vieze tiran, alle sukkels vallen voor z’n presentatie
#3
cor mol
“No one can doubt that the American political economy has changed dramatically over the last generation. Perhaps most fundamental is a transformation that Stiglitz and Krugman seem to assume and barely mention: the huge shift in the relative influence of business and labor. The sharp decline of unions outside the public sector (where they are now deeply embattled) has not only affected the bargaining power and compensation of employees in the workplace; it has also greatly weakened the major organized group most capable of defending less affluent Americans in the political arena.”
” What’s more, campaign contributions are only a small proportion of political spending. The organized energies of corporations and the wealthy influence every aspect of American governance. These efforts range from direct lobbying of political officials, to drives to shape both mass and elite opinion, to the long cultivation by conservative activists of a Supreme Court majority advancing a more pro-business economic agenda, to the carefully planned use of fiscal crises in many states to mount a frontal assault on public sector unions.“
NYR What Krugman & Stiglitz Can Tell Us, SEPTEMBER 27, 2012, Jacob Hacker and Paul Pierson
Reacties (3)
Hij heeft er 6 Trilion USD bij de publieke schuld gevoegd in zijn periode tot nu toe.
Van 10 biljoen naar 16 biljoen.
Zo gauw de USD als wereld handels munt in gevaar komt ( en dat komt hij nu) is het afgelopen.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=ceobsac7LE8
vieze tiran, alle sukkels vallen voor z’n presentatie
“No one can doubt that the American political economy has changed dramatically over the last generation. Perhaps most fundamental is a transformation that Stiglitz and Krugman seem to assume and barely mention: the huge shift in the relative influence of business and labor. The sharp decline of unions outside the public sector (where they are now deeply embattled) has not only affected the bargaining power and compensation of employees in the workplace; it has also greatly weakened the major organized group most capable of defending less affluent Americans in the political arena.”
” What’s more, campaign contributions are only a small proportion of political spending. The organized energies of corporations and the wealthy influence every aspect of American governance. These efforts range from direct lobbying of political officials, to drives to shape both mass and elite opinion, to the long cultivation by conservative activists of a Supreme Court majority advancing a more pro-business economic agenda, to the carefully planned use of fiscal crises in many states to mount a frontal assault on public sector unions.“
NYR What Krugman & Stiglitz Can Tell Us, SEPTEMBER 27, 2012, Jacob Hacker and Paul Pierson