> Labor organization may help transfer wealth from shareholders, suppliers, or consumers to the workers, unless it kills the host companies or causes them to move away.
This is by design. If we can transfer more wealth to workers instead of shareholders, we should. If workers can't receive an appropriate wage from a company, than the business is most likely not viable (see: people complaining their business won't work with a $15/hour minimum wage).
>"Growth is over my friend, at least the growth that would be necessary for wage inflation (ie Japan)."
> I disagree, and it is difficult (if not impossible) to prove which of us is right.
I agree that this will be determined by India, China, and to a lesser extent Africa. I believe these economies are growth-limited now, due to the fundamentals around how their economies are structured.
note: I removed a quote child comment responded to, referenced below.
>" If we can transfer more wealth to workers instead of shareholders, we should."
This is a normative goal, but you are assuming that unions always transfer wealth from shareholders to workers, and I am not convinced of this. Shareholders will refuse to invest if the returns are not attractive, so it is difficult to retain them. It seems more likely that unions will transfer wealth from consumers or suppliers to the union members, which is a much less appealing prospect.
>"Can you explain the rational as to how zero interest rate policies can stoke demand on-par with middle class consumers, versus simply enriching lending institutions? If I'm wrong, I am happy to concede the point."
I'm not convinced that the Federal Reserve has much impact on consumer and corporate interest rates. All central banks believe that international bond markets are relatively free. All central banks also believe that they control their national interest rates. These beliefs are not compatible.
note: the second quote in this post was edited out of the parent
This is by design. If we can transfer more wealth to workers instead of shareholders, we should. If workers can't receive an appropriate wage from a company, than the business is most likely not viable (see: people complaining their business won't work with a $15/hour minimum wage).
>"Growth is over my friend, at least the growth that would be necessary for wage inflation (ie Japan)."
> I disagree, and it is difficult (if not impossible) to prove which of us is right.
I agree that this will be determined by India, China, and to a lesser extent Africa. I believe these economies are growth-limited now, due to the fundamentals around how their economies are structured.
note: I removed a quote child comment responded to, referenced below.