aquascoot wrote on Aug 24
th, 2024 at 4:59pm:
socialism still beguiled leading intellectuals and politicians of the West.
Yes, because frequent market failure, cost of living crises, and periodic recessions badly affect less well-off citizens.
Quote:They believed, with John Maynard Keynes, that “the state is wise and the market is stupid.”
Keynes of course developed his economic policies largely in reaction to the Great Depression, which was largely a faiure of finance systems.
The important take from Keynes today is his famous remark:
"if the (currency-issuing) nation can build it, the nation can afford it".
Quote: As soon as the guns of World War II fell silent, Britain’s Labour Party nationalized every major industry and acceded to every socialist demand of the unions.
.....At first, socialism seemed to work in these vastly dissimilar countries.
......GDP growth in Great Britain averaged 3 percent from 1950 to 1965, along with a 40 percent rise in average real wages, enabling Britain to become one of the world’s more affluent countries.
But the government planners were unable to keep pace with increasing population and overseas competition.
A correct analysis, except for "planners couldn't keep pace with increasing population" - which is nonsense, planners can always plan for increasing population.
Quote:After decades of ever declining economic growth and ever rising unemployment, all three countries abandoned socialism and turned toward capitalism and the free market.
Wrong on a number of counts; the apparent 'failure' of the Keynesian welfare state in the West happened quickly in the 70's, (not decades) due to the Arab oil embargo which caused inflation in the West, and a simultaneous loss of industry to low wage Asia, cuasing an increase in unemployment (in the West)
Quote: The resulting prosperity in Israel, India, and the U.K. vindicated free-marketers who had predicted that socialism would inevitably fail to deliver the goods.
Wrong again: the "prosperity" wasn't evenly shared as many communities sank into
'1st world rust belt' status.
Quote:As British prime minister Margaret Thatcher observed, “the problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people’s money.”
Yet taxes on the rich have been reduced since the introduction of the post-Thatcher
neoliberal era, which is why inequality is now soaring, and the West (and the entire globe) is suffering a
cost of living crisis courtesy of your "capitalist" free market dogma.
As for taxes, I'm here to tell you currency-issuing governments don't need your taxes,
when the goods and services the government needs are available for purchase by the government.See the next post re Starmer's lies - he's turning out to be as useless as an ashtray on a motor bike.