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Comment about August Economic Update (re REAL WAGE)

I have to disagree with the "real wage" part of this lecture. In 1967, when min wage was $1.25/hr, I was living in Mission Beach (San Diego) in a nice little beach house with dutch doors and two parking spaces right out front. In the winter, the beach and bay were virtually barren of people - so it was ALL MINE! I worked 25 hours a week, same as my husband. We owned a VW camper ($1K then, $40K now), he drove a Suzuki motorcycle and I commuted to high school on my Vespa, and our rent was $100/mo. We were a 1 min. walk to Mission Bay and a 2 minute walk to the Beach at Mission Blvd and San Jose Place. Years later, they had knocked our little beach house down and erected a 3-story box. To rent that place now would be at least $10,000/mo. To live in what remains of those tiny original beach houses would be at least $5,000/mo. 25 hours/wk at $1.25, even if you inflate it, would not give us the lifestyle we lived then. I figured that minimum wage would have to be at least $121/hr at FULL-TIME for me to experience any facsimile of the same lifestyle, which would still be impossible because it's an over-crowded mess now and the diversity has been lost (only wealthy East Coast immigrants/investors can afford it now.) Same thing happened in other places I've lived: NYC, Boston, Philly, Chicago, San Francisco, Saratoga Springs, NY. Minimum wage would have to be closer to $300/hr for me to live in any of my old "stomping grounds." So, as you speak of "real wage," I tend to think you're assuming Davenport, Iowa, as your starting point.?

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Palo Alto planning commissioner can't afford to live in Palo Alto, resigns and moves

Professor Wolff, I thought I would share with you the following articles about the sudden resignation of the Palo Alto planning commissioner, who said she is moving to Santa Cruz because she can't afford a home in Palo Alto. Typically the plight of people like her rarely evokes sympathy from me. But she said the point of her bringing her resignation to the public's attention was not to garner sympathy, but to bring attention to working-class folks in Palo Alto who can't afford to live here. The lack of affordable housing in that city, and on the peninsula region of the Bay Area in general, has been garnering more airtime in recent years. Teachers and first responders, etc. who work in Palo Alto can't afford to live there. Many live as far away as cities like Modesto and Turlock, and commute some 90 to 100 miles to work in Palo Alto. In the articles, you'll see the outgoing commissioner says the city council is, in part, to blame because it ignores the pleas of its citizens for it to build more homes and less commercial office space. Though that may be true, it's probably not hard to see why the council ignores its everyday citizens if you follow the money... On the TV news yesterday morning, one reporter said, in trying to gauge the reaction of Palo Alto residents, that some have said people who can't afford to live in Palo Alto just have to work harder. Your oft-used punchline, "That's how capitalism works," seems appropriate here. I'm sure it won't be terribly long before this sort of issue in Palo Alto is common across much of the Bay Area. Here are a couple articles about it: http://www.mercurynews.com/bay-area-news/ci_30229420/palo-alto-planning-commissioner-quits-over-high-housing http://sf.curbed.com/2016/8/10/12426244/palo-alto-commissioner-resigns-housing

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white-collar co-ops?

Hi professor Wolff and D@work staff, I believe you've done a consistent and great job articulating the benefits of worker co-ops and the impact of Mondragon. I've been finding myself eager to hear your thoughts on how worker co-op situations can be enacted at companies that are larger and with more so-called white-collar workers who have specialized knowledge/skills. For instance, what might worker control look like at a software company, a marketing agency, an engineering firm, a law firm, etc.? And what are the preconditions necessary to make worker control a success in such organizations?

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Steemit.io white paper critique

Dear Dr. Wolff, I recently discovered a new social media site that uses block chain technology but adds an economic twist. It is steem.io. if you have time, please read their white paper as you will find it interesting. I would love to hear your thoughts on it and see if we could use that type of technology to further D@W. Thanks.

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Devalvation = hidden tax

Dear prof. Wolff. Could you in one of your updates talk about the currency devalvation as a tool for hidden taxation? Thank you.

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Democratize the Ownership of Capital

Your honorable mention of the "community-wealth building" project in Cleveland was touching, but not nearly adequate. How can any "Marxist economist" advocate for workplace democracy with no mention of also democratizing the "circuit of capital"? According to Marx, any organism must generate a surplus in order to reproduce, and Mondragon has done so for the past 60 years to create new jobs in democratic enterprise, most recently in Cleveland. They mobilize production to generate a surplus to mobilize production to generate a surplus, thus reproducing a more democratic economy. Not true of most worker coops in the United States. What are you doing to change that, Richard Wolff, aside from soliciting donations for your speaking engagements?

