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Why is FAIR TRADE better than FREE TRADE?

Choose between the following:

  • FREE TRADE is better than FAIR TRADE.

    Votes: 3 15.0%
  • FAIR TRADE is better than FREE TRADE.

    Votes: 17 85.0%

  • Total voters
    20
You repeat things that are either not relevant or shown to be wrong. I could repeat and provide more information but I suspect that it would make no difference to your beliefs.

You defend the excess wealth and power of the super rich while seeking to keep workers down. You defend a situation that is unsustainable in the long term.

You still aren't rebutting anything.

That's not an argument. It's nothing more than offering your opinion.
 
You repeat things that are either not relevant or shown to be wrong. I could repeat and provide more information but I suspect that it would make no difference to your beliefs.

You defend the excess wealth and power of the super rich while seeking to keep workers down. You defend a situation that is unsustainable in the long term.

You still aren't rebutting anything.
To be fair, neither are you.
 
You repeat things that are either not relevant or shown to be wrong. I could repeat and provide more information but I suspect that it would make no difference to your beliefs.

You defend the excess wealth and power of the super rich while seeking to keep workers down. You defend a situation that is unsustainable in the long term.

You still aren't rebutting anything.
To be fair, neither are you.

How so? "Neither are you" implies that I am in the same boat. Maybe an unintended implication? Given that I'm basically pointing out the power imbalance between the individual workers and management. What is there to rebutt? The imbalance is a reality. Exploitation of workers is a reality. The flow of wealth to the big end of town is a reality.
 
Workers, like suppliers, service providers, etc, need to be paid. If suppliers and providers do not get paid for their goods and services, they can withhold supply or take a company to court.

Individual workers offer a service to a company, their skill, time and labour, for which payment is necessary, just like anything else.

The problem being, too repeat yet again, individual workers do not have the clout of companies that supply goods and services, they cannot set their price of labour unless they join together and engage with collective bargaining, ie, they form a company of their own.

Once again you're using ideology as an attempt to rebut facts. It doesn't work.

If the workers had better options they wouldn't have taken the sweatshop jobs. If the workers had better options the sweatshop would never have opened in the first place.

Your bible-thumping won't change the facts.
 
Workers, like suppliers, service providers, etc, need to be paid. If suppliers and providers do not get paid for their goods and services, they can withhold supply or take a company to court.

Individual workers offer a service to a company, their skill, time and labour, for which payment is necessary, just like anything else.

The problem being, too repeat yet again, individual workers do not have the clout of companies that supply goods and services, they cannot set their price of labour unless they join together and engage with collective bargaining, ie, they form a company of their own.

Once again you're using ideology as an attempt to rebut facts. It doesn't work.

If the workers had better options they wouldn't have taken the sweatshop jobs. If the workers had better options the sweatshop would never have opened in the first place.

Your bible-thumping won't change the facts.

You're literally defending wage slavery. The very definition of wage slavery, and here you are defending it. Because it's "someone's best option".

Unions are the response. Fair trade is the other response: not trading with countries whose workers aren't getting paid, and paying more for the privilege of seeing work ethically compensated.

It is fucking disgusting that the people who work in sweatshops can't afford to even have the things they make day in and day out.
 
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Workers, like suppliers, service providers, etc, need to be paid. If suppliers and providers do not get paid for their goods and services, they can withhold supply or take a company to court.

Individual workers offer a service to a company, their skill, time and labour, for which payment is necessary, just like anything else.

The problem being, too repeat yet again, individual workers do not have the clout of companies that supply goods and services, they cannot set their price of labour unless they join together and engage with collective bargaining, ie, they form a company of their own.

Once again you're using ideology as an attempt to rebut facts. It doesn't work.

If the workers had better options they wouldn't have taken the sweatshop jobs. If the workers had better options the sweatshop would never have opened in the first place.

Your bible-thumping won't change the facts.

You have no facts that need rebutting. It is you who continues to defend right wing ideology. The facts are that - as with everyone else - workers need to be paid for their services and the wealth they help to generate, unless you are supporting slavery?

The facts are that individual workers are easy to exploit, that employers are known to exploit workers....examples have been given but ignored or dismissed.

The facts are that workers have been losing their market share of profit and wealth, which has been freely flowing to the big end of town, that the divide has grown significantly in the last four decades.

All of this has been supported by stats, figures and examples. For you, an inconvenient truth.
 
