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we need unions
without unions there will be no strong middle class, http://www.unionworld.us
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we need unions
Certain combinations of flavors have an amazing synergy. One of my favorites is
to dissolve a tiny piece of dark chocolate in your mouth and after your taste buds are saturated with the flavor, take a sip of good single-malt Scotch. It's WONDERFUL! |
we need unions
On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT),
wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class, http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) |
we need unions
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we need unions
On Jul 25, 8:12 pm, Wes wrote:
wrote: Yes, unions are very important. Expecally in long runs of piping with elbows. An old man I knew called them the plumber's friend |
we need unions
On Jul 26, 10:55 am, Bruce in Bangkok
wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. |
we need unions
On Jul 26, 3:43 pm, Gunner wrote:
On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 21:02:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 10:55 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. The largest middle class in the world..is in India. By several orders of magnitude Yes, I know that - the same for China, Indonesia, and a few others - they could buy and sell us all out of petty cash, so numerous are they. (And if China stops propping up the US, your well and truly stuffed - its unlikely, they are holding so many USD that would turn in Pesos if they did - a bad deal for both partys. Thank heavens their pragmatic and not run by the Wingers in their government)) BUT - are they 1%, 20 % = what? - never mind the numbers, (millions?) - do they have a middle class large enough to control the government to have at least the semblance of self determination, or is it the traditional 5% who control 95% of the wealth who still run things? Pointless, but I persist, in between pruning my roses.... Andrew VK3BFA. |
we need unions
On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 21:02:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote:
On Jul 26, 10:55 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. Nope. That wasn't what the guy said. Read it. I didn't say or imply that there is as many as in the West, Just that there is a middle class and no, or government, controlled unions. By the way, your last comment about the excesses of capitalism I assume refers to the low salaries in the developing countries vis-a-vis the high salaries in the West. The argument is spurious as the wages paid in S.E.A., when compared with the cost of living is probably roughly comparable, on a percentage basis, with the West. Note that I am not including China as I have no direct personal knowledge of the country. In fact the more factories that open the larger the "middle class" becomes as the problem is not low salaries, it is lack of jobs, which a union cannot solve. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) |
we need unions
On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 23:53:32 -0700 (PDT), wrote:
On Jul 26, 3:43 pm, Gunner wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 21:02:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 10:55 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. The largest middle class in the world..is in India. By several orders of magnitude Yes, I know that - the same for China, Indonesia, and a few others - they could buy and sell us all out of petty cash, so numerous are they. (And if China stops propping up the US, your well and truly stuffed - its unlikely, they are holding so many USD that would turn in Pesos if they did - a bad deal for both partys. Thank heavens their pragmatic and not run by the Wingers in their government)) BUT - are they 1%, 20 % = what? - never mind the numbers, (millions?) - do they have a middle class large enough to control the government to have at least the semblance of self determination, or is it the traditional 5% who control 95% of the wealth who still run things? Pointless, but I persist, in between pruning my roses.... Andrew VK3BFA. In 1992 the military government led by General Suchinda fell as a result of street demonstrations led by Chamlong, a retired general and ex governor of Bangkok. If you were watching television you would have seen the crowds of people in the street wearing white shirts, dark trousers and shoes. These were the middle class and their protests, and the responding actions of the Army were the cause of the coup collapsing. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) |
we need unions
On Jul 26, 7:23 pm, Bruce in Bangkok
wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 23:53:32 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 3:43 pm, Gunner wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 21:02:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 10:55 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. The largest middle class in the world..is in India. By several orders of magnitude Yes, I know that - the same for China, Indonesia, and a few others - they could buy and sell us all out of petty cash, so numerous are they. (And if China stops propping up the US, your well and truly stuffed - its unlikely, they are holding so many USD that would turn in Pesos if they did - a bad deal for both partys. Thank heavens their pragmatic and not run by the Wingers in their government)) BUT - are they 1%, 20 % = what? - never mind the numbers, (millions?) - do they have a middle class large enough to control the government to have at least the semblance of self determination, or is it the traditional 5% who control 95% of the wealth who still run things? Pointless, but I persist, in between pruning my roses.... Andrew VK3BFA. In 1992 the military government led by General Suchinda fell as a result of street demonstrations led by Chamlong, a retired general and ex governor of Bangkok. If you were watching television you would have seen the crowds of people in the street wearing white shirts, dark trousers and shoes. These were the middle class and their protests, and the responding actions of the Army were the cause of the coup collapsing. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) And all things are for the best in the best of all possible worlds... Andrew VK3BFA. |