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venezuela

Many questions regarding Venezuela. Was it really JUST the oil? Why are goods so hard to find? Is the lesson that Ayn Rand's Atlas can really work? How does one save the country from a reactionary right take-over? Can Serrano really do it? http://www.wsj.com/articles/venezuelas-nicolas-maduro-looks-to-a-marxist-spaniard-for-an-economic-miracle-1470678805

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Sandy Springs, GA a.k.a. The Town that Privatized Everything. WOW! (sarcasm)

https://joekent.liberty.me/the-town-that-privatized-everything/

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The "You-Economy"

Prof. Wolff, while travelling in California in July of this year, I picked up a copy of USA Today (July 2016) which contained a supplement called "YouEconomy", The Movement That's Changing the Way We Work. I was reminded of your Economic Updates in which you discuss companies like Uber, AirBnb, Lyft, etc., and how these companies are very profitably exploiting unemployed or underemployed US workers by getting them to use their personal cars as taxis, or rent out space in their homes as hotel suites, etc. I wonder if you could discuss this phenomenon in an upcoming Economic Update. The USA Today supplement has a link to you-economy.com for further information, if needed. The supplement discusses Uber, leVel, TaskRabbit, Etsy, Upwork, microbusiness, and other startups. It suggests this is the future of work in the USA (and, elsewhere presumably) as "freelance work", and includes this happy admonition: "Don't Be the One Left Behind! The biggest mistake you can make in this economy is choosing to ignore it. Ignoring the impact the YouEconomy has had on our daily lives, our ability to earn income, and our ability to control our destiny today would be like ignoring the automobile in the 19th century. Just because you ignore it doesn't mean it will go away. You can either choose to join in, or get left in the dust." Following from what you have discussed in previous Economic Update talks, this "You-Economy" is the deliberate creation of the over-jealous geniuses running the capitalist system as a response to the millions of jobs lost to automation and overseas transfers. I would be grateful to hear your interpretation of this development.

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WSDEs in prisons ?

I saw some articles online about many states that run dog training programs in their prisons. Prisoners train the dogs, some of which were problem dogs left at the pound. Prisoners and dogs alike are socialized. The dogs go into families in local communities, and some of the dogs achieve the level of service dogs. ........ paragraph ...... All the socialization of prisoners, dogs, prison staff, and outside community benefits begs the question: Why not socialize profits and revenue from the programs? Prisoner financial debt upon release is additional, undue punishment, and it works against rehabilitation. ........ paragraph ...... What about developing a variety of WSDEs in the prisons. Capital models are busy exploiting prisoners to profit corporations, while the public pays to keep prisoners. Opportunities are already identified. and many personnel are already in place and working. Thus, changing the model for direction/management could very quickly demonstrate improved results for the businesses and the communities. If US prisons can’t give up their compounding punishment models, would it work to start such programs in some foreign prisons to develop best practices and demonstrate results?

