what I mean, then take a few years off to sail the world, hunting dinosaurs.

    16. Re:Economics of envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's not that moving $19b from Facebook to 50 people increases inequality - I agree, good for them! It's that the existence of such a transaction provides a vivid example of a large degree of inequality. Those 50 people are not the problem, the problem is the overall degree of inequality. It's a society-level problem, not an individual-level problem.

      Absolute wealth is good. Equality is good too. There are costs in a society for inequality, e.g. it puts the population on an uneven footing in a democracy. It also leads to much more intense daily concerns about what level you're at and which level you will be at, which is bad for health and happiness of even the people in the upper percentiles. Even the wealthy do not benefit from living in a society where they've got to watch their back because there's so many people below them with much less to lose. From en economic viewpoint it's an inefficient allocation of resources, lowering overall utility, unless you can make the case that even the lower percentiles are better off then they would have otherwise been.

      That some level of inequality is helpful to making capitalistic economies work is certainly a case that can be made, to a point, though likely US inequality could be lowered a lot without removing the incentives that make a capitalistic economy work. Even the people who would complain the loudest about it would likely end up better off in terms of utility, even with less money to their name, they just wouldn't know it.

    17. Re:Economics of envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly, it's the gazelle companies that bring great things to the whole world, which for now we'll just say is the United States.

      Err, pardon me, but claiming that FB and WhatsApp are bringing great things to the whole world is a bit of a stretch. Do you have any evidence to back up this claim? I see about 50 people suddenly winning the lottery. Good for them, of course. But it isn't really doing much of anything for the rest of us. Just sayin'.

    18. Re:Economics of envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you don't realize is that the things they waste it on DO help the economy. The purchase of any goods or service helps the economy.

      The owners keep all the profit (that is the entire reason why companies are started), but profit is not the same thing as income. The profit will actually be a relatively small part of that "1 billion" (yachts don't actually cost THAT much). The rest goes to buying materials, salary, general R&D costs, etc. Now there are 50 people with more money than before, and that's not even counting the people working for the company that supplies the materials (or the company that supplies the electricity to the yacht factory, or the company that sells the gas that the yacht runs on). This is exactly what "trickle down" refers to. The rich guy bought something outrageously expensive, purely so he could play around, and those 50 people are able to feed their families because of it.

    19. Re:Economics of envy by crashumbc · · Score: 1

      Which is absolutely nothing in terms of economic impact and proves how worthless "trickle down" is.

      Take that billion dollars, distribute it across "average" workers who then go buy boats. They can buy 20,000 boats! Do have any idea the number just jobs that creates? The number of things people buy for their new boats? (life jackets, mooring lines, etc)

      The difference in economic impact is probably 1000 fold.

      oh and
      http://www.dailymail.co.uk/new...

    20. Re:Economics of envy by jopsen · · Score: 1

      We just need to transfer wealth from those with a lot to everyone else -- like we did when America was the greatest economic power and had the best education.

      +1, I agree...

      In other parts of the world, where there there is universal healthcare and decent unemployment support, politicians argue that we cannot afford not to give everybody an education. Because there will no jobs for people without an education.

      Note, I'm not saying that everybody needs a STEM degree, or a degree at all. Just an education (without having to accumulate debt).

    21. Re:Economics of envy by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      And the people who supply the resin, the teak, the brass fittings, the wiring, the lights, the upholstery, the stove, the engines for that yacht - they don't benefit at all, do they?

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    22. Re:Economics of envy by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Actually, on an inflation-adjusted basis, we're transferring more wealth now than we did back in the 50s when the top marginal tax rate was 90%. The Federal Government receives over twice the tax, on a per-capita, constant dollar basis, as it did back in the 50s. Perhaps all that wealth transfer that's accelerated over the last 25 years is part of the reason the middle class is disappearing? It's harder to keep what you make so you either make a big jump to the ranks of high net worth, or you simply are mired in constant lower-middle-class status.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    23. Re:Economics of envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "That statement is beyond dim, do you not understand what the definition of inequality is?"

      Are you seriously fucking stating that inequality is based on economic wealth? That is goddamn ridiculous.

      HINT: economic wealth has nothing to do with "equality", dumbass.

    24. Re:Economics of envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, on an inflation-adjusted basis, we're transferring more wealth now than we did back in the 50s when the top marginal tax rate was 90%. The Federal Government receives over twice the tax, on a per-capita, constant dollar basis, as it did back in the 50s. Perhaps all that wealth transfer that's accelerated over the last 25 years is part of the reason the middle class is disappearing?

      That's an irrational conclusion from the metric given (assuming it is correct, a citation would've been nice)

      How much wealth is transferred doesn't tell us where the wealth is transferred from, or to.

    25. Re:Economics of envy by brit74 · · Score: 1

      Do you have a source? Because I recently looked at federal revenue as a percentage of GDP. It's been surprisingly constant since World War 2. Specifically, government revenue (i.e. taxes) have fluctuated between 15% and 20% during that entire period.

      Look at the graph "Government Receipts and Expenditures as a Fraction of GDP", it's the second chart on this webpage: Source: http://www.deptofnumbers.com/m...

    26. Re:Economics of envy by Copid · · Score: 1

      If government revenue as a percent of GDP stays roughly constant while a larger and larger share of GDP goes into the hands of the top percentiles, it's pretty easy to end up with a system that redistributes more while still taking in the same amount of money as a whole. Imagine two economies: One where everybody is equal and one with one super wealthy person and a whole bunch of poor people. Both have governments that consume the same amount of GDP. The second economy is likely to transfer more wealth, simply because the wealth starts out massively skewed and becomes less so after taxes and government expenditures.

      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    27. Re:Economics of envy by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Federal tax receipts, historical. In 1957 tax receipts were basically $80 billion. In 2013, tax receipts were $2,775 billion.

      Population of the US, historical. In 1957, there were about 172 million people. In 2013 there are about 317 million.

      Inflation calculator. A 1957 dollar is worth about $8.46 in 2013

      Tax receipts in 1957, per capita: $465. Correct for a 2013 dollar (multiply by $8.46) and you get about $3900 (the Federal Government also ran a real cash surplus and the national debt decreased).

      Tax receipts in 2013, per capita: $8754. Or a bit more than double that 1957 per-capita after you adjust for inflation (deficit - pushing over $2000 per person).

      Essentially, the Federal Government is taking about twice out of everybody's pocket as it did back in the "high tax" 50s. The difference is in the deductions allowed today versus then, so the actual, effective tax rate was dramatically different than what many suspect. And given that the overwhelming majority of tax receipts come from high income people (the top 10% pay more than 70% of all Federal income taxes, and when you include SSI/FICA - which they would all cap out - and capital gains, approximately 88% of individual, and 40% of ALL, Federal receipts comes from the income of these top 10%), we are witnessing a massive wealth redistribution at the hands of the Federal Government. The fact it's happening so poorly is not a reflection on the taxpayers, but the inefficiency and corrupt nature of the Federal Government.

      Given that being in Congress makes one quite wealthy, perhaps a lot of that redistribution is strictly for the benefit of those IN Government. It's still a Federal Government by the people and of the people, but increasingly FOR Government, not for the people.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    28. Re:Economics of envy by brit74 · · Score: 1

      Tax receipts in 1957, per capita: ... about $3900... Tax receipts in 2013, per capita: $8754. Or a bit more than double that 1957 per-capita after you adjust for inflation

      Yeah, but you have to take into account the fact that the reason that people are paying more taxes is because people are earning more today than they did in 1950. If the average income of a person in 2014 is twice what it was in 1950, then that "double the taxes" thing simply disappears because it means people are still paying the same *percentage* of their income to the federal government. The way you state your argument, you make it sound like people are paying twice as much money (as a percentage of their income) in 2014 as they did in 1950, which is simply not true. Here's a graph of the average incomes in the US over the past 100 years. The dollar amounts have been adjusted to 2006-dollars, and you'll note that the average income has roughly doubled (from around $25,000/year in 1950 to $50,000/year in 2004): http://visualizingeconomics.co...

      Given that being in Congress [rollcall.com] makes one quite wealthy [opensecrets.org], perhaps a lot of that redistribution is strictly for the benefit of those IN Government. It's still a Federal Government by the people and of the people, but increasingly FOR Government, not for the people.

      That may be true that people in government can become quite wealthy, but to say that the redistribution is strictly for the benefit of those in government is missing a sense of scale. The amount of wealth gained by government officials is a drop in the bucket compared to tax revenue or the US economy in general. First of all, you're comparing the net worth of members of congress (i.e. most of them were millionaires *before* they gained office). In order for your argument to work, you need to track the amount of money gained by members of congress as a result of being in congress. Saying that (as the articles claim) the combined net worth of those members of congress is over a billion dollars is mostly irrelevant. Saying that members of congress earned a billion dollars a year as a result of being in congress is much more relevant (but that's not what the articles claim). Keep in mind that the US government is bringing in a tax revenue of 3.0 trillion dollars in 2014. Even if we (falsely) claimed that members of congress were pulling in an addition 1 billion dollars in income each year as a result of being in government (which they clearly are not, certainly not in a single year), it would still mean that their additional income would be 1 billion compared to 3,000 billion in taxes. That works out to 0.03% of the federal tax revenue. The argument that some large share of the tax revenue is simply going to enrich members of congress just doesn't make sense.

    29. Re:Economics of envy by brit74 · · Score: 1

      I'm not how to respond to your post. Did you read the comment above mine that said that the reason the middle-class is struggling is because Americans are paying twice as much money in taxes as in 1950? Your point about who the taxes are hitting may be correct (and I'm not going to argue against it), but I was responding to the false claim about taxes going up -- which is generally a Republican claim that we're all getting overtaxed, and things were so much better back in the 1950s.

    30. Re:Economics of envy by Copid · · Score: 1

      The post you responded to almost certainly has cause and effect reversed, but the "more transfers now" factoid is definitely true. I don't think it's true that the poor and middle class are paying higher rates (at least at the federal level, if you include all of the refundable credits and such designed to increase progressivity at the lower end), but I suppose that depends on where you draw the line at "middle class."

      There are a lot of arugments that get weird and distorted when people don't take into account our hugely skewed income distribution. Stuff like, "The to earners pay most of the taxes already!" and "We're transferring more wealth than ever!" ignore the inconvenient fact that the top earners earn an outsized share of the national income--much more than in the past. All I meant to note was that the variable "taxes as a share of GDP" doesn't reflect any of that.

