Lisa Jones wrote on Apr 29
th, 2023 at 6:24pm:
It’s not obsolete as it provides a basis for teaching the history of economic theory at Uni.
But of course
free marketeers still appeal to it today as a workable propostion, in the age of automation which has rendered simple free markets obsolete in a global supply chain economy.
Quote:So let’s make things a tad easier.
In the following continuum:
far left : centre left : centre right : far right
Where do you (roughly) slot in?
You might have to tell me, since I'm apolitical.
I despise the Coaltion's 'small government', 'go get a job' stance....and yet Paul Keating said that too, despite the fact there are over a million involuntarily unemployed people in Oz.
I like most of the Greens'
economic policies...but they don't know how to pay for them in a way which is acceptable to most of the public (ie the Greens usually propose higher taxes).
And I think most Greens are into
absolute national sovereignty - which is incompatable with
effective international law (though Senator Jordan Steele-John is strongly
anti war. So where do you place me on the continuum?