Why punish employers for doing the right thing? like cutting (labor) cost?

Answer: Because they're employers, who have to be scapegoated (according to "fair trade" doctrine)


No one has denied there are three pieces to the pie. You continue to deny that the upper management/ceo piece of the pie is getting larger while the worker piece of the pie is getting smaller. And everytime this is pointed out to you you bring up your three pieces BS again.

The data is looking at worker share and pretending the rest goes to the owners--de facto ignoring the third piece of the pie.

The fact is that employers seek to keep running costs down.

Which is what they should do. Whereas "fair trade" tries to impose higher costs, like wage levels higher than that necessary to attract the needed workers. You're showing how "fair trade" is worse than "free trade" because it drives costs up higher than necessary = higher prices = higher cost of living for all.


It is not in their interest to increase wage rates for any reason other than to attract and retain key staff.

Yes, to pay the minimum increases required to keep the operation running at maximum performance level, and no higher labor cost than this amount. E.g., to attract or retain the highest-performing producers/wage-earners, at only the level needed for this, meaning lower levels for those who are the easiest to replace, e.g., those higher-paid who can more easily be replaced by someone or something which could do the same function at lower cost.


It's not in the interest of a business to maintain market value incomes for workers and . . .

No, IT IS IN THEIR INTEREST to pay market value. Your stats have shown that they have let wages stagnate ONLY for those of lower market value, which might be a large % of the workforce, as those wage-earners' market value has declined, as they have become less necessary and more replaceable. So business has maintained the market value for workers, meaning in some cases (many/most cases perhaps) even reducing the wage level as their market value has decreased. So, "to maintain market value" means in some cases reducing the wage (as the worker value decreases) as well as increasing it as the worker value increases (perhaps for a small % of the workers in some cases).

. . . and individual workers are most likely not in a position to ask for pay rises.

There are millions (billions) of individual producers "not in a position to ask for" higher compensation (from their employers or from their customers or whoever pays them) because they're already paid their market value, even though probably 100% of all producers of any kind believe they're worth more than they're paid. Bummer!


CEO and executive salaries, of course, are a different matter.

Maybe. This might be a problem in some cases. And there are some rich celebrities, entertainers, pro athletes, etc. who are overpaid somehow. Maybe we can solve this if we first get cured of our obsession on employers as a class to hate and scapegoat.


A double standard if ever there was one.

"double standard" = illogical. So let's find a LOGICAL solution for a change.

Some kind of higher tax on the super-rich is the way to fix it, not scapegoating all employers. Like the sweatshop owner, e.g., many of whom are struggling to survive.

A logical solution (in contrast to a "double standard") is one which targets the problem and fixes that, not one which eliminates some viable jobs, reduces needed production, and punishes all of society by driving up the cost of living for everyone.
 
Answer: Because they're employers, who have to be scapegoated (according to "fair trade" doctrine)


The fact is that employers seek to keep running costs down.

Which is what they should do. Whereas "fair trade" tries to impose higher costs, like wage levels higher than that necessary to attract the needed workers. You're showing how "fair trade" is worse than "free trade" because it drives costs up higher than necessary = higher prices = higher cost of living for all.


It is not in their interest to increase wage rates for any reason other than to attract and retain key staff.

Yes, to pay the minimum increases required to keep the operation running at maximum performance level, and no higher labor cost than this amount. E.g., to attract or retain the highest-performing producers/wage-earners, at only the level needed for this, meaning lower levels for those who are the easiest to replace, e.g., those higher-paid who can more easily be replaced by someone or something which could do the same function at lower cost.


It's not in the interest of a business to maintain market value incomes for workers and . . .

No, IT IS IN THEIR INTEREST to pay market value. Your stats have shown that they have let wages stagnate ONLY for those of lower market value, which might be a large % of the workforce, as those wage-earners' market value has declined, as they have become less necessary and more replaceable. So business has maintained the market value for workers, meaning in some cases (many/most cases perhaps) even reducing the wage level as their market value has decreased. So, "to maintain market value" means in some cases reducing the wage (as the worker value decreases) as well as increasing it as the worker value increases (perhaps for a small % of the workers in some cases).

. . . and individual workers are most likely not in a position to ask for pay rises.

There are millions (billions) of individual producers "not in a position to ask for" higher compensation (from their employers or from their customers or whoever pays them) because they're already paid their market value, even though probably 100% of all producers of any kind believe they're worth more than they're paid. Bummer!


