Can we all be as rich as America please?

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In summary, the conversation discusses the idea of whether everyone on Earth could enjoy an affluent western lifestyle or if the affluence of the few depends on the poverty of the many. Some argue that capitalism has worked in America due to its resources, but now that resources are running low, the exploitation of other countries becomes the easiest option. Others mention the role of American companies in dictatorships and hiring workers at low wages. The conversation also explores the myth of hard work always leading to success and the dependence of capitalism on a stratification of wealth. Overall, there is a debate about the true effects of capitalism and its potential for creating equal prosperity for all.
  • #1
N_Quire
Simple question: can everyone on Earth enjoy an affluent western lifestyle or does the affluence of the few depend on the poverty of the many?
 
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  • #2
Originally posted by N_Quire
Simple question: can everyone on Earth enjoy an affluent western lifestyle or does the affluence of the few depend on the poverty of the many?

Hmmm...this speaks to my idea of why capitalism worked in America. It had teh advantages of the industrial revolution combined with more resourses than any other western nation. Now that tose resourses are running low, and we have so many more people, raping the rest of the world is the easiest option.
 
  • #3
My father in law farms coffee in Kenya. I talked to the coffee pickers there. If they spend all day, 8 hours, picking coffee, they get about 50 cents to $1 (and even if you're a superwhizz picker, you will not make more than $3 a day), which doesn't buy very much in Kenya.

Go to Starbucks in America and order a medium cup of regular coffee and you'll pay about $1.50.

So from someone working all day picking lots of beans, you get to the stage of a medium cup of coffee costing more than the picker get's for his day's labor.

In between, a lot of people are making a lot of money (and a few people are making millions). The farmer is not one of them.
 
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  • #4
And, let's not forget, Americans insist on a living wage, which is why American companies set up in dictatorships and hire people at literal slave wages.
 
  • #5
N_Quire -- yes, though it will take time in many countries. South Korea is the sterling example usually cited. Zero natural resources, crappy economy at the beginning of this century, very affluent now.
hire people at literal slave wages
Uh, I don't know about that... literally, slaves don't get paid anything, right? :wink: The question that immediately comes to mind is why would these people choose to work for the American companies, if they had better jobs before?
 
  • #6
Originally posted by N_Quire
Simple question: can everyone on Earth enjoy an affluent western lifestyle or does the affluence of the few depend on the poverty of the many?
Yes. Everyone can enjoy western style prosperity.
 
  • #7
Originally posted by damgo
N_Quire -- yes, though it will take time in many countries. South Korea is the sterling example usually cited. Zero natural resources, crappy economy at the beginning of this century, very affluent now. Uh, I don't know about that... literally, slaves don't get paid anything, right? :wink: The question that immediately comes to mind is why would these people choose to work for the American companies, if they had better jobs before?

Because the companies are in cahoots with the dictators, that's why.
 
  • #8
yes, capitalism does work, however, competition in america has gotten more fierce and this has sorted out those who work hard/have a better opportunity (ie: money for college, etc) vs. those dwelling in american poverty (yes, we do have poverty in america)...

what people all over the world need to remember about america, is that ultimately as an american citizen, you have the greatest power, and that power is to choose...

if you do not have a wealthy supportive family, (in which case a lot of us don't), it is up to you to earn your success...i can say this because my grandfather and great grandmother both migrated from oppressed eastern european countries and made a great life for themselves and the families they started here...
 
  • #9
The myth that hard work ALWAYS leads to success is pretty popular, I see. It is the same myth that has millions of kids shooting hoops in their backyard for teh hopes of being one of 3-4 new players every year who make the big bucks. It is cousin to the hope of winning the lottery. It is still a myth, and anyone who peddles it misses teh bigger picture.
 
  • #10
certainly a negative attitude will not get you forward...
 
  • #11
Not possible. Capitalism relies on a stratification of wealth, relies on there being winners and losers in the game.

Furthermore, our relative wealth (in the US) is heavily dependent upon using far more than an equitable share of the Earth's resources. It stands to reason that if every nation operated in a matter identical to the US, we would very swiftly deplete this planet of every useful resource.

If every single person wants to be wealthy, and works hard to get there, is it possible? No. Because capitalism does not allow every sector of the job market to pay well. What would the purpose of money be if everyone earned 1 million dollars per year, even working at McDonalds? That would cease to be capitalism. And, as there will be low paying jobs, there must be people to fill those jobs, or else the entire house of cards crumbles.

It may be true that a fettered capitalism can raise the standard of living in most poverty stricken countries, but the type of so-called capitalism we are currently exporting to the third world is really a disguised method for further lining the pockets of gigantic global corporations, not lifting the people out of abject poverty.
 
  • #12
Originally posted by Kerrie
certainly a negative attitude will not get you forward...