      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    31. Re:Economics of envy by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      I guess it comes down to the belief that Government exists to consume a certain portion of your income, or to provide a limited set of services. If my income increases, I don't pay my mechanic or plumber more money. If my income increases the restaurants and gas stations don't charge me more. Costs of Government should increase at a rate about equal to inflation plus population growth - not personal income growth.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    32. Re:Economics of envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If my income increases, I don't pay my mechanic or plumber more money.

      It is precisely because you don't pay more that you end up being taxed on income.

      Follow your own logic, in both directions: to your customers/employers, YOU are the mechanic or plumber. Why should they pay you more?

      So how does a mechanic increase his income? He needs more customers

      Where do more customers come from? Population growth

      In other words, increase in income is a close approximation of population growth, thus taxation ends up being based on it.

    33. Re:Economics of envy by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Uhh, no. If you get a raise at work, do you now pay more for a haircut, or for a pound of beef? No. But the Government does take more of what you earn.

      I have no problem with tracking Government growth to inflation plus population growth - I wrote that above. If you have twice the number of customers, your costs are doubled. And as your cost of materials/salaries increases (cost of living), then your costs increase as well. That's population growth and inflation, combined. However, why should cost of Government increase with income, which has outstripped inflation and population growth combined?

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    34. Re:Economics of envy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uhh, no. If you get a raise at work, do you now pay more for a haircut, or for a pound of beef? No.

      You're repeating yourself. I heard you the first time, and my point still stands. My point is simply that income is a close approximation of population. If you can`t charge your customers more (you don`t pay your butcher more), then the only way you can make more money is by population growth and finding more customers.

      You keep saying "if you get a raise". Keyword here is IF. Why would you get a raise? Your employers/customers use the same logic. They aren't going to pay you more. Your boss' boss also applies the same logic. So your boss won't get a raise.

      Keep applying your logic, and NOBODY ever gets a raise. Costs won't ever go up. We would have zero inflation (nor deflation)

      Unless the population grows, and somebody managed to sell to more customers.

      If you have twice the number of customers, your costs are doubled.

      Wrong. Look up economies of scale. Your butcher or barber doesn't hire an additional worker for every new customer.

      However, why should cost of Government increase with
      income,

      I already told you: income is a close approximation of population growth. We don't measure population growth directly because census are costly, but government needs taxes more than once every few years.

      which has outstripped inflation and population growth combined?

      Because population growth isn't just your country's population growth anymore.

      We live in the age of globalization now. Your government can't just spend money on the 300 million or so people on US soil. It has to spend money on all those bases, embassies, spies, etc around the world, to ensure your American businesses can keep making things in China so they can sell it in Europe while diverting the profits to British Virgin Isles or other tax havens, so that your boss's boss's boss make more money and could give his employees a raise, which trickles down and give YOU a raise.

      In an ideal world, each country's government would pay their share and cover their own people, but we do not live in an ideal world. I suppose you could tell your government to adopt more isolationist policies so they don't have to spend so much on defense (and cut those veteran benefits while we're at it, welfare being the other big chunk of spending), but don't be surprised if you find yourself no longer able to attract foreign customers, or all those wonderful cheap goods made elsewhere stop coming.

  7. Reality Check by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Someone just spent $850 Billion on shovel ready jobs. We were told it was to fix bridges, fix unemployment, and give jobs to people filling pot holes. In addition we just bumped up the top tax rate, removed the 2% tax cut on SS wages, and tossed on about 17 tax increases on healthcare. (Bonus, that $850 billion became part of the base budget so has been spent for 5 years now making this year's budge $3.9 Trillion)

    The result of all that is you saying unemployment is too high, the roads and bridges are falling apart, and we need to raise taxes again.

    How much complete failure of the Federal Government doing EXACTLY what you are wanting them to do must you witness before you realize they are corrupt to the point they are completely unable to help anyone and they just destroy lives instead?

    1. Re:Reality Check by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The wealthy only pay 15% because they set things up to only pay capital gains taxes; which are exempt from SS.

    2. Re:Reality Check by Darth+Snowshoe · · Score: 1

      Are you siting the continued existence of potholes in America as your only evidence of corruption in the government, or do you have some references you are not showing? As someone who works indirectly for the government, I take offense that there is constant presumption of corruption in the public sector. I've worked several weekends and late nights recently to make deadlines, with no extra compensation, and no one has showed up to line my pockets with bribes or kickbacks. No one ever has. I'll let you know though - I swear I'll post to Slashdot the first time it happens.

      It's easy to villify federal workers if you don't go to the trouble to actually ever know any. Most of them are just pluggers trying to do their job and get through their day, just like everyone else. Conspiracy theories that it's all some big scam are just that - conspiracy theories, fun to blow off steam with, but entirely unmoored from any actual knowledge (or maybe with a couple of anecdotes garnered from your own echo chamber.) Jeez I heard potties on the space shuttle cost a million dollars each!

    3. Re:Reality Check by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 0

      Breaking my AC rule here because what you spout is an oft-repeated but absolute lie. And it cannot be allowed to stand.

      Take a look at the actual breakdown of taxpayers. The top 1% pay, on average, 24% in income tax alone. The top 5% average a 16% tax rate (top 5% being those who make around $150K+ a year - meaning a lot of people here at Slashdot, lots of tech workers). It's not until you get below that level that you find those who pay less than 15% tax rates.

      Furthermore, those who have income outside of long-term capital gains will pay their 7.62% SS/FICA on their first $110K of salary; above that level they are exempt - but SS benefits are also capped. Since SS is nominally a "retirement plan" insurance package, capped benefits means capped contributions.

      The vast majority who are paying less than 15% total taxes (income and SS/FICA) are the 75% of the population who earn under $67K per year; if you're earning more than that, then you are most likely paying well above 15% total taxes to the Federal Government. And in some States (like California), you can pay as high as 10.5% - meaning an income tax load of 40% or more is entirely realistic for a high earner.

      For the record, I'm paying an effective 21% Federal income tax rate, I capped out my SS/FICA (meaning $16,700 - self-employed so I pay both halves), and my CA State income tax rate is 7.1%. Total taxes I'm paying this year are about 35% of my adjusted gross income (and about 30% of my gross income). A 15% tax rate? I'd gladly take it - provided everyone else also paid the same (which is how it should be - a flat tax rate for everyone).

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  8. Reference please by jamesl · · Score: 1, Interesting

    'Ninety-nine percent of people have seen no economic improvement over the last decade,' he said ...

    I'd like to see an authoritative reference for this statement.

    1. Re:Reference please by wombatmobile · · Score: 4, Informative
    2. Re:Reference please by Vitriol+Angst · · Score: 2

      Well I found that median income (adjusted for inflation) is down over the past 15 years;
      http://billmoyers.com/2013/09/...

      The income range to be considered middle class:$25,500 – $76,500

      The median middle class household income in 2012: $51,017
      and in 1989: $51,681

      Year inflation-adjusted median household income peaked at $56,080: 1999

      Income needed in a two parent, two child home in St. Louis for an adequate living standard: $64,673
      and in New York City: $94,676

      The Problem

      Share of self-described middle-class adults who say it’s more difficult now than a decade ago for middle-class people to maintain their standard of living: 85

      85% say it's harder. I'd say another large chunk are kidding themselves. 99% might be a slight exaggeration -- but not by much.

      Then there is the productivity increase (which means they need fewer workers) coupled with reduced pay -- and we can look at record corporate profits and know that it is not an equitable distribution.

      --
      >>"ad space available -- low rates!!!"
    3. Re:Reference please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow... the twitterization of Slashdot. A single obfuscated link posted bare into the comment field with no context, description, or explanation.

      You can feel the average IQ of this place dropping.

  9. looser immigration laws by lagomorpha2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "looser immigration laws"

    No you clown, that's most of the reason wages in the US have stagnated in the first place. Supply and demand. If you supply more labor the equilibrium price will fall.

    1. Re: looser immigration laws by Xest · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I don't know why this myth persists, it's such a pathetic populist simplification.

      Consider this scenario. Your company has an idea for a new product, but it requires an AI expert. There are other AI experts with the required skillset in the country getting paid on average $200k a year. You can poach one by paying $250k a year and in doing so increase the average salary for that skillset but that then deprives another company of one which means they have to shut their project down, and people lose their jobs as the project cannot continue. The loss of jobs means instead average salaries decline because whilst one guy is getting paid $50k more, a bunch of others are going from $80k to $0k.

      So instead you bring in someone from overseas for $200k, this lets the other company keep going, and sure it doesn't increase the average salary for that profession, but then you need to hire some additional devs to help your expert, you hire three more great programmers at $100k each - that's $30k above the average and so guess what? you just increased average salaries by hiring someone that enabled this.

      Of course your next argument, the next argument used by populist immigrant haters will of course be "well train someone up in the country" - great, train them up how? if we're talking cutting edge or highly advanced stuff who is going to train them? Even if you can and do train them then this puts your project back years and when that happens what if another country develops your idea? They get the wealth and jobs from it instead.

      So no, if you supply more labour that doesn't inherently mean that salaries will decrease. The problem is entirely about what types of labour you let in. Done right, it can increase average salaries.

      I've pointed it out before, the list of H1-B hires by the likes of Facebook, Google, Microsoft, Apple and so forth shows salaries far above the national average salaries and so you simply cannot accuse big tech companies of having an agenda to drag salaries down with immigrants - the very fact their immigrant hires are paid more on average by definition means that these companies are increasing average salaries by bringing in these people and paying them what they do.

      The immigration issue isn't as simplistic as people like you seem to think, it can be a massively important tool in driving growth and increasing salaries, and certainly the major tech companies are using it in a way that they're increasing average salaries.

      As an aside, FWIW, the reason salaries have stagnated in the first place is actually mostly because of the work of indigenous American bankers and has absolutely nothing to do with immigration - immigration was still happening even pre-recession and wages were still going up. It actually declined slightly when the recession hit and wages also declined, they certainly didn't go up when there were less immigrants arriving.

    2. Re: looser immigration laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it is simple supply and demand. A companies biggest cost is wages. Flood the market with more labor, and presto, the cost of labor comes down. There is an ample supply of home-grown engineers in the States.