we need unions
On Jul 26, 7:23 pm, Bruce in Bangkok
wrote: If you were watching television you would have seen the crowds of people in the street wearing white shirts, dark trousers and shoes. These were the middle class and their protests, and the responding actions of the Army were the cause of the coup collapsing. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) Actually, thats total crap, - the regime changed because the king supported change and told the existing lot to bugger off. Andrew VK3BFA. |
we need unions
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we need unions
On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 02:54:36 -0700 (PDT), wrote:
On Jul 26, 7:23 pm, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 23:53:32 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 3:43 pm, Gunner wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 21:02:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 10:55 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. The largest middle class in the world..is in India. By several orders of magnitude Yes, I know that - the same for China, Indonesia, and a few others - they could buy and sell us all out of petty cash, so numerous are they. (And if China stops propping up the US, your well and truly stuffed - its unlikely, they are holding so many USD that would turn in Pesos if they did - a bad deal for both partys. Thank heavens their pragmatic and not run by the Wingers in their government)) BUT - are they 1%, 20 % = what? - never mind the numbers, (millions?) - do they have a middle class large enough to control the government to have at least the semblance of self determination, or is it the traditional 5% who control 95% of the wealth who still run things? Pointless, but I persist, in between pruning my roses.... Andrew VK3BFA. In 1992 the military government led by General Suchinda fell as a result of street demonstrations led by Chamlong, a retired general and ex governor of Bangkok. If you were watching television you would have seen the crowds of people in the street wearing white shirts, dark trousers and shoes. These were the middle class and their protests, and the responding actions of the Army were the cause of the coup collapsing. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) And all things are for the best in the best of all possible worlds... Andrew VK3BFA. Nobody has said anything about "the best of best worlds". All that has been said is that there is a viable middle class in Asia and some examples. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) |
we need unions
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we need unions
On Jul 26, 9:04 pm, Bruce in Bangkok
wrote: On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 02:58:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 7:23 pm, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: If you were watching television you would have seen the crowds of people in the street wearing white shirts, dark trousers and shoes. These were the middle class and their protests, and the responding actions of the Army were the cause of the coup collapsing. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) Actually, thats total crap, - the regime changed because the king supported change and told the existing lot to bugger off. Andrew VK3BFA. You may say it is total crap but I was in Bangkok and saw what was happening while you were, where? And, got your information from? The ABC (thats the Australian Broadcasting Commission), SBS, BBC World service, etc.) - yes, there are real reporters out there, not just CNN and Murdochs empire. We take some interest in the world around us, can even identify countries on the map. True that ultimately the King did intervene...after the army had attacked the protesters and shot a number and entered the Royal Hotel and attacking both Thais and foreigners there. With your call sign you should have seen that as the most provoking scenes were shot by BBC cameramen. . Why wasnt CNN there? - not enough blood? - and I am not disputing the FACTS of the matter, just your jaundiced opinion. As neither the army nor the protesters were prepared to back down the King took it upon himself to resolve matters by calling both Suchinda and Chamlong to the palace and admonished them which was enough to cause the coup to collapse, Yep, thats what happened. which without the intervention of the middle class protesters would not have happened. You want to quote a reference to that, or do I take your word for it? Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) Yep, I repeat -total crap - if you were there, were you getting your news off CNN - given the obvious knowledge and insight of the culture you live in, you would have to be working for one of the American intelligence agencies - either that, or sequestered in an American base somewhere, safe from the outside world. Andrew VK3BFA. |