On the other hand, an overly optimistic one whitewashes the very steep uphillbattle that many people face in trying to just make a living.
 
  • #13
Not possible. Capitalism relies on a stratification of wealth, relies on there being winners and losers in the game.
Hmm, no. It relies on the profit motive, markets, and open trade. In general it will not lead to a flat distribution of income/wealth, but there is nothing to disallow a widespread increase in wealth among all classes -- indeed this is rather typical.
Furthermore, our relative wealth (in the US) is heavily dependent upon using far more than an equitable share of the Earth's resources. It stands to reason that if every nation operated in a matter identical to the US, we would very swiftly deplete this planet of every useful resource.
Resources which the USA either makes, or buys -- there are not many, besides oil, that we are in danger of running out of.

Zero, can you give me a specific example(s) of a dictator in a Third-World country forcing his people out of higher-paying jobs and into laboring for US companies?
 
  • #14
Damgo – Your comments are irrefutable except re: oil.

The worlds proven oil reserves will suffice for 300 years at present rates of consumption. The US has 2/3 of all proven reserves, most of which is in the Colorado mountains. Many other nations have lesser amounts. Extracting the oil from the shale rock is more expensive and more polluting than drilling. Problems have practical solutions.

Regards
 
  • #15
300 years!? I wish, oil is great. But most reputable estimates I've seen put peak production at anywhere from 2015-2050, after which it will enter permanent decline. Usage at around current levels could probably continue until around ~2100 or so.

There is probably a ton more oil out there -- we can manufacture the stuff, in any case -- but oil that costs $100/barrel to get at is pretty much useless. At that price there are plenty of other alternatives.

Also a quick googling puts OPEC having ~75% of proven reserves, with the USA only having 3%. http://www.petroleum.co.uk/education/natural/3.htm [Broken]
 
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  • #16
Originally posted by damgo


Zero, can you give me a specific example(s) of a dictator in a Third-World country forcing his people out of higher-paying jobs and into laboring for US companies?
I'm hunting for the specific articles...here's one on Ivory Coast chocolate:http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=12373 [Broken] ...there are more, and of course those companies pay the local governments for land and water rights.
 
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  • #17
Originally posted by GENIERE
Damgo – Your comments are irrefutable except re: oil.

The worlds proven oil reserves will suffice for 300 years at present rates of consumption. The US has 2/3 of all proven reserves, most of which is in the Colorado mountains. Many other nations have lesser amounts. Extracting the oil from the shale rock is more expensive and more polluting than drilling. Problems have practical solutions.

Regards

Gah! Jaw drops. There goes all your credibility. 300 years? 2/3? Where do you get these figures? Is that 2/3 mostly shale?

--------------------------------------

Any attempt to bring others anywhere near our level of wealth is dependent on using renewable forms of energy -- solar, geothermal, wind. It will depend on using sustainable forms of producing raw materials, and using relatively closed-loop systems. Renewable energy sources only require the consumption of the raw materials (wood, metal, etc) to build the equipment and a small amount for maintenance. We must have a continued supply of resources, such as can be provided through sustainably-managed lumber farms. But, in order for these farms to continue to produce lumber, and for other sources to continue to produce other raw materials, materials that we are no longer using must be put back into the system, rather than thrown in a landfill. Otherwise, those sustainably lumber farms will have no resources to make trees with. All our metal will end up in landfills as we run out of places to mine. With finite resources, that is the only way to continue indefinitely.

I'm not saying that we will soon run out of these resources, but we will eventually, if we do not implement a closed-loop system. If even half the world had even half our (USA's)level of prosperity, resources would disappear at an alarming rate, and mass death would grip the world.

That is the truth. We cannot expect others to consume as much as people in the USA, England, France, or other Western nations do. Without closed loop systems, they cannot be as prosperous without consuming as much.
 
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  • #18
Any attempt to bring others anywhere near our level of wealth is dependent on using renewable forms of energy -- solar, geothermal, wind.
The problem with these -- as with nuclear power -- is that they all require large amounts of capital investment, the main thing that developing countries don't have. In general, coal is still a main source of power for developing countries, right? Anyone know what the coal supply situation is?

I almost mentioned the lumber thing, but I'm not sure if it's really a problem or not -- lumber isn't as critical a resource as it once was, and techniques seem to have much improved. As far as metal, I remember reading someplace that there is enough easily accessible iron, aluminum, and uranium to last us an obscenely long time -- millennia at the very minimum.
 
  • #19
I was wrong, it wasn't 2/3 it was 64%.