CEO and executive salaries, of course, are a different matter.

Maybe. This might be a problem in some cases. And there are some rich celebrities, entertainers, pro athletes, etc. who are overpaid somehow. Maybe we can solve this if we first get cured of our obsession on employers as a class to hate and scapegoat.


A double standard if ever there was one.

"double standard" = illogical. So let's find a LOGICAL solution for a change.

Some kind of higher tax on the super-rich is the way to fix it, not scapegoating all employers. Like the sweatshop owner, e.g., many of whom are struggling to survive.

A logical solution (in contrast to a "double standard") is one which targets the problem and fixes that, not one which eliminates some viable jobs, reduces needed production, and punishes all of society by driving up the cost of living for everyone.

You are not saying anything new. Just offering the same irrelevant excuses in defence of the exploitation of workers. A functional business has to pay a fair price for the goods and services it receives, including wages.

A business should not under pay its employees just because it can. Wages, as with suppliers and service providers, needs to be paid at market value so that everyone does well, including the economy as a whole
 
Workers, like suppliers, service providers, etc, need to be paid. If suppliers and providers do not get paid for their goods and services, they can withhold supply or take a company to court.

Individual workers offer a service to a company, their skill, time and labour, for which payment is necessary, just like anything else.

The problem being, too repeat yet again, individual workers do not have the clout of companies that supply goods and services, they cannot set their price of labour unless they join together and engage with collective bargaining, ie, they form a company of their own.

Once again you're using ideology as an attempt to rebut facts. It doesn't work.

If the workers had better options they wouldn't have taken the sweatshop jobs. If the workers had better options the sweatshop would never have opened in the first place.

Your bible-thumping won't change the facts.

You're literally defending wage slavery. The very definition of wage slavery, and here you are defending it. Because it's "someone's best option".

Unions are the response. Fair trade is the other response: not trading with countries whose workers aren't getting paid, and paying more for the privilege of seeing work ethically compensated.

It is fucking disgusting that the people who work in sweatshops can't afford to even have the things they make day in and day out.

You're continuing to preach rather than address the facts.

Unions "worked" for a while when there was no real competition for US products.
 
You have no facts that need rebutting. It is you who continues to defend right wing ideology. The facts are that - as with everyone else - workers need to be paid for their services and the wealth they help to generate, unless you are supporting slavery?

You're still trying to use ideology as a rebuttal. It's not.
 
You have no facts that need rebutting. It is you who continues to defend right wing ideology. The facts are that - as with everyone else - workers need to be paid for their services and the wealth they help to generate, unless you are supporting slavery?

You're still trying to use ideology as a rebuttal. It's not.

I'd say that it is you who is pushing right wing ideology. Rather than a fair go for all, defending exploitation of productive workers and inequality as a matter of principle.
 
You have no facts that need rebutting. It is you who continues to defend right wing ideology. The facts are that - as with everyone else - workers need to be paid for their services and the wealth they help to generate, unless you are supporting slavery?

You're still trying to use ideology as a rebuttal. It's not.

I'd say that it is you who is pushing right wing ideology. Rather than a fair go for all, defending exploitation of productive workers and inequality as a matter of principle.

You still haven't explained where the good jobs come from when you throw the people out of work.
 
I'd say that it is you who is pushing right wing ideology. Rather than a fair go for all, defending exploitation of productive workers and inequality as a matter of principle.

You still haven't explained where the good jobs come from when you throw the people out of work.

Throwing people out of work is your claim. Being your claim, you need to support the assertion that people are thrown out of work if they are paid a decent wage.
 
I'd say that it is you who is pushing right wing ideology. Rather than a fair go for all, defending exploitation of productive workers and inequality as a matter of principle.

You still haven't explained where the good jobs come from when you throw the people out of work.

Throwing people out of work is your claim. Being your claim, you need to support the assertion that people are thrown out of work if they are paid a decent wage.

And have you stopped beating your wife?

You're assuming they'll actually be paid the wage you envision rather than the job disappearing.
 
Throwing people out of work is your claim. Being your claim, you need to support the assertion that people are thrown out of work if they are paid a decent wage.

And have you stopped beating your wife?

You're assuming they'll actually be paid the wage you envision rather than the job disappearing.