    3. Re: looser immigration laws by Casca · · Score: 3, Informative

      You have some interesting points. From my perspective though, which is coming from a very large American company, sitting in a large IT department, surrounded by H1B workers getting paid around $40k to do the work that used to pay $80-100k, I find your points to be lacking.

      --
      Casca
    4. Re: looser immigration laws by Xest · · Score: 1

      All I can go on is the lists of H1-B hires and so forth that are about on the internet e.g.:

      http://www.immihelp.com/h1b-sp...

      So sure, maybe you do work at one of the companies that does bring in cheap overseas hires, but my point remains that all the big boys are not doing this. The big tech companies are all paying well above the average. I can't find the site I used last time I looked into this as it had more uptodate data, this one only goes to 2010, but if you find such a site with more recent data you'll see it's the exact same pattern.

      But what is this job that used to pay $80k - $100k exactly and has now dropped to $40k? It's certainly not software development because wages there have not declined - on the contrary, they've been increasing. Why are you certain the H1-B hires are the reason the average salary has dropped? Another thing I've pointed out previously is that the number of H1-B hires isn't even large enough to have much of an impact on any particular field - they're still a vast minority relative to the numbers in most fields in general.

      It's easy to blame immigrants, because of that innate tribalism that so plagues humanity, but the reality is if wages are dropping in a field it almost certainly has absolutely nothing to do with them. They're still a small drop in the ocean, especially compared to other factors.

      I see the same debates and complaints day in day out in the UK about immigrants and immigration, but when actual scientifically sound studies are done on the topic it always comes out that immigrants are of net economic benefit and make society richer. Even in the worst case there's only a handful of professions that suffer, whilst most improve greatly. The reality is professions like IT support are seeing declining wages not because of immigration, not in the slightest, but simply because it's become a less skilled profession with greater training available. You could cut immigration to zero tomorrow and it wouldn't change this fact.

    5. Re: looser immigration laws by ebno-10db · · Score: 1

      They're nice hypotheticals though. You can come to any conclusion you want if you start with the right assumptions - like $200/250k jobs being the typical case for H-1B's (perhaps he could look at the actual statistics showing that H-1B's on average are paid less than equally skilled Americans). Lastly, for something like real AI gurus, there are the 'O' series visas, which nobody objects to.

    6. Re: looser immigration laws by bberens · · Score: 1

      I think this argument always boils down to nationalism. Do you support the idea of restrictions on business practices that are intended to promote your own country's citizens over that of another's? It's certainly fair and reasonable to do so, but I think a lot of people think the best person for the job should get the job no matter where they come from. And "best" of course is defined by the business owners and lower pay is obviously a factor. I think there's some merit to both schools of thought. In IT I think people like to compare current salaries to the dot com bubble which is silly. That's like comparing current realtor pay to the haydays of the housing bubble. It's very difficult to make a reasonable objective argument on what IT salaries *should* be right now.

      It's also important to consider how IT work has changed over the decades. It's certainly true that a lot of the types of work we do has been commoditized so that a less skilled worker can complete tasks that were impossible 15 years ago. How should that impact wages?

      TBH I think our country is facing very complex geopolitical issues that will result in us slowly becoming something other than the only world superpower, which is something we've enjoyed for generations. Competition is coming and it's silly to assume that US employees/workers are the "best." We just had a head start in relatively recent history due to the nature of the world economies after WW2. Americans are going to have to become accustomed to a lower relative standard of living because we've had it so amazingly good forever and there's a natural force pulling us back to normal.

      --
      Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
    7. Re: looser immigration laws by Xest · · Score: 1

      "They're nice hypotheticals though. You can come to any conclusion you want if you start with the right assumptions - like $200/250k jobs being the typical case for H-1B's"

      Oh stop making stuff up putting words into my mouth. I made no such claim that $200k was typical, I merely used it as an example of the fact that a $200k hire can actually increase the average paid to American workers by creating jobs and that hiring such a person doesn't inherently guarantee a decrease in average salaries.

      "(perhaps he could look at the actual statistics showing that H-1B's on average are paid less than equally skilled Americans)."

      I'd like to see these, I've been looking for a while for H1-B stats and haven't found much of genuine academic value. I'm not disputing that this may well be the case. I've found individual lists that show the big tech name companies certainly hire far more developers at above national rates than below and by a notable margin. I'm not arguing that there aren't other companies that pay less, I'm merely arguing that immigration isn't always bad whilst also making the point that the companies who are often accused of using H1-B to drag down salaries like Microsoft, Apple, Facebook, and Google are most certainly not the companies that are doing that - again, maybe others are, but they are not. Search for Google, Microsoft, or whatever here and you'll see what I mean:

      http://www.immihelp.com/h1b-sp...

      "Lastly, for something like real AI gurus, there are the 'O' series visas, which nobody objects to."

      Well, some people object to them, xenophobes, nationalists, that sort of person. The person I responded to was making the rather sweeping claim that all immigration inherently leads to a reduction in average salaries. You seem to be indirectly agreeing with me if you think there are some categories of immigration which should be allowed, so why the defensiveness? Perhaps there does need to be a better balance, but what's certain is that Google, Microsoft, Facebook, Apple, and a bunch of the others aren't abusing H1-B, to drag salaries down, so let's find out who is if that's the case and focus on them in future instead if it's a problem that must be dealt with. It seems silly to bitch at companies who are actually using immigration to increase average salaries and to defend people who claim all immigration is bad no?

    8. Re: looser immigration laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As demands for a job goes up, more people go into training for that job. The cycle wobbles back and forth.

      Besides, everyone doesn't need an expert AI programmer. Mid-level AI programers work just as well is most cases, and if not, 50K will train that person up a level. Companies want things now, now, now and aren't willing to sped a little effort to get it (except cash). A company isn't going to go under because they lost one programmer unless it's an extremely poorly run or a very small company.

    9. Re: looser immigration laws by Xest · · Score: 1

      But it's a competitive world - countries don't sit in isolation now for years at a time. If your country applies restrictions to stop companies getting what they want now, another country will not and they'll take those technological advances from you. Whilst you're spending a number of years training up those people the other more dynamic country will have built a whole new market and guess where those trainees you developed will fuck off to when they're done training? The country that's already developed that technology that you put off developing whilst you spent a few years training those folks up.

      End result, you're out of a new market, you're out of your new talent, and you're all in your country economically worse off as a result, all because you didn't want to let any foreigners in and missed out on the income of a whole new market. Is that really worth it?

    10. Re: looser immigration laws by The+Cat · · Score: 1

      So instead you bring in someone from overseas for $200k

      BZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZT

      Thanks for playing.

    11. Re: looser immigration laws by Xest · · Score: 1

      Right, because this person for example is imaginary?

      http://www.immihelp.com/h1b-sp...

    12. Re: looser immigration laws by The+Cat · · Score: 1

      Yes. That person is imaginary.

      Apple is paying a 50% premium in wages? On what planet does that make sense when they can recruit worldwide?

    13. Re: looser immigration laws by Xest · · Score: 1

      "Yes. That person is imaginary."

      So you're accusing Apple of fraud? You can also get the raw data direct from the US Department of Labor if you prefer?

      http://www.foreignlaborcert.do...

      "Apple is paying a 50% premium in wages? On what planet does that make sense when they can recruit worldwide?"

      Sometimes it's worth paying for the best. That same site will show you many others paid the same as or not far off of that.

      Instead of jumping to the conclusion that it must be some conspiracy theory involving fraudulent record keeping have you stopped to think that maybe it's simply just that you're wrong and weren't aware of the salaries being paid to some H1-B hires? Just a thought.

    14. Re: looser immigration laws by The+Cat · · Score: 0

      So you're accusing Apple of fraud?

      Oh, you're precious, aren't you?

      Why would Apple go through the expensive and time-consuming process to "hire" an H1-B, when there's a guy within five miles of their HQ who has better skills and will work for less?

      Because the H1-B process can be gamed and manipulated, and the local guy can't. The end.

      P.S. All of those numbers are pure horseshit.

    15. Re: looser immigration laws by Xest · · Score: 1

      "Why would Apple go through the expensive and time-consuming process to "hire" an H1-B, when there's a guy within five miles of their HQ who has better skills and will work for less?"

      Why are you so certain? Are you saying no one outside of America could possibly have a skillset that no American has, or that no American that's not already getting paid more has? You really believe that someone from outside the US couldn't possibly be better than an American for a particular role?

      "Because the H1-B process can be gamed and manipulated, and the local guy can't. The end.

      P.S. All of those numbers are pure horseshit."

      So you are claiming fraud? That the Department of Labor is illegally manipulating it's records on this issue? Do you have proof of this rather extraordinary claim?

    16. Re: looser immigration laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ten years ago today isn't the tech bubble.
       
      Also, there's an important issue that you didn't mention: Corporations want every advantage of the locality while trying to avoid paying for those advantages. They want the infrastructure and the laws of (for instance) the U.S., they want to live in the U.S., but they also shift their assets outside of the U.S. so they don't have pay taxes on them and they also want to import cheap foreign labor rather than pay the going U.S. rates. Although people these days seem to define ethics as whatever's legal, I would say that the actions and attitudes of corporations like Google are extremely unethical -- not to mention irresponsible, given that as more companies act similarly it'll eventually lead to the loss of the local advantages that Google wants.

    17. Re: looser immigration laws by poached · · Score: 1

      I was laid off 5 years ago and I saw a lot of citizens and greencard holders also get laid off. But not one single H1-B was laid off.

      I would be more in favor of H1-B immigration if it allows the immigrants to be on the same playing field. But it's not. And for some perverted reason they actually have better job security than American workers.

      I know a few H1-Bs who survived the recession, got to night school for MBAs, and are now program managers on the way up - hiring more H1-Bs from their home country and not hiring workers from other countries. If the H1-B system was not fundamentally broken we would have a more equal representation of immigrants from all over the world - Brazil, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, Russia, Ukraine, etc. But no, we have a monoculture, and while we are playing fair, they are not.

    18. Re: looser immigration laws by The+Cat · · Score: 0

      Why are you so certain?

      You're right. All technology workers in this country are fully employed at the maximum possible salary, and Apple was forced to cast a worldwide net at a 50% salary premium in order to find someone to fill the job.

      Or, all Americans are fat, dumb, unemployable losers, and Apple was forced to cast a worldwide net at a 50% salary premium in order to find someone to fill the job.

