Tag Archives: Capitalism

We Need A State Law To Prevent Cheap Gas?

A new gas station opened up in a North Carolina town recently.  As it turns out, that gas station is interested in attracting customers AND selling things other than gas.

It would seem that station owners would or should be able to adjust the price of their gas at whatever levels they see fit.  Higher prices would generate more money per gallon to be sure, but lower prices would generate more gallons.

Discretion of the station owner, right?

Wrong.

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How Cool Is The Market?

We’re going to redo the master bath at my house.  I’ve told my wife that I wanna get a mirror that doubles as a computer touch screen so that we can check our calendar and email in the morning.

She laughed.

Who’s laughing now?

Lending Money

There’s all kinds of reasons why people want to borrow money.  Mostly, though, there are two:

  1. They need the money now.  A bill has to be paid or service will be turned off.
  2. They want something now.  A purchase is to be made and saving the money isn’t desirable.

In any case, an individual is taking current value of money in trade for some future value of money.  And current money is more valuable than future money; I’d rather have $20 now than $20  later.  So, to compensate for that, money lenders charge interest.  While I would rather have that 20 bucks now, I might be willing to hold off if I could get 25 bucks next week.

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Coffee

Like everyone, I love L-O-V-E my morning coffee.  Perhaps like many fewer, I like my coffee to be of specific make; Goya Espresso coffee.

As I made my coffee this morning, I noticed that I was running a bit low and would need more soon.

So, I got on my magic typewriter, typed some letters that included “www” and entered an online “market” where distributors from all over creation competed to sell me my Goya.  More than that?  They’re shipping it to my door for free.

Gotta tell ya’, that free market sure does suck.

Health Care: Market Style [Literally]

Are they waiting for bread or medicine?

So, I needed some bread the other day.  I dressed in my best thermal and made my way down to the local state run community bread line.  With luck I’d be able to get half a loaf of 5 day old bread 3 days early.  Times is tough in the state ya know.

Actually, because food isn’t either:

  1. Distributed by the state
  2. Used as means of compensation

I went to my local for profit market driven food market.

In addition to my fresh bread, I bought wine from California, Champagne from France, beer from Seattle and Saki from Japan.

Olive oil from Italy.  Chocolate from Switzerland.  Blueberries from Chili.  Bananas from India.  And fresh organic tomatoes from right here in North Carolina.

But the MOST amazing thing I saw in my fresh daily market just 1.5 miles up the road?

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A Test On Taxes

The debate rages on; almost always never resolved.  Do tax hikes benefit or harm economies?

On the one hand, the argument is that the State needs the income to do the People’s Business.  On the other hand, taxes are a burden and a head wind for economic growth.

Who wins out?

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Econ 101: Coal and China

China is reporting that the nation is experiencing localized brown outs. Cities are without electric power.

Why?

Because power plants don’t have coal to make electricity.

Why?

No one is mining coal. No money in it.

Why?

The Chinese government mandates coal below market rates.

Econ 101.

More From the Boys at Brad and Britt

I suspect that we’ll be talking about health care and the health care law, Obamacare, for some time now.  And rightfully so, this is a huge issue at a time when we need to craft solutions, and quick.  We simply have no money and need to solve that problem.

So, health care.  This morning on the Brad and Britt Show the issue of allowing insurance companies to sell their policies across state lines came up.  And Brad admitted he didn’t know why that was such a sticking point to Republicans.

Blink.  Blink.

This illustrates the disconnect in the discourse today.  On one hand you have a group of people who want to legislate just “whatever they want”.  This is akin to passing a l aw that requires the ice cream man to deliver me ice cream before bed.  Who doesn’t want THAT?  And on the other hand, you have a group of people who have actual knowledge of how things work trying to legislate the “business” of government.

So, Brad, here is why allowing inter-state trade of insurance would reduce costs.

Suppose that a corporation wants to open stores in all 50 states, say, like Target.  But in order to do so, they have to meet individual state mandates on the products in their store they sell.  Say, for example, that Minnesota has passed legislation that says Target must sell books to children of all ages and adults who are poor for $2.00 each.  Target, wanting to remain in business in Minnesota, will either stop selling books all together [selling books at $2 won’t return them a profit] or, OR….they will RAISE the price of all books such that the price of a book to a non-poor adult is enough to cover the cost of having to provide subsidized books to the poor and the young.

Or, say that South Carolina passes legislation that requires Target stores that sell groceries that when someone does buy groceries from them, the store has to deliver those groceries to the customers house.  Target will either stop selling groceries in South Carolina or, OR…they will raise the price of groceries to cover the government mandated delivery service.

Is it Targets fault that they are selling books at a higher price in Minnesota?  Or that they are selling groceries at a higher price in South Carolina?

No.

Now go further and say that ALL sellers of books in Minnesota must follow the same rules; likewise all sellers of groceries in South Carolina.

Overnight you have increased the cost of books and groceries in those states.  And for what?  For some government mandated feel good legislation.  After all, why do you hate the young and the poor who want access to books?  How DARE you pass laws that restrict their access to book?

And food?  There are people in this world [at least on] who are home ridden and don’t have the luxury or ability of going shopping.  Would you deny THEM food?  Soulness, greedy capitalist pig.  You are GREEDY!

So, in the name of altruism and good intentions, laws are passed that actually RAISE the price of goods while at the same time restricting supply.

As a citizen of Minnesota or South Carolina, would you like to enjoy the ability to buy a book in Iowa?  Or South Dakota?  Or even Mississippi if it were cheaper?  Would you not like to shop for books in the same way you shop for Star Wars action figures?  Or the citizen of South Carolina….would you blame her for peeking across the border in North Carolina for cheaper goods?  Or Georgia?  Or even, gasp, shopping on-line at Amazon?  [Where, by the way, they DO deliver your groceries to you].

It is the states that make mandates that causes insurance policies to rise.  Not ALL of the rise to be sure, but much of it.  When Maine passes a law that requires insurance companies to sell a policy to any person, no matter how sick, as long as that person has been living in Maine for 60 days, the cost of policies is going to go up.  When New York passes a law that requires insurance companies to cover acupuncture therapy, the price of that policy is going to go up.  When Vermont passes a law that forces insurance companies to cover up to 14 days in the hospital no matter the ailment, the cost of policies is going to go up.

THAT is why breaking down state barriers would reduce the cost of coverage.  Imagine if the Maine-ian could shop for a policy in North Carolina that covered only the eventualities and procedures that he wanted to insure?  His cost would plummet.  And his experience and value on his dollar would explode.

For sure Maine would see it’s insurance companies close shop nearly over night.  And so, if they wanted to keep those businesses in state, they would have to remove the punitive restrictions they placed on them.  And competition would force the cost down, the quality up.

That is why.  THAT is why we want to see insurance sold across state lines.

Evil Greedy Capitaalist Pigs!

The rich; they are reedy pigs!

And the corporations they run; just mechanisms to take money from the poor and give to the rich!

They take from those who have little and give to those that have much!

Right?

Nope.

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Middle Class: I

The Middle Class.  The new [or continued] prize in American politics.

All we hear about these days is that the middle class is getting hammered.  Taken advantage of and squeezed.

Only the rich survive; the rest of us are fodder to the wealthiest Americans.

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