• @Delta_V
    link
    -2
    edit-2
    4 days ago

    The “implosion” of oligarchs profit margins isn’t something any of us need to worry about. Over the short term, the vast majority of us will benefit from it - like 90% of the population stands to gain, 10% will break even, and the billionaires will see their income reduced.

    In the long run, putting more disposable income into the hands of working Americans will be a driver of economic growth.

    • @RememberTheApollo_
      link
      4
      edit-2
      4 days ago

      Implosion of oligarchs?

      You are sadly mistaken that the fallout will harm the wealthy. They aren’t going to throw up their hands in despair, they’ll just further attack worker and consumer protections, salaries, benefits, retirement funds and all the rest. I don’t know what planet you live on where the oligarchy just go ahead and hand out money to the masses because their exploited labor force got deported. They just find new bodies and exploit even harder when they’ve already made it a mission to crush the middle class.

      • @Delta_V
        link
        24 days ago

        Yeah, its not credible to claim that large, profitable enterprises will “implode” if the supply and demand curve shifts slightly.

        At the most cynical level, businesses that depend on cheap labor from undocumented immigrants will get squeezed as their labor costs increase.

        America’s Military Industrial Complex isn’t going to fail if market forces require they offer more money to secure a sufficient supply of labor.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      1
      edit-2
      3 days ago

      When I think of implosion and oligarchs, the image of a submarine springs to mind.

      In the long run, putting more disposable income into the hands of working Americans will be a driver of economic growth.

      Too bad none of Trump’s policies will do that.

    • Flying Squid
      link
      24 days ago

      The “implosion” of oligarchs profit margins isn’t something any of us need to worry about. Over the short term, the vast majority of us will benefit from it - like 90% of the population stands to gain, 10% will break even, and the billionaires will see their income reduced.

      I’d say what happened in 1929 suggests otherwise.

      • @Delta_V
        link
        -14 days ago

        What happened in 1929 was a result of low wages and high unemployment pulling the rug out from under the economy, and therefore it suggests that policy that leads to higher wages and lower unemployment is needed to prevent a repeat.

        • Flying Squid
          link
          34 days ago

          Sure, that stock market crash that destroyed a whole lot of wealth had nothing to do with it. Nothing at all.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          13 days ago

          And the cost of living was simultaneously driven up by an idiotic tariff policy that caused a collapse in global trade. Which directly led to less demand for labor, hence the low wages, hence the high unemployment.