we need unions
On Jul 26, 9:06 pm, Bruce in Bangkok
wrote: On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 02:54:36 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 7:23 pm, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 23:53:32 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 3:43 pm, Gunner wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 21:02:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 10:55 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. The largest middle class in the world..is in India. By several orders of magnitude Yes, I know that - the same for China, Indonesia, and a few others - they could buy and sell us all out of petty cash, so numerous are they. (And if China stops propping up the US, your well and truly stuffed - its unlikely, they are holding so many USD that would turn in Pesos if they did - a bad deal for both partys. Thank heavens their pragmatic and not run by the Wingers in their government)) BUT - are they 1%, 20 % = what? - never mind the numbers, (millions?) - do they have a middle class large enough to control the government to have at least the semblance of self determination, or is it the traditional 5% who control 95% of the wealth who still run things? Pointless, but I persist, in between pruning my roses.... Andrew VK3BFA. In 1992 the military government led by General Suchinda fell as a result of street demonstrations led by Chamlong, a retired general and ex governor of Bangkok. If you were watching television you would have seen the crowds of people in the street wearing white shirts, dark trousers and shoes. These were the middle class and their protests, and the responding actions of the Army were the cause of the coup collapsing. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) And all things are for the best in the best of all possible worlds... Andrew VK3BFA. Nobody has said anything about "the best of best worlds". All that has been said is that there is a viable middle class in Asia and some examples. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) And all I asked was what percentage of the population would be described as middle class -its axiomatic that a large, educated middle class is the best protection against tyranny and dictatorship. If it hasnt reached critical mass, then you have the situation of, say Thailand where ".. the army had attacked the protesters and shot a number and entered the Royal Hotel and attacking both Thais and foreigners there......" Sorry Bruce - I forgot you were American , didn't explain myself simply enough. Andrew VK3BFA. |
we need unions
On Jul 25, 8:55 pm, Bruce in Bangkok
wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) yeah but there is also some form of fascism there, what are your thoughts of unions being associated with being socialist? http://www.unionworld.us |
we need unions
On Jul 25, 9:12 pm, Wes wrote:
wrote: Yes, unions are very important. Expecally in long runs of piping with elbows. unions dont use elbows , they bend them :) using prefab material is a DISGRACE! |
we need unions
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we need unions
On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 04:51:42 -0700 (PDT),
wrote: On Jul 25, 8:55 pm, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) yeah but there is also some form of fascism there, what are your thoughts of unions being associated with being socialist? http://www.unionworld.us Sure, in Singapore, who's leader Lee Kwan Yu was a rabid socialist in his younger days and as soon he gained power became a dictator, or at least as much of one as Soeharto, in Indonesia. The Singapore Government formed a union to control the workers. It exists today and in fact most of the grocery stores in Singapore are run by the union. Thirty years ago when Singapore was actively beating the bushes to entice foreign companies to locate in Singapore they used to guarantee "no labour problems". In Thailand they just buy the union officials. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) |
we need unions
"Gunner" wrote in message ... On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 21:02:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 10:55 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. The largest middle class in the world..is in India. By several orders of magnitude From _Business Week_, one year ago: "The next two groups-seekers, earning between 200,000 and 500,000 rupees ($4,376- $10,941), and strivers, with incomes of between 500,000 and 1 million rupees ($10,941-$21,882)-will become India's huge new middle class. While their incomes would place them below the poverty line in the United States, things are much cheaper in India. When the local cost of living is taken into account, the income of the seekers and strivers looks more like $23,000 to $118,000, which is middle class by most developed-country standards. Seekers range from young college graduates to mid-level government officials, traders and business people... "...The middle class currently numbers some 50 million people, but by 2025 will have expanded dramatically to 583 million people-some 41 percent of the population. These households will see their incomes balloon to 51.5 trillion rupees ($1.1 billion)-11 times the level of today and 58 percent of total Indian income." So India's middle class is growing rapidly, but it is still about half the size of the US middle class. Definitions of middle class vary all over the place but the median definition puts America's middle class at around 45% of households -- well over 100 million people. -- Ed Huntress |
