PassedOut, on 2016-June-01, 12:10, said:
In my opinion, we need a mixture of capitalism (to ensure an adequate production of goods and services) and socialism (to provide for an equitable distribution of those goods and services). Not sure what the label is.
But the two are interlocked: for businesses to thrive, it's important to have a lot of folks with some disposable income. A problem we face is that there is no guarantee that there is now, or ever will be, enough well-paying jobs to provide that disposable income for many folks. It is certainly not automatic.
Yes, I was relying on memory. Seems as if there was some action with coal too, but maybe I am wrong. And I completely agree that some sort of mixed form is what is needed.
My brief view of US labor history runs as follows:
During the thirties, things got tricky. Stalin had his admirers, as did Hitler. Some very good decisions got made that allowed workers to make substantial improvements in their lives. Circumstances, partly beyond our control, , WW II included, contributed to the favorable result.
Circumstances change. Although I am not prepared to write a paper on the subject, I suspect that both labor and management had a share of the blame for the auto industry's slow response to competition. And there was a philosophy that industry is no longer important, we are now a service economy. When I first heard this, a good forty years ago, I recall think ing that people in the service industry are called servants. It seemed like a mistake.
Now we are, I think, in a mess. Robert Samuelson had a recent column entitled Good news for the middle class
Maybe so. But there seem to be a lot of kids growing up in very insecure environments. Perhaps good news means that it is not as bad as it could be.
If I have to go with an ism, I prefer realism. Not that it is easy to come to agreements on just what that entails. But I have limited enthusiasm for any argument based on the inherent superiority of either capitalism or socialism. And attaching adjectives to it, democratic socialism or democratic capitalism, doesn't move me either.