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Little Austria

Dear Professor Wolff, first of all: THANKS³ for putting into words, what’s roaring in my head! I discovered „Economic Update“ only a few weeks ago on our local free radio station. Since then it’s my favorite radio-hour of the week. I’m 63 now and I’m desparately missing such devotedness in the neck of our woods. I really do know that you can’t read all of the mails reaching you, and I’m not waiting for any answer, but believe me: It’s kind of a big relief to talk something away! So it‘s an urgent necessity to tell a litte story about what’s happening in my home country, little Austria (wich used to be BIG not so far in the past). Inspiration for my writing came from this week‘s program, dealing with Franco’s Spain. Motto: „Where have all the flowers gone? When will they ever learn?“. So let’s go: We had presidential elections in Austria some time ago, and in a run-off the Green (sic!!!!!) candidate won by a head (only some 30.000 votes plus). Runner-up was the candidate of the very right-wing „Freedom Party“ (as it always is translated in international reports. I’m always asking: Whose freedom do these guys represent?) FPÖ. But: Will the Green really be President? To put it clearly: Our „President“ is more or less a person who only has to represent. He‘s not aproximately got the „power“ of the US-President is said to have (Has he?). But he is the one who plays an important role in swearing in a newly elected government. And the „green“ candidate Mr Van der Bellen was the only one who stated clearly - before the election - not to swear in someone as next chancellor (the person, whose „potency“ most likely might be compared with the US-President‘s in terms of decision-making power), whose attitude and mindset wasn’t fully PRO the European Union. Just a few words only about Austria’s political system before I continue: We had a mainly Two-Party-System since the end of Word War II: The first time always winning „moderate“ right-wing „People’s Party“ (Austria had – not out of all reason - terrible fear from everything coming from „left“. By the way: They still have….. No more so out of reason, so why?) and the „Socialist-Party“. „Right“ (false??) supremacy lasted till 1970, when - finally – Socialist Bruno Kreisky, became OUR chancellor. The third (at first little) „force“ was the above mentioned FPÖ (following up the Nazi-contaminated VDU), where all the right-wing nationalists gathered. Call it „safe haven“ for many Austrian Nazis. They could develop, because Austria always stated to have been Hitler‘s first victims (Brief remark in this case: See all the raised right hands in Vienna, when Hitler claimed Austria’s connection in 1938!). And now? It’s very hot water! If elections were hold today, the FPÖ would become the strongest party. It’s pathetic and it feels like crying, but ONE THIRD of Austria’s population has learned not the tiniest bit from history. Let me return to our presidential election. First round of voting ended in the (for many surprising) out of the candidates of the Popular Party, the Socialist Party, and of 3 other contenders. „Winner“ was the FPÖ-candidate, second came the candidate of the Green Party. As told, a run-off had to decide. And believe it or not: Mr Green won!!! Wow!!! But: A Green CANNOT be Austria’s President. A No-Go! The voting was contradicted by the FPÖ because of some (minimal) „inconsistencies“ within the scope of our postal voting (proceedings, which were custom practice over many, many years). Quintessence: Austrian Constitutional Court decided to let the run-off-vote be repeated. The same Constitutional Court, which often was brought into ridicule over the past years by……. you guess: the FPÖ, which always stated the office „Bundespräsident“ (as we call him) to be obsolete nowadays. Bizarrely only as long as they got the chance to „get“ it themselves. Oportunists? Populists? Demagogues? So we will have to vote again in October, and all the prognostic symptoms point to a win of…… You guess again! Finally I soon - at 63 - will be able to buy me a gun to protect my life against those criminal people having fled from countries, which fight in wars with all the kinds of weapons WE have sent to them. So that’s the one objection – I really don’t know if right or wrong – to your last program: I think, it always is a very big deal to send weapons to whom and where ever. Was it really Roosevelt’s (or would it be anybody’s in the future) fault not to support Franco’s opponents? Thank you VERY much again for your being AND STAYING on air! Yours hopefully full of hope! Reinhard Sommer Austria Short PS, I read today: „Literature cannot change the world. The anxiety-administrators don’t read books“ (Andrzej Stasiuk). I’m afraid, they aren’t able to listen too!

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is it true you have endored Jill Stein for president?

i have often heard you talk up Bernie on economic update and have never heard you mention Jill. is this intentional?

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Worker Co-ops: Success and failures

On Economic Update, you've been talking about work co-ops a lot using the Mondragon Corp. in Spain as an example. I'm really interested in investigating this subject as a possible way to start a company in my California military industrial complex town which is choked by outside contractors, lack of change, innovation and culture, and Wal Mart. I've heard that Mondragon has been having problems this year, and I was hoping you could address this on EU. My guess is that they went back on co-op principles and tried to fit into the regular capitalist mold. Maybe not. I like to study failures first so that I know possible weak points and how to fix them. Secondly, I asked a friend who is a business psychologist and older leftist what he knew about work co-ops, and he mentioned the ideas of Scanlon. He said he knew of a worker owned factory using his ideas that didn't survive. Yet we have Evergreen and Mondragon that have. I'd like to hear your take on what happened to the places that failed versus the ones that survive. Do the ones that fail simply get greedy, or is it more complicated than that like a lot of things are? -Chris

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Fiat money

A friend of mine insists that the fact that all money is, in essence, loaned into existence by banks and thus creates debt, is at the root of our economic problems, and that what we really need to do is switch over to "fiat money," like the "greenbacks" the US government printed in the Civil War, or the "Continentals" that were our nation's first currency. If you have already talked about this in one of your radio shows (which I only recently became aware of), could you please direct me to the appropriate radio show, and, if you haven't, could you please talk about this issue? Obviously, one drawback to it is that our current government would never implement it, but, beyond that, what are its pros and cons? Thank you!

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