we need unions
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we need unions
"Bruce in Bangkok" wrote in message ... On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 02:54:36 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 7:23 pm, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 23:53:32 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 3:43 pm, Gunner wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 21:02:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 10:55 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. The largest middle class in the world..is in India. By several orders of magnitude Yes, I know that - the same for China, Indonesia, and a few others - they could buy and sell us all out of petty cash, so numerous are they. (And if China stops propping up the US, your well and truly stuffed - its unlikely, they are holding so many USD that would turn in Pesos if they did - a bad deal for both partys. Thank heavens their pragmatic and not run by the Wingers in their government)) BUT - are they 1%, 20 % = what? - never mind the numbers, (millions?) - do they have a middle class large enough to control the government to have at least the semblance of self determination, or is it the traditional 5% who control 95% of the wealth who still run things? Pointless, but I persist, in between pruning my roses.... Andrew VK3BFA. In 1992 the military government led by General Suchinda fell as a result of street demonstrations led by Chamlong, a retired general and ex governor of Bangkok. If you were watching television you would have seen the crowds of people in the street wearing white shirts, dark trousers and shoes. These were the middle class and their protests, and the responding actions of the Army were the cause of the coup collapsing. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) And all things are for the best in the best of all possible worlds... Andrew VK3BFA. Nobody has said anything about "the best of best worlds". All that has been said is that there is a viable middle class in Asia and some examples. As I pointed out in the example to Gunner, it's actually quite small compared to the middle class in western developed countries, and calling them "middle class" requires looking at it from the point of view of purchasing-power parity (PPP), not their status in the world economy. There's an argument for looking at it either way. Considering the way we define "middle class," which generally is by lifestyle, rather than by comparative income, the case for PPP is a strong one. That puts India's middle class at around 50 million -- 1/2 that of the US, and a MUCH smaller percentage of their population. By any definition, most people in India still live in poverty. Other Asian countries vary in that regard, but, overall, the Asian middle class is tiny as a percentage of the total population. -- Ed Huntress |
we need unions
wrote in message ... On Jul 26, 9:06 pm, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 02:54:36 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 7:23 pm, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 23:53:32 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 3:43 pm, Gunner wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 21:02:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 10:55 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. The largest middle class in the world..is in India. By several orders of magnitude Yes, I know that - the same for China, Indonesia, and a few others - they could buy and sell us all out of petty cash, so numerous are they. (And if China stops propping up the US, your well and truly stuffed - its unlikely, they are holding so many USD that would turn in Pesos if they did - a bad deal for both partys. Thank heavens their pragmatic and not run by the Wingers in their government)) BUT - are they 1%, 20 % = what? - never mind the numbers, (millions?) - do they have a middle class large enough to control the government to have at least the semblance of self determination, or is it the traditional 5% who control 95% of the wealth who still run things? Pointless, but I persist, in between pruning my roses.... Andrew VK3BFA. In 1992 the military government led by General Suchinda fell as a result of street demonstrations led by Chamlong, a retired general and ex governor of Bangkok. If you were watching television you would have seen the crowds of people in the street wearing white shirts, dark trousers and shoes. These were the middle class and their protests, and the responding actions of the Army were the cause of the coup collapsing. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) And all things are for the best in the best of all possible worlds... Andrew VK3BFA. Nobody has said anything about "the best of best worlds". All that has been said is that there is a viable middle class in Asia and some examples. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) And all I asked was what percentage of the population would be described as middle class -its axiomatic that a large, educated middle class is the best protection against tyranny and dictatorship. If it hasnt reached critical mass, then you have the situation of, say Thailand where ".. the army had attacked the protesters and shot a number and entered the Royal Hotel and attacking both Thais and foreigners there......" If we're still using India as the example, it's about 4% of the population. The US middle class is between 40% and 45% of the population. Sorry Bruce - I forgot you were American , didn't explain myself simply enough. Now, now....d8-) -- Ed Huntress |