      As long as Apple can tell the local guy "no" they'll come up with whatever story they have to come up with.

      Clearly we must therefore conclude there is not one single solitary candidate anywhere in metropolitan San Francisco or San Jose, or within Apple itself, that qualifies for that job, mustn't we?

      Does that sound reasonable in light of the number of unemployed or underemployed technology workers in San Francisco and San Jose in 2014?

      So you are claiming fraud? That the Department of Labor is illegally manipulating it's records on this issue? Do you have proof of this rather extraordinary claim?

      The unemployment rate only counts people who are currently taking unemployment benefits. Others who are also unemployed but don't qualify or who have exhausted their benefits are not counted. Therefore the "unemployment rate" is fiction.

      There's your proof that at least one important statistic is horseshit, wiseass.

    19. Re: looser immigration laws by The+Cat · · Score: 0

      I see you're calling in your buddies to mod all of my replies down.

      Chickenshit.

    20. Re: looser immigration laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Chickenshit.

    21. Re: looser immigration laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummm...WTF?

      You can poach one by paying $250k a year and in doing so increase the average salary for that skillset but that then deprives another company of one which means they have to shut their project down, and people lose their jobs as the project cannot continue.

      So instead you bring in someone from overseas for $200k, this lets the other company keep going, and sure it doesn't increase the average salary for that profession, but then you need to hire some additional devs to help your expert, you hire three more great programmers at $100k each - that's $30k above the average and so guess what? you just increased average salaries by hiring someone that enabled this.

      So.. $250 for a $200k job (25% 'overpay') == bad, kills jobs because project cannot continue; $100k for a $70k job (42% 'overpay') == good, creates jobs and raises average salaries
      You're just completely spewing nonsense.

    22. Re: looser immigration laws by The+Cat · · Score: 1

      but I think a lot of people think the best person for the job should get the job no matter where they come from.

      And then you have a nation where 100 million people can't feed their families. See how that works out for you and your egalitarian utopia.

      In IT I think people like to compare current salaries to the dot com bubble which is silly.

      I think we should compare salaries to 1973. Because they're the same.

      It's certainly true that a lot of the types of work we do has been commoditized so that a less skilled worker can complete tasks that were impossible 15 years ago. How should that impact wages?

      Clearly all of those people should be fired and dragged from their homes. Who the fuck do they think they are?

      Competition is coming and it's silly to assume that US employees/workers are the "best."

      You're awfully cavalier with everyone else's standard of living.

    23. Re: looser immigration laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason they hire immigrants is because they are cheaper.

      Cheaper.

      Cheaper

      Cheaper

      CHEAPER

      And you're a chickenshit.

    24. Re: looser immigration laws by miroku000 · · Score: 1

      But what is this job that used to pay $80k - $100k exactly and has now dropped to $40k? It's certainly not software development because wages there have not declined - on the contrary, they've been increasing. Why are you certain the H1-B hires are the reason the average salary has dropped? Another thing I've pointed out previously is that the number of H1-B hires isn't even large enough to have much of an impact on any particular field - they're still a vast minority relative to the numbers in most fields in general.

      The wages of tech workers are less than pre-recession levels and are increasing at a rate lower than inflation. http://www.motherjones.com/pol...

      So sure, maybe you do work at one of the companies that does bring in cheap overseas hires, but my point remains that all the big boys are not doing this. The big tech companies are all paying well above the average. I can't find the site I used last time I looked into this as it had more uptodate data, this one only goes to 2010, but if you find such a site with more recent data you'll see it's the exact same pattern.

      The big boys are definitely hiring the most H1B visas. Whether or not that is driving down their wages is debatable. The top requester of H1B visas is Microsoft. http://www.geekwire.com/2012/4... . Intel, IBM and Oracle are also high on the list. (Yeah, I know, that list is a bit dated, but you get the point.) Actually, the largest recipients of H1B visas may be firms specializing in off-shoring jobs. They bring people over here to learn the jobs and then they can do the work from India or wherever after the visa expires. Apparently, these kind of companies got 40,000 out of the 85,000 visas that were issued in 2012. http://www.npr.org/blogs/allte...

    25. Re: looser immigration laws by heteromonomer · · Score: 1

      Caught you lying. There is something called a prevailing wage requirement. It is set by the government (USCIS) which sets it based on the actual average prevailing wage for that job description (and makes sure it is higher than the average). Secondly, no H1-B works for less than $70k unless he/she is a post-doc at a university (which I can tell you, is truly slave labor, my wife is one). But. I guess it's wrong to let facts get in the way of your pet notions.

    26. Re: looser immigration laws by Casca · · Score: 1

      You selected the All Industries database for 7/2013 - 6/2014.
      Your search returned the following: Print Format
      Area Code:33860
      Area Title:Montgomery, AL MSA
      OES/SOC Code:15-1134
      http://www.flcdatacenter.com/O...
      OES/SOC Title:Web Developers
      GeoLevel:1
      Level 1 Wage:$15.63 hour - $32,510 year
      Level 2 Wage:$20.42 hour - $42,474 year
      Level 3 Wage:$25.20 hour - $52,416 year
      Level 4 Wage:$29.99 hour - $62,379 year
      Mean Wage (H-2B):$25.21 hour - $52,437 year

      Pet notions...

      --
      Casca
    27. Re: looser immigration laws by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I would be more in favor of H1-B immigration if it allows the immigrants to be on the same playing field. But it's not. And for some perverted reason they actually have better job security than American workers.

      Um, except they do not. Keep in mind that if they are fired, they have like a month to find a new job before they get booted out of the country.

    28. Re: looser immigration laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And then you have a nation where 100 million people can't feed their families.

      As opposed to having 100 million people in other nations who can't feed their families.

      You're awfully cavalier with everyone else's standard of living.

      How big an "everyone else" are we talking about, here? Your friends? Your country? Or the whole world?

    29. Re: looser immigration laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Of course your next argument, the next argument used by populist immigrant haters will of course be "well train someone up in the country" - great, train them up how? if we're talking cutting edge or highly advanced stuff who is going to train them? Even if you can and do train them then this puts your project back years and when that happens what if another country develops your idea? They get the wealth and jobs from it instead."

      So your argument is that we should forget trainig because it takes too long and instead rely on imported know-how? What a utterly short-sighted and risky concept you are suggesting.

      As far as I can see immigration in the US is eroding the fundamentals of the economy, the job market. Yes, the Erich-Shmidts applaud the cheap labour but someone else ends up paying for their fortunes. By massimportin labour you also make someone else unemployed. That will eventually show up on the bottom line of the countrys economy.

    30. Re: looser immigration laws by The+Cat · · Score: 1

      As opposed to having 100 million people in other nations who can't feed their families.

      Not my responsibility. I have no power over what happens in other nations. Here, I'm a voter, so here is where my responsibility lies.

    31. Re: looser immigration laws by Xest · · Score: 1

      LOL paranoid much?

    32. Re: looser immigration laws by Xest · · Score: 1

      You seem to think that every developer can do every other developer's job. That is simply false.

      There are developers doing certain areas of brand new research pursuing ideas that no one is and who can hence develop things that no one else can.

      It's possible that such a person has such a talent outside America that no one inside America has, it's possible that Apple wants this skill for a future product before anyone else gets it so is willing to pay for it.

      The reason you're failing to grasp the situation is because you think every developer is interchangeable, they're not. Your argument is akin to the idea that the greatest basketball player in the world can be replaced by some fat extremely unfit guy at your local bar.

    33. Re: looser immigration laws by Xest · · Score: 1

      "The wages of tech workers are less than pre-recession levels and are increasing at a rate lower than inflation."

      Sure but as I say, tech workers is a pretty broad term - it includes both development and support, and whilst development salaries have increased, support salaries have decreased. That's why I was intrigued to know what specific IT profession has seen it's pay drop by over a half.

      "The big boys are definitely hiring the most H1B visas. Whether or not that is driving down their wages is debatable."

      Sure but as I said, if you look through the raw data (available at the US DoL) those firms are also the ones that are paying far more people above the national average salary for the professions in question than below. The salary information is included in the H1-B visa data.

      I've had a further look though and I think you're right in your later assertion - it's companies like WiPro that seem to be abusing the H1-B system to pay below average. Microsoft, Facebook, Yahoo, Google, Apple etc. are not - they're raising the average with H1-B but like you say, it looks like some of the other players are taking the piss a bit.

      Perhaps the solution therefore is to crack down on such companies, or simply agree to an increase in H1-B cap that MS etc. are asking for on the agreement that no one can be paid less than the national average salary for the profession? This would allow the likes of Microsoft et. al. to keep using H1-B properly (because they're already paying above the average for nearly all the H1-B positions they use) whilst making it expensive for the likes of exploitative outsourcing firms like WiPro to take the piss with it?

    34. Re: looser immigration laws by Xest · · Score: 1

      No, you should pursue training in parallel, but you can't train everything - sometimes other countries have exceptional talents in some areas that the US simply does not, when that's the case you want to get those guys over, possibly even to be the ones that do the training in the first place.

      I'm absolutely 100% for training, but it's not a magical cure that prevents other countries getting ahead with some particular talent, it's something that has to be done alongside being able to bring over the best of other nations.

  10. Looser immigration? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How does that help the economy? Please tell Schmidt-y.

    1. Re:Looser immigration? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most economic studies show immigration as a net economic benefit to the US. For example:

      Professor of Law Francine Lipman [56] writes that the belief that illegal migrants are exploiting the US economy and that they cost more in services than they contribute to the economy is "undeniably false". Lipman asserts that "illegal immigrants actually contribute more to public coffers in taxes than they cost in social services" and "contribute to the U.S. economy through their investments and consumption of goods and services; filling of millions of essential worker positions resulting in subsidiary job creation, increased productivity and lower costs of goods and services; and unrequited contributions to Social Security, Medicare and unemployment insurance programs."[57]

      Aviva Chomsky, a professor at Salem State College, states that "Early studies in California and in the Southwest and in the Southeast...have come to the same conclusions. Immigrants, legal and illegal, are more likely to pay taxes than they are to use public services. illegal immigrants aren't eligible for most public services and live in fear of revealing themselves to government authorities. Households headed by illegal immigrants use less than half the amount of federal services that households headed by documented immigrants or citizens make use of.

    2. Re:Looser immigration? by ebno-10db · · Score: 1

      It would be much easier to rebut those sound bites if I knew what [56] or [57] refer to, or even *gasp* what Wikipedia page you're quoting from.

