M
Martin Brown
Guest
On 15/05/2010 16:50, John Larkin wrote:
but for the ruling classes running scared of what happened during the
French revolution. In some senses the same landless peasants and urban
poor revolt against rich overlords is playing out today in Bankok.
largely used to drive the share price of sound companies downwards. It
is little more than a form of spread betting on future share price.
In theory I think such transactions are banned in the USA but are not
adequately policed by an SEC more interested in downloading porn videos.
I know most about produced stuff that the workforce would need more than
a years salary to buy. Amusingly it also included fine linen tablecloths
for the White House that were shipped during the American War of
Independence. We know this because the copy invoice survives.
For the love of money is the root of all evil: which while some coveted
after, they have erred from the faith, and pierced themselves through
with many sorrows.
There is maximising profit by producing a good product, but there was
also a lot of maximising profits by exploiting the poor and vulnerable
leaving them with a choice of starving to death quickly or more slowly.
Famines usually epitomise this scenario. There is food in warehouses,
but the merchants want a price that is way beyond what any of the
starving people can afford to pay. Ireland was still exporting food
during the infamous potato famine.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2010/apr/26/ba-virgin-cartel-price-fixing
Left to their own devices industries will shake down to two or three big
players that carve up the market between them and then raise prices. US
anti-trust laws were to prevent this scenario after fo example
Rockefellers Standard Oil company showed how to create and exploit a
monopoly.
For all his vicious business practices he was also quite philanthropic.
And even more so in his long retirement.
Regards,
Martin Brown
A very long transitional period. It would have remained the status quoOn Sat, 15 May 2010 11:08:13 +0100, Martin Brown
|||newspam|||@nezumi.demon.co.uk> wrote:
On 14/05/2010 21:42, John Larkin wrote:
On Fri, 14 May 2010 17:53:22 +0100, Martin Brown
|||newspam|||@nezumi.demon.co.uk> wrote:
On 14/05/2010 16:06, John Larkin wrote:
On Fri, 14 May 2010 08:31:49 +0100, Martin Brown
|||newspam|||@nezumi.demon.co.uk> wrote:
Engels saw first hand what greedy industrialists were doing to their
workers in the Lancashire cotton industry. Boiler explosions were
commonplace up until the Vulcan insurers made a stand and insisted on
proper boiler safety inspections. And in cases of tampering with safety
relief valves they would not pay out.
[snip]
It makes reasonable sense to pay your workers a living wage for the work
that they do rather than pay them less than they can sensibly live on.
Ford was about the first in the USA to actually do this.
It only makes sense if the money comes from somewhere. If all the
employers arbitrarily doubled wages, inflation would take it all away
We are talking here of industrialised manufacture that was possibly two
or more orders of magnitude more productive. All the profits went to the
mill owners and their workers were left to starve on a subsistance level
of pay because it was marginally better than being out of work.
That effect was transient. The first mill owners could indeed hire
unemployed labor cheap. As other mill owners got into the act, they
had to compete for labor whether they were nice people or not. The
That isn't how it worked at all. There were enough starving people
migrating to the cities that the mill owners could fix the price they
were prepared to pay and anyway preferred to employ children at roughly
1/10 of the adult rate where possible. The working day was unregulated
but typically around 14 hours. A brief history of some of the worst
areas of the country for these practices is online at:
http://www.manchester2002-uk.com/history/victorian/Victorian1.html
The poor were viewed as an underclass to be exploited for commercial
gain like beasts of burden and kept poor. They lived in squalour and
paid barely enough to stay alive. This "transient" situation persisted
until the late 19th century which is how Engles came to observe it.
Yes, that was al the transition period. Before technology caught up
with fertility.
but for the ruling classes running scared of what happened during the
French revolution. In some senses the same landless peasants and urban
poor revolt against rich overlords is playing out today in Bankok.
Germany has just banned trading in "naked short selling" a practiceIt seems that the global banking system has major crashes with an almost
predictable period of 80-90 years - 1847, 1929, 2008
The period is getting shorter, and nobody with any sense is doing
anything to lend stability. Quite the opposite.
largely used to drive the share price of sound companies downwards. It
is little more than a form of spread betting on future share price.
In theory I think such transactions are banned in the USA but are not
adequately policed by an SEC more interested in downloading porn videos.
Simple example for the UK was the rest of the empire. The Linen factoryProductivity is the ultimate benevolence. Technology pushes
productivity.
Increased productivity is good, but only when some of the proceeds are
shared with the people who are doing the work.
If workers are massively productive, where is the stuff going to go,
but to the workers? Where else could it go? Why would Henry Ford want
to personally own a million model Ts? Why would Edison want a billion
light bulbs for himself?
Widespread productivity is better than widespread lack of same.
I know most about produced stuff that the workforce would need more than
a years salary to buy. Amusingly it also included fine linen tablecloths
for the White House that were shipped during the American War of
Independence. We know this because the copy invoice survives.
Timothy 6:10 (King James Version):In the Victorian era most
of the mill owners were out to exploit the poor for maximum profit. They
had enough money to buy the capital kit to enter the market and were
determined to keep it that way. The eventual rise of a powerful middle
class of managers and administrators eventually broke the deadlock but
the workers at the bottom of the pile had little option but to form
unions if they were ever to get a fair deal.
All business people want to maximize profit. As productivity and
For the love of money is the root of all evil: which while some coveted
after, they have erred from the faith, and pierced themselves through
with many sorrows.
There is maximising profit by producing a good product, but there was
also a lot of maximising profits by exploiting the poor and vulnerable
leaving them with a choice of starving to death quickly or more slowly.
Famines usually epitomise this scenario. There is food in warehouses,
but the merchants want a price that is way beyond what any of the
starving people can afford to pay. Ireland was still exporting food
during the infamous potato famine.
That is why the airlines form cartels to keep prices up?competition increase, we go from pre-Victorian poverty to modern
car-in-every-drivway. Nobody guides the process... it has its own
dynamic. There's no credit and no blame; actors act and the system
changes.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2010/apr/26/ba-virgin-cartel-price-fixing
Left to their own devices industries will shake down to two or three big
players that carve up the market between them and then raise prices. US
anti-trust laws were to prevent this scenario after fo example
Rockefellers Standard Oil company showed how to create and exploit a
monopoly.
For all his vicious business practices he was also quite philanthropic.
And even more so in his long retirement.
Regards,
Martin Brown