Geekzone: technology news, blogs, forums
Guest
Welcome Guest.
You haven't logged in yet. If you don't have an account you can register now.
To post in this sub-forum you must have made 100 posts or have Trust status or have completed our ID Verification



View this topic in a long page with up to 500 replies per page Create new topic
1 | 2 | 3 
sen8or

1897 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 1402


  #2706375 12-May-2021 08:16
Send private message

So those accumulating the wealth, don't provide opportunity for others to do the same? Do they generate all the income themselves?

 

My on view on trickle down may not be the same as your definition above, but for me, it gives opportunities that otherwise wouldn't be there. What people do with the opportunity is on them. We should absolutely have equality of opportunity, we should not have equality of outcome, to argue equality of outcome will dis-incentivise the innovators and entrepreneurs from creating opportunities in the first place.




freitasm
BDFL - Memuneh
80658 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 41071

Administrator
ID Verified
Trusted
Geekzone
Lifetime subscriber

  #2706409 12-May-2021 09:04
Send private message

sen8or:

 

So those accumulating the wealth, don't provide opportunity for others to do the same? Do they generate all the income themselves?

 

My on view on trickle down may not be the same as your definition above, but for me, it gives opportunities that otherwise wouldn't be there. What people do with the opportunity is on them. We should absolutely have equality of opportunity, we should not have equality of outcome, to argue equality of outcome will dis-incentivise the innovators and entrepreneurs from creating opportunities in the first place.

 

 

No, because the majority of workers are paid the minimum wage and the employers fight to keep it down (where is the trickle down here?). At minimum wage it is hard to pay for home, food, education, health, leisure and more. 





Referral links: Quic Broadband (free setup code: R587125ERQ6VE) | Samsung | AliExpress | Wise | Sharesies 

 

Support Geekzone by subscribing (browse ads-free), or making a one-off or recurring donation through PressPatron.

 


Rikkitic
Awrrr
19071 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 16318

Lifetime subscriber

  #2706413 12-May-2021 09:09
Send private message

If trickle down works, why are there so many working poor who can't afford food and clothing for their children, never mind houses or decent cars?

 

 





Plesse igmore amd axxept applogies in adbance fir anu typos

 


 




sen8or

1897 posts

Uber Geek
+1 received by user: 1402


  #2706440 12-May-2021 09:55
Send private message

freitasm:

 

 

 

No, because the majority of workers are paid the minimum wage and the employers fight to keep it down (where is the trickle down here?). At minimum wage it is hard to pay for home, food, education, health, leisure and more. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.stats.govt.nz/information-releases/labour-market-statistics-income-june-2020-quarter

 

 

 

Median income was $27/hour, I'm not sure on the distribution below, but as minimum wage at that time was $19odd, but that shows that at least 50% of incomes were at least 50% (or more) higher than minimum wage, hardly "the majority" earning minimum wage.

 

It also showed that "self employed" income dropped whilst the others increased. As the majority of NZ businesses are SMEs (I think its around 80% +/-) and they employ about 1/2 of the workforce (again, rough numbers based on memory), its the employers whos income has suffered, not the employees (wage / salary earners increased during this time). This was ofcourse a COVID period summary and it is likely that the impact of out of work employers/employees have contributed to the fall.

 

I have no doubt that at minimum wage its difficult to afford things, but there always has to be an incentive to grow. 

 

 

 

 


1 | 2 | 3 
View this topic in a long page with up to 500 replies per page Create new topic








Geekzone Live »

Try automatic live updates from Geekzone directly in your browser, without refreshing the page, with Geekzone Live now.



Are you subscribed to our RSS feed? You can download the latest headlines and summaries from our stories directly to your computer or smartphone by using a feed reader.