  11. Re:Schmidt just signed his death warrant by ebno-10db · · Score: 2

    deracinated

    I have a pretty good vocabulary but I had to look up that word.

    deracinated: adjective, uprooted or displaced from one's geographical or social environment. noun, a person who has been or feels displaced.

    The problem is that, like the word niggardly, it can easily be misunderstood.

    Having looked it up though, I completely agree with your post.

  12. That's "bless their heart" in tech speak. by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Here's how I read that:

    >> "$19 billion for 50 people? Good for them."

    Which really means: "If Facebook wants to eliminate themselves as a threat to Google (and Google+) by peeing away mound of cash on stupid deals, I'm all for it. Meh heh heh heh ha!'

    1. Re:That's "bless their heart" in tech speak. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed, and are you really telling me that Facebook couldn't have built the own system for oh say less then a billion, spent 10 billion or so on advertising and gotten better results for cheaper.

    2. Re:That's "bless their heart" in tech speak. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some people avoid Facebook because it's Facebook and will avoid all Facebook products. WhatsApp wasn't Facebook so those people were on it. Facebook bought a bunch of user data they were never going to get otherwise. Was it worth $19 billion? Only they know.

  13. Absurd waste of $$ on an app that'll be obsolete by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In less than 2 years. I trust Zuckerberg will express his "regret" on this decision at a later date. Or the board of Facebook will. I suspect they didn't back it when it was decided, but there was little they could do.

  14. "education" - train our employees for free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    He's not looking for generalized education. He's looking for "high school/college graduates with job skills". More and more coding jobs are essentially clerical: here's a spec, generate code that executes this spec using the algorithms you've been given. This is recognized by the non-exempt nature of entry level programming jobs. I'm not talking here about "architect" or enterprise data store design, I'm talking about "here's a screen layout for each of the 50 states, we need them all coded up by a month from now, so we can roll out the new application" or "here's a document describing the workflow and business rules, implement SQL stored procedures for this"

    Right now, a lot of that kind of work gets offshored, but that's getting expensive. They'd MUCH rather have $15/hr high school grads cranking out the code, particularly if they can collect various subsidies for hiring young people or prisoners or whoever.

  15. Schmidt is a Shmuck. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "looser immigration". blah blah blah.

  16. Schmidt the Captialist Commie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On the one hand, he's saying "we'll keep all the money, and you'll get none of it" (capitalist). On the other, he's saying "we'll give you all sorts of handy services for free" (the commie).

    The fact is, if Google and all the others paid more tax, then there'd be more money in the public purse to pay for local services that people want. The thing is, Americans don't seem to think like this - they think that government "interference" is bad, and that taxes should be lower. Unlike the way Schmidt wants it, you can't have it both ways.

  17. Labor rates have to be competitive to get work by sjbe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's well-established by now that one of the most significant factors in destroying the lives of the unskilled and semi-skilled workers across the country has been the influx of similar immigrants from around the world.

    Bullshit it's "well-established". What you are talking about is essentially a subsidy to labor by limiting the size of the labor pool. Limit supply and prices for the labor and every product that labor produces has to rise. Make labor cost more and you will pay more for the results of that labor. What you are forgetting is that we are in a GLOBAL economy. There are very few unskilled jobs that cannot be done elsewhere. Limit the supply of labor in the domestic market and much of that production will migrate elsewhere. If labor costs are too high relative to those available elsewhere then labor-intensive work will migrate to areas with lower labor costs like osmosis. Try to stop it and you will only drive prices higher and hurt the economy in the long run.

    Here's how you enact a sensible immigration policy. You crack down on the employers of illegals such that no one will hire them.

    You think that is the basis for a "sensible" immigration policy? You think a police state is somehow a good thing? It's unenforceable at any reasonable economic or humanitarian cost. It drives up costs making it harder to compete globally. Furthermore it doesn't address why they are coming into the country in the first place. They come because there is work available. What you should worry about is not whether people are coming into the US illegally. What you should worry about is if they STOP coming to the US because that means there are some serious economic problems.

    hen, you only allow immigrants with provable skills to immigrate as singles or with their immediate family if they're married with children.

    How does this work with unskilled workers? You think those crops are going to pick themselves? There is lots of vital work that does not depend on skilled labor. Furthermore if a family wants to migrate to the US then that is not a bad thing. Who the hell are you to tell them they cannot come?

    That's just a recipe for waking up one day and finding a large ethnic enclave in an American city

    Oh so it's really about race. I get it. You don't want those brown people who don't speak English immigrating to the US. Never mind that your ancestors were immigrants too and probably came here illegally as well and probably lived in "a large ethnic enclave in an American city". It's not as if we asked the Native American population if it was ok if we moved in.

    1. Re:Labor rates have to be competitive to get work by ebno-10db · · Score: 4, Interesting

      What you are talking about is essentially a subsidy to labor

      Just as the limited liability aspect of incorporation is a subsidy to capital. Stop pretending that we live in, or ever will live in, a global libertopia. All government policy creates "distortions", and the big question is who those distortions benefit. The only alternative to having any such policies is anarchy.

      What you are forgetting is that we are in a GLOBAL economy.

      Where is that line from, the Thomas Friedman school of sycophancy? The global aspect of the economy is very selective. For example, offshoring is considered wonderful, but little mention is made of region pricing. Our so-called "free trade" agreements include lots of things that are very much anti-free trade, like requirements for the greater enforcement of government monopolies called "intellectual property". I'm not opposed to IP, for the reasons stated in the Constitution, but they're anathema to free trade, and the original free trade proponents said so. Odd how that aspect of "free trade" seems to have been forgotten. It's interesting how some government distortions are considered desirable.

    2. Re:Labor rates have to be competitive to get work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh dear I was expecting an interesting retort, but you haven't addressed any of the substantive points made by OP about the matter at hand, instead choosing to handwave generalities, and then you go on an irrelevant anti-IP rant with appeals to authority and all sorts of other nonsense. Epic fail. Are you able to address any of OP's specific points about the specific example of the labor market?

    3. Re:Labor rates have to be competitive to get work by ebno-10db · · Score: 1

      you haven't addressed any of the substantive points made by OP about the matter at hand, instead choosing to handwave generalities

      As opposed to your using "handwave [sic] generalities" to criticize my post? You haven't offered any specific criticisms, or addressed any of my substantive points, of which there are several (e.g. capital vs. labor subsidies, several specific points about how so-called free trade is not true free trade as espoused by economists, etc.). Your exclusive use of cliche generalities (e.g. "handwave [sic]") in an attempt to be condescending is a pathetic critique. If there is a post you disagree with, try an actual rebuttal.

    4. Re:Labor rates have to be competitive to get work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and the Native American's policy of letting the "white people who don't speak their language" worked out great for them.

      So basically, what you're saying is you want the brown people to come in, kill off almost all the white people and put whatever few of them that are left on reservations, and that any white person who doesn't agree with this policy is a racist.

    5. Re:Labor rates have to be competitive to get work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That because our ancestors won the war over this land, now they should roll over and give it all up when the next wave of immigrants comes around to take control of it.

      In-case you didn't know, those Native Americans you yap on about didn't exactly roll over and give their land away either.

    6. Re:Labor rates have to be competitive to get work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How did the crops get picked BEFORE mass immigration?

      Any answers? Nice try though...

    7. Re:Labor rates have to be competitive to get work by The+Cat · · Score: 1

      Limit supply and prices for the labor and every product that labor produces has to rise.

      Increase supply of labor and it becomes worthless, and you have no customers for those products labor produces.

      When labor commands a higher wage, wealth results. When labor cannot command a higher wage, poverty results. The 2014 economy is conclusive proof.

      What you are forgetting is that we are in a GLOBAL economy.

      We're in an American economy where Congress forces our workers to compete with the Chinese government on wages.

      Try to stop it and you will only drive prices higher and hurt the economy in the long run.

      We haven't tried to stop it for 20 years and now we have 47 million people on food stamps. Hurt the economy?

      You think a police state is somehow a good thing?

      You think widespread contempt for the law is a good thing? It is illegal today to hire undocumented workers. Has been for decades.

      Oh so it's really about race. I get it.

      And you think it's not about race for the immigrants too? Let me guess, you've never lived anywhere near an immigrant neighborhood, have you?

      You don't want those brown people who don't speak English immigrating to the US. Never mind that your ancestors were immigrants too and probably came here illegally as well and probably lived in "a large ethnic enclave in an American city".

      And within a generation, they were:

      1. English speakers
      2. Citizens
      3. Attending college
      4. Award winning journalists
      5. Military officers

    8. Re:Labor rates have to be competitive to get work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How did the crops get picked BEFORE mass immigration?

      When was that? Do you mean to ask how the native Americans picked their crops?

    9. Re:Labor rates have to be competitive to get work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In-case you didn't know, those Native Americans you yap on about didn't exactly roll over and give their land away either.

      And what both of you knuckleheads haven't glommed on to is that we white folk are not going to end up decimated because some "brown people" have moved into the neighborhood. We will still be here and doing fine even if the demographics have changed from those former halcyon days when whites unquestioningly ruled the roost.

      Have a good day, ya crackers!

    10. Re:Labor rates have to be competitive to get work by sjbe · · Score: 1

      Just as the limited liability aspect of incorporation is a subsidy to capital. Stop pretending that we live in, or ever will live in, a global libertopia.

      Nice straw man. Who ever claimed that we were in a "libertopia"? (whatever the hell that is supposed to be) We're talking about someone who is trying to mask their racism under the guise of economic protectionism. We have millions of illegal immigrants in the US who are finding work because there is a need and they are willing and able. If you subsidize labor then you necessarily are taxing capital. Which one do you want to do because you can't have both. The best you can hope for is to find the magic level of capital versus labor to optimize growth and thus maximize benefits for all.

      BTW the limited liability aspect of a corporation is the entire point of a corporation. Limiting personal liability for the actions of others is what allows many investments to be made at all. Without the corporate veil our modern economy would not exist at all. It's what allows us to take risks with capital. Your comparison of the very existence of corporations with the decision on subsidizing wages by limiting the size of the labor pool is an irrelevant comparison.

      Where is that line from, the Thomas Friedman school of sycophancy?

      Cute. Remember that the next time you buy something made outside the US which you will most assuredly do today whether you want to or not.