You are the one claiming that jobs will disappear if workers are paid a decent wage. You haven't provided evidence for your claim. Workers were paid better before decades of wage stagnation and rising prices set in....and the unemployment rate was not a factor.
 
It's supply-and-demand, not employer-bashing Left-Wing outbursts, which determines who is underpaid.

The fact is that employers seek to keep running costs down. It is not in their interest to increase wage rates for any reason other than to attract and retain key staff.

It's not in the interest of a business to maintain market value incomes for workers and individual workers are most likely not in a position to ask for pay rises. CEO and executive salaries, of course, are a different matter. A double standard if ever there was one.

That's not a rebuttal. The facts are all your data ignores the third piece of pie and is thus irrelevant.

It is through their labour and input, time and effort that employees help create the very pie that they fail to get their market share of.

Who's the "they" here? Are you insisting that EVERY SINGLE low-paid worker in the world, all 1.5 billion of them (whatever the number is) -- everyone of them, without exception, is paid LESS than their proper market share? Let's say it's $10/hour -- Do you insist that every single last one of these workers is paid LESS than their proper market share? without exception?

Or are you willing to admit that some of them really are being paid what they deserve, based on their true market value, or their true contribution, or the true need for them?

Why must you insist on sloshing ALL workers -- or all low-paid workers -- into the same category, insisting that every last one of them is underpaid, paid lower than their real market value? Isn't it possible that at least some of them really are so low in value, based on their actual contribution, or on the actual need for them, and replaceability (anyone can do that job and there are a thousand job-seekers waiting in the wings to take that job) -- based on these real factors which determine value, isn't it possible that there are a few $10/hour workers somewhere in the world who really are not worth any more than this?

Do you dogmatically insist that this is not so, and that every single last one of these workers, throughout the world, is being gyped and deserves a higher wage, and that if the state would FORCE every employer to increase their wage to $15/hour, this would not cause ANY unemployment, or any of these workers to lose their job? That seems to be your idiotic nutcase wacked-out retarded mentality, based on your Crybaby Economics.


They, as employees, are providing the goods and services, manufacturing, construction, repair, serving customers, etc, etc, which is economic activity.

Probably all of them are providing this, but how do you know that every single last one of them is being paid LESS than the value of what they are providing? How can you be so sure that there is not a single one (of those paid $10 or less) who actually is being paid what s/he is worth, based on the particular contribution they're making, or the need for them in that job? How can you slosh ALL these workers into one group and condemn all the employers of them -- every single employer -- as a thief who is robbing that worker, paying less than the real value of the labor? Isn't it possible that a few hundred or a few thousand or a few million of these workers are really being paid their true value? the value of what they produce?

If you have the brain power to understand this, then must you not recognize the need for a principle which distinguishes those workers who are truly underpaid from those who are truly being paid their real value? How do you determine the difference? If you refuse to distinguish them, then you are making the broad judgment that every single low-paid worker in the world is being gyped and must get an increase of $5/hour (or some such figure), and yet still there will be not one job loss, not one layoff, not any work terminated as a result. How can you be so brain-dead?



The managers, decision-makers, investors --
ALL are "workers" needed to get the stuff produced.

Planning doesn't get the iron ore out of the ground, sitting in boardrooms doesn't build houses, white goods, furniture, etc, etc....

Planning is necessary for all that getting done. None of that work gets done without someone making the decisions, the investment, the calculation how much cost to pay and when to eliminate something too costly, which workers to hire and where to put them, what contractor to hire, etc. -- all those decisions are part of the work needed in order to get any of that done. The "work" is anything anyone has to do in order for the production to take place to generate the desired result.

It is hallucination to believe that no planners are needed and that everything gets done by those who swing the shovels and hammers.
 
Too tiring to have to explain things again, only to get a response that does not relate to what was said. Rinse and repeat. :(

Except you keep preaching rather than explaining.

Fair is good but what's most important is that it actually works--and you ignore the fact your approach doesn't magically create the good jobs you say people deserve. We are addressing reality, not your utopia.
 
Too tiring to have to explain things again, only to get a response that does not relate to what was said. Rinse and repeat. :(

Except you keep preaching rather than explaining.

Fair is good but what's most important is that it actually works--and you ignore the fact your approach doesn't magically create the good jobs you say people deserve. We are addressing reality, not your utopia.

Workers being paid a fair and reasonable wage in return for their time, skill, labour and wealth creation is a utopian idea?
 
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