A publication of the State of Utah (1980) reports "The potential of oil shale is enormous. While found throughout the world, nearly 62 percent of the world's potentially recoverable oil shale resource are concentrated in the United States...The largest of the U. S. oil shale deposits is found in the 16,500 square-mile Green River formation in northwestern Colorado, northeastern Utah, and southwestern Wyoming. The richest and most easily recoverable deposits are located in the Piceance Creek Basin in western Colorado and the Uinta Basin in eastern Utah...The deposits are estimated to contain 562 billion barrels of recoverable oil. This is more than 64 percent of the world's total proven crude oil reserves."

"The numbers on oil shale resources around the world are nothing short of staggering. Most of the following estimates are drawn from Duncan and Swanson (1965) unless otherwise cited. Oil shale deposits of Late Permian age in southern Brazil have been estimated to contain 800 billion barrels oil equivalent in shale that yields 10 to 25 gallons per ton, and 3.2 trillion barrels in possible extensions. Resources that yield 5 to 10 gallons of oil per ton were estimated to hold 4 trillion barrels of oil equivalent in possible extensions. A 200 square-mile Middle Tertiary lake basin deposit in southwestern Montana has approximately 1000 feet of sediments which have not been appraised in detail but may contain tens of billion barrels of oil potential. Weeks (1960) stated "possible potential resources" of higher grade oil shale in the U. S. are approximately 2 trillion barrels of oil equivalent, and 12 trillion barrels in the world. Duncan and Swanson (1965) estimated a world oil shale resource of 2.1 quadrillion barrels."

Regards

PS - I've omitted parts of the article not supporting my position. SOP. NO?
 
  • #20
I was wrong too. I called my in-laws in Kenya to find out the going rate for a coffee picker who works a full day, it's 25 to 50 US cents a day. It takes about two minutes or less to pick enough coffee for one cup of coffee, which costs $1.50 at Starbucks.
 
  • #21
^^^ Just for context, don't forget that those coffee beans have to be cleaned, collected, packaged, loaded onto trucks, driven to a port, loaded onto a cargo ship, sailed across the Atlantic, unloaded from the ship and back into a truck, driven across the country to some warehouse, from there to some Starbucks, stored there, made into coffee, and finally served up by a Smiling Starbucks Employee in an high-rent, air-conditioned building. All of that gets rather expensive.

I think the problem is that small-scale, hand-picked agriculture of this kind is just not very efficient or lucrative; nor has it ever been. What needs to happen -- in Kenya and elsewhere -- is the creation of more and better-paying jobs, which will help lead to the adoption of more efficient methods of agriculture.

----

Zero, that article has local plantations enslaving children (I agree this is horrible), not foreign multinational corporations. It also has no suggestion of government involvement. Indeed the Cote d'Ivoire just had a people's revolution in 2000, after a military coup in 1999 -- the previous government had been following IMF/WB restructing plans and seeing ~5% growth; since the revolutions things have been much nastier.

If your grand thesis -- that the West is rich because it forcibly exploits cheap labor throughout the developing world by being in cahoots with dictators -- it should be trivially easy to find one or two or three examples, right? The world's a damn big place.
 
  • #22
Originally posted by GENIERE
I was wrong, it wasn't 2/3 it was 64%.

A publication of the State of Utah (1980) reports "The potential of oil shale is enormous. While found throughout the world, nearly 62 percent of the world's potentially recoverable oil shale resource are concentrated in the United States...The largest of the U. S. oil shale deposits is found in the 16,500 square-mile Green River formation in northwestern Colorado, northeastern Utah, and southwestern Wyoming. The richest and most easily recoverable deposits are located in the Piceance Creek Basin in western Colorado and the Uinta Basin in eastern Utah...The deposits are estimated to contain 562 billion barrels of recoverable oil. This is more than 64 percent of the world's total proven crude oil reserves."

Ah, so it is shale. I'm guessing that the "total proven crude oil reserves" refers to the underground lake type of reserve, not shale.

According to http://216.239.57.104/search?q=cach...d's+total+proven+oil+reserves&hl=en&ie=UTF-8, the world had about 1.05 trillion barrels (1,050 billion barrels, 1.05x1012 barrels). 562 billion barrels represent 53%. Your source mentioned 64%, but that was written in 1980 (which quotes a source form 1965?).

"The numbers on oil shale resources around the world are nothing short of staggering. Most of the following estimates are drawn from Duncan and Swanson (1965) unless otherwise cited. Oil shale deposits of Late Permian age in southern Brazil have been estimated to contain 800 billion barrels oil equivalent in shale that yields 10 to 25 gallons per ton, and 3.2 trillion barrels in possible extensions.

That is a lot, if we can feasably get that out of the ground.

Resources that yield 5 to 10 gallons of oil per ton were estimated to hold 4 trillion barrels of oil equivalent in possible extensions.