      The global aspect of the economy is very selective.

      Really? Let's see if I can enumerate just some of the things I've purchased today that came from overseas. About half the produce on my grocery bill came from South America and most of the rest either came from the Midwest or California. I bought a piece of electronics that mostly came from China, a piece of clothing that came from Vietnam, I used gasoline that has a percentage of the oil in it most likely from either Canada, Mexico and/or Venezuela. Several products I used have materials mined from all over the globe. I drank some coffee that almost certainly was not domestically produced. For my company I bought some wire that was manufactured in Asia and probably mined there too as well as some terminals that were made in Japan. I'm going to turn that into a product that is going to be exported to Europe. We're about to buy a machine that was designed in Switzerland, made in Germany and has parts from Asia and the US.

      Selective? Spare me... I'm surrounded by products, both tangible and intangible, that came from all around the world including here at home and so are you. The economy is global and the notion that you can close the borders and keep the rest of the world out is both naive and dangerous. You want to close the border and kick out all the immigrant labor? Fine. Enjoy your higher prices at the grocery store and other places as well as the higher taxes and lower economic growth required to make it happen.

      For example, offshoring is considered wonderful, but little mention is made of region pricing.

      Off-shoring is neither wonderful nor horrible. It is simply economic laws in action. It's like saying "gravity is considered wonderful" - it misses the point. Capital and labor will seek the locations where costs are lowest. It's like water settling into the lowest cavity. Sometimes there are good reasons it doesn't move but if it can then it will. It might be beautiful or it might be dangerous but that is a second order effect.

      Our so-called "free trade" agreements include lots of things that are very much anti-free trade, like requirements for the greater enforcement of government monopolies called "intellectual property".

      Intellectual property laws are in place to mitigate the free rider problem. If you have a better way to do it then dazzle us with your brilliance. I

    11. Re:Labor rates have to be competitive to get work by ebno-10db · · Score: 1

      We're talking about someone who is trying to mask their racism under the guise of economic protectionism.

      Talk about straw men. What is your evidence for that? Can you read minds?

      BTW, last time I checked Americans include an awful lot of dark skinned people. Not too far in the future they will become the majority. There's even a rumor that the president is one of them.

      The best you can hope for is to find the magic level of capital versus labor to optimize growth and thus maximize benefits for all.

      What is your argument that simply optimizing aggregate growth is necessarily the optimal strategy for maximizing benefits for all? Many people, like yourself, often state that as though it were axiomatic. At the very least explain the rationale for your unstated assumptions.

      BTW the limited liability aspect of a corporation is the entire point of a corporation.

      Which doesn't change the fact that it's a subsidy. It's a very useful subsidy in a modern economy, but still a subsidy.

      People should remember that, lest they fall for your selective observation that limited immigration is a "subsidy to labor", as though there were no subsidies to capital.

      Let's see if I can enumerate just some of the things I've purchased today that came from overseas.

      Which does nothing to refute my point that "globalization" is selective. No kidding we get products from around the world. As I pointed out, that's the part of "free trade" that's encouraged by our trade agreements. I also mentioned some of the parts that are "overlooked".

      Off-shoring is ... simply economic laws in action. It's like saying "gravity is considered wonderful"

      Which I suspect describes your economic beliefs - that economic "laws" are as natural and inexorable as the law of gravity. Hint: unless you have anarchy, all economics are affected by government policy. There is no "natural" or inexorable situation that just happens to resemble an economic situation you prefer, and implying that there is is just a way to avoid examination or debate.

      Intellectual property laws are in place to mitigate the free rider problem

      Maybe that's why I said "I'm not opposed to IP, for the reasons stated in the Constitution". All these straw men are starting to become a fire hazard.

      Intellectual property is not "anti-free trade".

      If you believe that then you real need to read up on the history of free trade thought and implementation. Many 19th century free trade advocates made this point. At the time some European countries completely dropped patents, and did fine.

      Apparently you've been hoodwinked by the "modern interpretation" of free trade, which has little to do with the economic theory, and much to do with selectively citing it for the benefit of the most well off in affluent countries. Similarly you think that "labor mobility" (aka unlimited immigration) is an essential part of free trade. In fact it's not necessary at all. You could completely eliminate international "labor mobility" and still have free trade. Free trade is about trading goods and services between countries, not labor and capital.

    12. Re:Labor rates have to be competitive to get work by rk · · Score: 1

      Selective? Spare me...

      Yes, you are surrounded by good from all over the globe. How about that foreign cane sugar? That's an example. Oh, and how about you sell your labor in a different country tomorrow? You'll need a passport, a work visa, or whatever else the country you want to work in will require. Some things cross borders easy, and some don't. That is the very definition of selective.

    13. Re:Labor rates have to be competitive to get work by miroku000 · · Score: 1

      Bullshit it's "well-established". What you are talking about is essentially a subsidy to labor by limiting the size of the labor pool. Limit supply and prices for the labor and every product that labor produces has to rise. Make labor cost more and you will pay more for the results of that labor. What you are forgetting is that we are in a GLOBAL economy. There are very few unskilled jobs that cannot be done elsewhere. Limit the supply of labor in the domestic market and much of that production will migrate elsewhere. If labor costs are too high relative to those available elsewhere then labor-intensive work will migrate to areas with lower labor costs like osmosis. Try to stop it and you will only drive prices higher and hurt the economy in the long run.

      This is probably true for factory workers. It is not necessarily true when it comes to jobs like construction, maids in hotels, or picking vegetables in a field somewhere. These sorts of jobs generally must be performed locally. Coincidentally, these are the jobs that many illegal aliens are performing here.

    14. Re:Labor rates have to be competitive to get work by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Increase supply of labor and it becomes worthless, and you have no customers for those products labor produces.

      Do you think those extra people just work 24/7, and don't eat, don't need a place to live and a car to drive etc?

      More people means more customers, not just a larger labor force.

  18. Raise the top marginal tax rate by mbone · · Score: 1, Insightful

    That is what I think every time I hear this idiot speak. 95% should do nicely.

    1. Re:Raise the top marginal tax rate by bigpat · · Score: 1

      I agree with a much larger tax rate on very very high incomes. Except the downside is that it just shifts the problem of societal corruption even more so to government.

      I believe in Free Market Capitalism and the collective wisdom of as many people as possible making investment decisions and that people should be able to accumulate some amount of wealth as quickly as they are able. So some amount of wealth accumulation makes sense from the standpoint of societal good. So, if there was a 95% tax rate on income that didn't somehow account for win falls of income or allow people to build up wealth for some additional capital investment, then that would also distort society in a way that protected vested family wealth at the expense of newly wealthy that are presumably or more merit.

      But there should be limits to new wealth accumulation also. No one person can efficiently manage billions or even hundreds of millions of dollars. Just not possible. Given that it costs tens of millions of dollars to even just build a moderately sized office building or warehouse, then I think some tens of millions or even a hundred million dollars would be a good cut off in terms of wealth accumulation before taxation kicks in to provide some asymptotic upper bound. And if you need to spend a billion dollars on something then you just need to convince more people to go in on it with you.

  19. Facebook bought the userbase by Daniel+Hoffmann · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Just like Google bought Youtube for its userbase. They could have made Google Videos a lot better than Youtube, but the userbase would have taken years to migrate (if at all). The point is, being the first person in the party is a very good thing if you are a startup.

  20. Raising their own rents? by dane23 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "...where high-salaried techies have driven up rents" The "techies" didn't drive up the rent, the landlords drove up the rent because they could. Who the hell says, "Hmm, this is a nice place for $XX but I'd really rather pay $XXX for it"?

    --


    Warning! Keep Out of Eyes! Wash Out with Water! Don't Drink Soap! Dilute! Dilute!
    1. Re:Raising their own rents? by whoda · · Score: 4, Informative

      The guy who is trying to get the current residents evicted. That's whom.

    2. Re:Raising their own rents? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the neighbors who own their home aren't complaining, either.

    3. Re:Raising their own rents? by Shados · · Score: 1

      Competition between the techies will do it, regardless of landlords (well, I guess the landlord has to agree in the end, but...).

      Reality of the world is: most places suck to live in. Most people rather not hear a dog bark all night or have people drink screaming on top of their head. And if you can help it, most people rather have conveniences near by.

      That leaves a very small subset of places where people would prefer to live if they can help it. That subset generally is smaller than the amount of middle upper class people in any given metro area. So they compete against each other for them. The landlords just make popcorn and enjoy the show.

      Its more pronounced with real estate, where you can actually see actual bidding wars, and then its definitely between the buyers...but real estate value going up affects rent pretty directly.

      The solution to that isn't very hard honestly. Make more places that people would agree to live in. There's kind of a plateau: if your neighbors aren't too noisy, you don't hear stomping over your head, your place is clean, and there's a grocery store near by, its enough for a lot of that crowd. Not everyone wants a mansion even if they can afford it.

      Actually enforce city noise ordinance, build houses in brick, not in stupid cedar that falls apart about 5 years, have actual noise insulation....all of that isn't very expensive or hard to do when compared to the price of the land. Then you have a LOT of places high salaried people are happy to live in, and it delutes the market.

      The difference in cost between building a place with paper thin walls, wood finishes, and a 20 gallon water heater, vs one in brick with premium insulation and a tankless is 50-100k, not 1-2 million. Look no further than Boston to see where all that goes wrong...

      Net result: everyone with money cluster around the 10-15 buildings with acceptable condition, then anything built to basic standard is advertise as "luxury living", and you end up with prices skyrocketing.

    4. Re:Raising their own rents? by ddtstudio · · Score: 1

      Disclaimers:
      a. Anecdotal evidence ahead, though a lot of it
      b. Yeah, I'm one of those "I've lived here for ages, whippersnapper" guys

      But I've seen first-hand that 20somethings and newly minted millionaires-on-paper actively go to landlords and work with them, often funding the legal costs of evicting long-term tenants (the techies gets the "authentic" place, the landlord gets to raise the rent). See more context here: http://www.kqed.org/a/forum/R2...

      Also, a large part of the housing stock in the SF areas in question (the Mission, Noe Valley, Hayes Valley, etc.) is multi-unit small buildings. Often houses converted into multi-unit. The same people as mentioned above come in and buy the building for a few hundred thousand dollars over its last listing and do an owner movein; this also can displace the other tenants in the building (esp if it's done as a TIC); it at least gives them the change to reset or raise rents.

      So, it's not as simple as you make it out to be.

  21. skilled by tleaf100 · · Score: 0

    who says the folk at whatsapp are skilled. the only skill they appear to have is for conning conmen into vastly over paying for a firm thats not worth a tenth of what fb paid. stupid yanks will not be happy until you have screwed the entire worlds economy by exporting your stupid get rich quick ideas of trade. can anyone actualy explain exactly how fb aim to make the extra cash to pay for all their stupid buys? apart from their criminaly over inflated stock price what else do fb actauly have? they make nothing from adverts,basicly they have no income. apart from a falling user base,

  22. After double checking the US Constitution... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and consulting his paid politicians around the globe, Eric Schmidt welcomes any attempts to increase the international tax collected. This way he appears to be on everyone's side yet knows full well it will never happen.

  23. looser immigration laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    HIRE AMERICANS to do the job, and you won't need looser immigration laws.

    It's not the cheap option, but it's the RIGHT option.

  24. Supply and Demand is a populist myth? by JoeyRox · · Score: 1

    Who knew?

    1. Re:Supply and Demand is a populist myth? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In my experience, economic laws appear to be immutable ONLY in situations which support conservative/business-friendly policies. Otherwise they seem to be an over-simplification, are being inappropriately applied, or are just plain wrong. A rather curious phenomena.

    2. Re:Supply and Demand is a populist myth? by Xest · · Score: 1

      If you didn't understand my original post I'm not sure you're really smart enough, but I'll try and explain it you in perhaps more simplistic terms.

      Mr Apple seller has 10 customers, his sale price has reached $1 per Apple after reaching equilibrium under the laws of supply and demand. He sells 1 Apple to each customer a week and so makes $10 a week from his Apples. Mr immigrant comes along with his wife and 3 children. They also buy Apples at $10. The price doesn't need to change because Mr Apple seller has plenty of Apples and was just throwing them away - he can't limit supply because his Apple tree grows hundreds each year and he would actually have to spend money to counter that. Mr Apple seller now makes another $5 a week from Mr Immigrant and his family. Mr Apple seller now makes $15 a week and everyone still has Apples. It's win-win for everyone.

      Any use for seeing why supply and demand isn't some perfect absolute or do you need pictures? The problem is that you're trying to apply an extremely simplistic law to a far more complex market. You're ignoring the fact that employees can out and out create whole new markets or simply grow old markets. So yes, one good employee from abroad may well keep wages stagnant for that profession, but what if he creates a new market with his product that results in employment of many more people? How does your simplistic view of supply and demand factor that harder to quantify worth into the equation?

    3. Re:Supply and Demand is a populist myth? by JoeyRox · · Score: 1

      You'll need to come up with a different analogy because time-limited goods and services like perishable items and airline seats have multiple intersection points on a supply and demand curve.

    4. Re:Supply and Demand is a populist myth? by Xest · · Score: 1

      None of which changes the fact that you can't simplistically apply a basic interpretation of supply and demand to the jobs market and expect it to be accurate.

    5. Re:Supply and Demand is a populist myth? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In my experience, economic laws appear to be immutable ONLY in situations which support conservative/business-friendly policies. Otherwise they seem to be an over-simplification, are being inappropriately applied, or are just plain wrong. A rather curious phenomena.

      WHAT?!? You mean people are manipulating social science theories to further their own agenda? I'm shocked, SHOCKED, I tell you! Also, I would be careful about making sweeping claims about who is manipulating whom. Whatever conclusions you come to will most likely say more about you than the theory or the putative data.

    6. Re:Supply and Demand is a populist myth? by JoeyRox · · Score: 1

      Naturally there are other factors which affect pricing for any market, be it labor or goods. But the argument you're making is a rather specific one, that supply begets demand begets more supply/demand in a virtuous cycle. That indeed does occur in certain market situations but that's a rather specific and ephemeral lever to pull in arguing against the basic principles of supply and demand.

    7. Re:Supply and Demand is a populist myth? by Xest · · Score: 1

      My point was nothing more than a suggestion that a simple increase of supply inherently results in a reduction of pricing in the labour market is false.

      If it were true then wages would be on a permanent downward spiral for nothing other than the simple fact of natural population growth even without immigration. It's not though, real terms wages have been increasing consistently for decades, despite the fact that the size of the labour market has also been growing, that in itself is direct evidence that the labour market does not follow a simplistic view of supply and demand as the original poster was claiming as there is no way to reconcile this lack of correlation with the idea that it does.

  25. I.T. Job Skills as Sweetshop by cyberhooligan77 · · Score: 3, Informative

    You are right.

    He wants highly skilled cheap people, as many I.T. companies business people.

    But, there is a problem, I.T. jobs, specially programming, ARE NOT FACTORY jobs, altought many CEO's want to treat it, lik that.

    The "here's a spec, generate code that executes this spec using the algorithms you've been given" talk given from architects, or project managers to coders, doesn't work well. I known it, because I did tried, and went back to the good old Analyst-Programmer way of solving problems.

    The funny thing, is that I have worked with I.T. students or undergraduates, and there are situations where they worked well, but, usually, this scenario works well when playing "fair":

    Been directed by unleast one patient senior developer
    Not expecting to do the whole project by themselves, without supervision
    Teaching stuff the students don't know, and not expecting them to learn by themselves
    Don't expect they
    Provide some payment, tuition, food, school, ...

    There are situations when taking undergraduates, or students instead of senior developers work well, and viceversa, taking senior developers instead of junior developers.

    But, not because ageism, or looking an excuse for paying less.

    Something similar happens with offshoring, I have met companies that has offshore offices or factories, and sometimes, a branch has problems because they have to wait the main company to deliver some software or hardware, instead of having their own I.T. people doing the job.

    Just my 2 spartan silver coins (2 cents)

    1. Re:I.T. Job Skills as Sweetshop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'The funny thing, is that I have worked with I.T. students or undergraduates, and there are situations where they worked well, but, usually, this scenario works well when playing "fair":'

      Why do you think there is supposed to be a comma after "thing"? I've been seeing this kind of comma abuse everywhere lately, so I'm kind of hoping that one of the illiterates who does it might be able to help me.

      Obviously, there are issues with pretty much every comma in this sentence, but let's take this one at a time.

  26. "looser immigration laws" LOL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, sure, that's going to help.
    If the immigrants are really intelligent, surely they are needed in THEIR OWN countries, to help grow themselves out of 'third world' status?

  27. Restrictions and permitting procedures for new hou by aurizon · · Score: 1

    I suspect that one of the reasons house prices increase is the desire on the part of existing residents to make their house go up in value, so they erect thickets of permitting procedures and regulations that can mean a 2-3 year delay before you can build on a lot you have acquired.
    This is the problem in Toronto, where complex zoning restrictions, green ratios and green zones and a 30 foot limit have made house prices increase dramatically over the past 10 years.
    Any loosening of these restrictions is fought tooth and nail by house owners who fear price declines will cause their equity to vanish.

  28. We allow policies that permit income iequality by sjbe · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's about blaming income inequality on teachers and schools rather than the 1%.

    Blaming a specific group of people for income inequality kind of misses the point. That's just scapegoating. Just because someone was fortunate enough to gain a lot of wealth doesn't mean they are responsible for others not being so fortunate. Economic growth is not a zero sum game except in the short run. In the long run it is possible for economic rewards to be shared and everyone to benefit. The top 1% of the population does not have the power by themselves (in a democracy) to dictate income inequality. That can only happen if a very large portion of the remaining 99% permits it to happen. People regularly support policies that are demonstrably not in their best interest or that of society if they were deciding rationally.

    Too many people have bought into the notion that social structures that keep the playing field relatively level are somehow a bad thing. Everyone should have the chance to become rich but after a certain point some have more money than they could ever possibly need. More accumulation by one person at that point does not benefit society. Nobody likes paying taxes but a sensible progressive tax policy (or a flat tax with a floor) can have the side effect of minimizing income disparity. Healthcare is a cost that everyone experiences but in the US we historically have forced low income people to pay a disproportionate share of their income on it. We subsidize large corporations (oil companies, big agriculture firms, etc) that don't need the help. We refuse to balance our taxation levels with our expenditures. We spend a disproportionate amount of our tax revenue on maintaining an overly large military rather than on economic growth, research and jobs. These are choices we have made as a society and they aren't just the fault of the so-called 1%.

    And also about washing one's hands of any social responsibility for the well-being of the roughly 70% of Americans who don't have a college degree.

    Approximately 40% of Americans have at least an Associates degree and over 50% have at least some college education. Your point is valid but the data isn't correct.

    (Not that a college degree guarantees middle-class success these days.)

    No degree ever guaranteed success.

    1. Re:We allow policies that permit income iequality by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2

      If you look at the lessons of history- every time the 1% pushes the 99% hard enough- it ends badly in mass quantities of blood for the 1% as well as the 99%.

      So, the 1% better consider it part of their responsibility to care about the 99% or they'll find their heads in baskets, or in brainwashing reeducation camps while they make left shoes 12 hours a day.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    2. Re:We allow policies that permit income iequality by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      A lot of 1%ers have begun to notice this in the past few years - even Eric Schmidt now, although he still has his head far up his ass about any possible solutions.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    3. Re:We allow policies that permit income iequality by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      mass quantities of blood for the 99% too, unfortunately, and it also seems to be a crap-shoot whether you end up with some sort of egotistical psycho in charge afterwards.

      If we make it to the 2nd amendment as a corrective measure, we have failed.

    4. Re:We allow policies that permit income iequality by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      Economic growth is not a zero sum game except in the short run.

      Short, if you consider decades short. Production, efficiency, corporate profits, ceo pay, etc.., have risen much quicker than average worker salary in the last 30 years. The average worker salary increase is nearly flat. You are right that economic growth is not zero sum, but it can nearly be zero sum with the right political and market manipulation.

      The top 1% of the population does not have the power by themselves (in a democracy) to dictate income inequality.

      In theory. In practice, media ownership concentration and money in politics heavily influences people to the point that they consistently vote against their own best interests. The people are not "permitting" anyone. They are actively being mislead.

  29. looser immigration laws and laborers by geoffrobinson · · Score: 1

    Is it just me or would a wave of low-skilled immigrants be a disaster for people on the low-end of the economic spectrum who are already here? Or is Google only thinking about high-skilled immigrants, i.e. the ones they want to hire?