5 to 10 gallons per ton...that doesn't seem like a lot. It seems to me that it would be cheaper to buy photovoltaic systems at today's prices than it would be to mine that. How many gallons of total material are in a ton? And how much destruction of habitat would be necessary? It doesn't seem worth it to me to get that out of the ground.

Thanks for providing your sources, Geniere.
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Originally posted by damgo
The problem with these -- as with nuclear power -- is that they all require large amounts of capital investment, the main thing that developing countries don't have. In general, coal is still a main source of power for developing countries, right? Anyone know what the coal supply situation is?

Yes, that is a problem. But if most of the world is to have affluence anywhere near our own, it will be necessary. In the United States, at least, it is cheaper than paying for electricity from the power company, if you stick with it for a decade or so (I'm not sure of the exact payback period). But, of course, you have to have that money to spend in the first place. Sounds like a good reason for loans. (Of course, interest would drive up the payback period).

I almost mentioned the lumber thing, but I'm not sure if it's really a problem or not -- lumber isn't as critical a resource as it once was, and techniques seem to have much improved.

Maybe not, but we do use if for a lot of things...and we need forest in existence for biological reasons. Breathing oxygen is always fun :smile:.

As far as metal, I remember reading someplace that there is enough easily accessible iron, aluminum, and uranium to last us an obscenely long time -- millennia at the very minimum.

Hmm, Apparently so. But, once again, I'm not talking about today's usage rates, but if most of the world has a level of affluence comparable to our own. I have read that recycling generally uses much less energy than mining, so that helps in the energy department.

If you're looking at the really long term, then you might want to give some thought about metal supplies. In 20,000 years (if we're still around), will we still have a steady, plentiful supply?
 
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  • #23
Originally posted by damgo
Hmm, no. It relies on the profit motive, markets, and open trade. In general it will not lead to a flat distribution of income/wealth, but there is nothing to disallow a widespread increase in wealth among all classes -- indeed this is rather typical.
The idea that capitalism requires a large number of poor is a common misconception, easily refuted by actual income statistics. http://www.census.gov/hhes/income/histinc/histinctb.html [Broken] for the USA show that in fact *ALL* segments of the population are increasing their incomes faster than inflation. Pick a table. Any table. Any way you slice the statistics, EVERYONE in the US (including the poor) is getting richer.

example: in 1967, the bottom fifth of households in the US had an average income of $7,303. In 2001, $10,136. An increase of 38%. These numbers are inflation adjusted.
 
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  • #24
Well when you think about it, the reason for some countries is the form of government. Communists and Socialists can't exactly do that because there is no room for advancing. You always have to stay in one postition and can't make your own decisions. Where as in america you are free to start your own business if you wish.
 
  • #25
Well when you think about it, the reason for some countries is the form of government. Communists and Socialists can't exactly do that because there is no room for advancing. You always have to stay in one postition and can't make your own decisions. Where as in america you are free to start your own business if you wish.

Guevara wanted to have the Cuban government allow small business so people can expand and the country could prosper. Guevara knew that a Soviet-style economy couldn't work in order to prosper the country. Inherently, Guevara was not against capitalism's free choice, but against capitalism's exploitation of workers.

However, Guevara's suggestion went unheard either due to a bad management of the Cuban economy or the adamant nature of the leaders to refuse the Western style economy.
 

1. Can wealth be evenly distributed among all countries to make everyone as rich as America?

No, it is not possible for wealth to be evenly distributed among all countries. There are various factors such as natural resources, political stability, and economic systems that contribute to a country's wealth. Additionally, wealth distribution is a complex issue that involves various stakeholders and cannot be easily solved by simply redistributing wealth.

2. Is America's wealth sustainable and can it be replicated in other countries?

America's wealth is a result of a combination of factors such as a large population, a strong economy, and historical events. While some aspects of this wealth may be sustainable, it is not realistic to expect other countries to replicate America's success. Each country has its own unique challenges and resources that contribute to its level of wealth.

3. Is it possible for developing countries to become as wealthy as America?

Yes, it is possible for developing countries to become as wealthy as America, but it requires significant efforts and changes in various areas such as education, infrastructure, and economic policies. It also depends on the country's specific circumstances and resources. Additionally, wealth is not the only measure of a country's success and development.

4. Can a country's wealth be solely determined by its citizens?

No, a country's wealth is influenced by many factors such as government policies, international trade, and global economic conditions. While citizens play a significant role in a country's economy, they are not the sole determinant of its wealth. Other external factors also play a crucial role in a country's economic success.

5. Can education and hard work alone lead to a country's wealth?

While education and hard work are important factors that contribute to a country's wealth, they are not the only determining factors. A country's wealth is influenced by various economic, political, and social factors. Additionally, access to education and opportunities for hard work may not be equal in all countries, making it difficult for individuals to achieve wealth solely through these means.

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