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
    1. Re:looser immigration laws and laborers by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Yes

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  30. Capitalism doesn't mean what he thinks it means. by bigpat · · Score: 2

    For Free Market Capitalism to work as a social good it must encourage the equitable distribution of capital rather than the concentration of capital in very few hands.

    Yes, in some ways it does make sense for individuals who demonstrate exceptional talent, contributions or even dumb luck to be rewarded with exceptional rewards. But for the most part we should be aiming for a society where meaningful capital investment decisions are made through the collective wisdom of hundreds of millions of people not just thousands of people.

    If not then Capitalism will fail for the exact same reason that communism fails, because centralized control leads to corruption. Whether it be a king, or other dictatorship, business leader or elected leader with too much power. Self interests and incompetency will always lead to inefficiencies that are laid bare during times of natural disaster or other natural scarcity.

    The beauty of the American model was that prosperity was not only shared by many based on merit, but that the merit was decided by our peers and not some oligarchs deciding from on high what people were worth. With much of our economy now stratified with various expensive credentialing legal or de facto requirements we are very much becoming the type of rigidly corrupt society which we tried to counter over two hundred years ago.

    Capitalism is all too quickly devolving into a neo-fascist feudalism with just a few well connected, well bred, well educated people collecting the vast majority of the wealth, spending it foolishly to invest in their friends stupid "tech" or other start-ups which are often no more than fly by night flim-flam outfits with no lasting value or even profitability. People without even the merit that the elite define for themselves are getting rich in this way and it sets up a clear moral hazard where the elite do not suffer the consequences for the decisions they impose on others.

    Governments are also in direct control of a vast portion of the economy with the same sorts of centralized pyramid style decision making being dominant. I support the Audit the Fed initiative, not because I think we can afford to put an end to loose monetary policy, but because we now have trillions of new dollars flowing into the economy through public policy, but that is creating another imbalance in society where the new money is trickling down from the top through banks and government rather than being distributed more equitably.

    Much better would it be to distribute that trillion dollars in new money to every many woman and child in the US with each getting a check for $3,000 rather than funnel it through a few select banks and government programs with billionaires and millionaires taking cuts at each level as it trickles down into the real economy. Individuals themselves are usually the best decision makers about what their specific needs are.

    With a very expensive education system funded with loans and other debt here in the US, increasing immigration will help some few lucky people at the expense of devaluing labor here in the US and undermining the education investments that people here have made in themselves to better their own lives. It will further social and economic displacements, but yet on paper will grow the economy, but not to the betterment of most Americans who will see their lives increasingly disrupted by forced (and expensive) migrations to find work.

    "Better" Education is another false promise as the costs in the US for more and more education are being born by individuals and the result is that those with more wealth are able to better themselves and education becomes a barrier to entry for families without wealth rather than an enabler. Universities will always trumpet the few that they give special access to and enable, but as gate keepers to income growth they are doing as much harm as they are good while leaving millions of equally meritorious students behind. Education must be reformed to be more affordable and more applicable to the

  31. We need immigrants to compete by sjbe · · Score: 1

    We're in an American economy where Congress forces our workers to compete with the Chinese government on wages.

    Congress has nothing to do with it. You are going to compete with people from around the globe no matter what Congress does. You are going to compete whether you like it or not. Labor and capital will seek where costs are lowest and national borders plays little role in that. The economy does not stop at our border no matter how much some might wish it did. Furthermore China has 5 people for every 1 in the US. Exactly how do you think the US is going to compete with China without encouraging immigration? When China has a 5:1 ratio of people then China has a larger the talent pool to draw from. It's not as if Americans are smarter. Want to compete globally in the next 100 years? Better be welcoming immigrants with open arms because you'll need them.

    You think widespread contempt for the law is a good thing? It is illegal today to hire undocumented workers. Has been for decades.

    If the law is pointless, unjust and/or hurts the economy then yes it is a good thing that we ignore the law. We've had lots of laws that weren't worthy of respect. I don't give a crap which side of a line of a map someone was born on. They're just people, same as you and me. If they want to come to my country to work, pay taxes and don't cause trouble then let them come. I do not support wasting tax dollars to keep people on the other side of an artificial barrier unless the represent a threat to my physical safety. If more people are coming than the law permits then it's probably worth wondering why and figuring out a way to let them come here legally. Most work hard, pay taxes and don't cause trouble. I'm not worried about the fact that immigrants want to come here. That means there is opportunity here. What worries me is if someday they stop wanting to come here. That means the opportunity has gone away.

    And within a generation, they were: 1. English speakers 2. Citizens 3. Attending college 4. Award winning journalists 5. Military officers

    Congrats. So what exactly is your problem with welcoming immigrants?

    And you think it's not about race for the immigrants too? Let me guess, you've never lived anywhere near an immigrant neighborhood, have you?

    Nice strawman. We live in a nation of immigrants. Almost nobody in North or South America can trace their ancestry back more than a few generations before they hit an immigrant. Over 38 Million first generation immigrants are in the US. As far as I'm concerned they have every much right to be here as I do. Immigrant ghettos at you pointed out tend not to last very long for the most part.

    1. Re:We need immigrants to compete by The+Cat · · Score: 0

      Congress has nothing to do with it. You are going to compete with people from around the globe no matter what Congress does.

      Pure bullshit.

      Exactly how do you think the US is going to compete with China without encouraging immigration?

      We could start by insisting on a fair trade policy. You know, one where China doesn't block our products at their borders and one where they don't subsidize their company's prices by manipulating their currency?

      When China has a 5:1 ratio of people then China has a larger the talent pool to draw from.

      More people does not equal more talent.

      If the law is pointless, unjust and/or hurts the economy then yes it is a good thing that we ignore the law.

      You've got all the answers, don't you? I'm going to take a wild guess and say someone does your laundry for you.

      If more people are coming than the law permits then it's probably worth wondering why

      Because they are getting a free lunch paid for by us.

      So what exactly is your problem with welcoming immigrants?

      Because the immigrants today:

      1. Remain non-English-speakers by choice
      2. Have no need to become citizens, therefore they don't
      3. Attend college, but only if someone else pays for it
      4. Can't obtain higher-paying jobs because of 1-3
      5. Rarely join the military and almost never become officers

      Further they also:

      1. Live 14 people to a three-bedroom apartment, so even if they are all earning minimum wage, they clear $3000 a week and can afford $2000 a month in rent. Guess who ends up with no affordable place to live? That's right: mom, dad and their kids. (The fact that 14 people living in an apartment designed for perhaps four people is against the law doesn't matter, because hey, we don't have to follow the law, right?)

      2. Are equipped by the government with a complete roadmap on how to qualify for hundreds of thousands of dollars in ongoing taxpayer-funded benefits which are specifically denied to others by law. (See if you can guess what the earned income tax credit is for 14 people earning minimum wage?)

      3. Form communities that exclude other ethnicities to the point where city services like fire and police can't function properly because they can't communicate with anyone, and where the stores are off-limits to visitors because they can't read the packaging or communicate with the sales staff.

      4. Send billions of dollars back to their home countries that almost never returns to our economy because their home countries also block our products.

      But hey, you've got all the answers, so why don't we just lower the flag, erase the borders, disband Congress (since they don't matter either) and just green light whatever-the-fuck? It will be global economic paradise!

  32. Too many people, not enough work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The concentration of capital, increases in efficiency & productivity, and the high entry costs now associated with launching anything grander than a mom & pop scale operation combined with the large number of people in the potential workforce result in the pattern that we are seeing now. I propose that this trend will continue until we have a society structured somewhat like this:

    The 'wealthy', i.e. those who do not have to labor in order to generate income (tip of the pyramid)
    The 'services' class, i.e. doctors,lawyers,police,armed forces, and civil servants of every stripe (upper third to half)
    Everyone Else, i.e. those who, for whatever reason, are not 'rock stars' with regards to any marketable skillset. Willing to work, able to work, but unable to compete. (the base).

    Since capital does not usually have social welfare in mind, it has no incentive to 'hire down'. The question becomes, how does a society who's defining characteristics are mass consumerism and populist concepts of productive labor (coupled with a love/hate attitude towards the wealthy) adjust to this new arrangement?

    1. Re:Too many people, not enough work by WillAdams · · Score: 1

      Interesting examination of that in the novella _Manna_ by Marshall Brain: http://marshallbrain.com/manna...

      --
      Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.
  33. bullshit answer from a bullshit person by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 2

    Everything he said helps his company and does nothing for the poor people.

  34. looser immigration laws? by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    How does that help raise salaries for techies? Seems to me it would do the opposite.

    Unless you believe that bullshit about h1bs creating jobs for Americans (even though h1bs are not legally allowed to do that).

  35. Google missed the boat on social media... and they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...that is all....

  36. There is already a working model for this by infidel_heathen · · Score: 1

    There is already a working well-proven economic model that promotes equality while preserving economic robustness: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N...

  37. Fuck you Schmidt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So his "solutions" for the problem of inequality is more of the exact same policies which caused the inequality in the first place? Go fucking kill yourself you god damn cunt.

  38. Unions? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What are your thoughts on a tech workers union that negotiates exclusive-employment contracts with tech firms. Surely if enough people got on board, it could work out to be a solution.

  39. looser immigration laws == we want to hire more ch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That way we don't have to pay high salaries. Fsck it America. You blew it. The jobs ain't coming back. Say hello to your new immigrant overlords.

  40. Godwin? Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought slashdot was supposed to let commenters race to reach godwin's law.

  41. 50 people? by jcrada · · Score: 1

    I think they paid $19B for 450M users, which leads to $42/person.

  42. Another Corporate Tool speaks out against...uh..wh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, I'm sure the Head Googlers are VERY concerned about income inequality. That's why they hire Indian programmers for $5/HR and Laotian programmers for $4.50/HR.

  43. The citation you required by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here it is... the lazy french are the most productive people worldwide (well... per hour of work done... which are not a lot)
    http://www.businessinsider.com/are-the-french-the-most-productive-people-in-the-world-2009-8

  44. a language that lacks consonants by CmdrTamale · · Score: 1

    French is written with plenty of consonants. The Parisians seem too hurried to pronounce the ones toward the end. I am told the final consonants survive in parts of France away from central influence.

    On the other hand, their lack of stress irritates those who speak more Northerly tongues, who tend to be more stressed about monetary irregularities.