we need unions
On Jul 26, 12:43*am, Gunner wrote:
On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 21:02:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 10:55 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be *a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. The largest middle class in the world..is in India. By several orders of magnitude- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++ + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ |
we need unions
Bruce in Bangkok wrote:
As far as my insight into the culture I live in I can only say that I have lived in Thailand for nearly 40 years. I'm married into a large Thai-Chinese family, and have been for over thirty years. I have both children and grandchildren here. I speak a fair amount of Thai and probably have more acquaintances in the Thai community then I do in the Farang community. Bruce, were you stationed in Thailand during the Vietnam war? Have you been back to the USA since? I'm just a bit curious, I've seen your sig for ages, once I was thinking Maine but that is Bangor. What did you do for a living in Thailand during the last 40 years? Wes |
we need unions
On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 10:18:50 -0400, "Ed Huntress"
wrote: "Gunner" wrote in message .. . On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 21:02:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 10:55 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. The largest middle class in the world..is in India. By several orders of magnitude From _Business Week_, one year ago: "The next two groups-seekers, earning between 200,000 and 500,000 rupees ($4,376- $10,941), and strivers, with incomes of between 500,000 and 1 million rupees ($10,941-$21,882)-will become India's huge new middle class. While their incomes would place them below the poverty line in the United States, things are much cheaper in India. When the local cost of living is taken into account, the income of the seekers and strivers looks more like $23,000 to $118,000, which is middle class by most developed-country standards. Seekers range from young college graduates to mid-level government officials, traders and business people... "...The middle class currently numbers some 50 million people, but by 2025 will have expanded dramatically to 583 million people-some 41 percent of the population. These households will see their incomes balloon to 51.5 trillion rupees ($1.1 billion)-11 times the level of today and 58 percent of total Indian income." So India's middle class is growing rapidly, but it is still about half the size of the US middle class. Definitions of middle class vary all over the place but the median definition puts America's middle class at around 45% of households -- well over 100 million people. The original post stated, or implied, that the unions were responsible for the develop of the middle class. I replied that it must be a U.S. phenomena as in Asia a middle class was developing without a union. I'm shore that developing countries have a smaller middle class then developed countries. In Thailand, for example, approximately 60% of the population still make their living by agriculture and to a great extent by subsistence farming. But still, since the early 60's a middle class has developed and without the aid of a union. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) |
we need unions
On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 18:25:51 -0400, Wes wrote:
Bruce in Bangkok wrote: As far as my insight into the culture I live in I can only say that I have lived in Thailand for nearly 40 years. I'm married into a large Thai-Chinese family, and have been for over thirty years. I have both children and grandchildren here. I speak a fair amount of Thai and probably have more acquaintances in the Thai community then I do in the Farang community. Bruce, were you stationed in Thailand during the Vietnam war? Have you been back to the USA since? I'm just a bit curious, I've seen your sig for ages, once I was thinking Maine but that is Bangor. What did you do for a living in Thailand during the last 40 years? Wes I first came to Siam in somewhere in the mid 50's. I say that jokingly as I was actually a member of a three B-29 flight that the U.S. Government sent to Siam to make a fly over in honor of something to do with the King. I have no recollection of what the reason was since as a young airman I was far more interested in booze and broads then Kings and have only a hazy, but pleasant, recollection of the trip. I then re-visited the country in 1970 for a year, again at Uncle Sam's request and returned in 1973 as a civilian. Since then I have not been back to the U.S. Initially I worked for a company that provided air base maintenance for the USAF in Thailand and when that evaporated worked in Indonesia for a company doing support for (mainly) international oil companies. I'm now retired and we live about 50% of the time in Bangkok and the other 50% in Phuket. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) |
we need unions
"Bruce in Bangkok" wrote in message ... On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 10:18:50 -0400, "Ed Huntress" wrote: "Gunner" wrote in message . .. On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 21:02:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 10:55 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. The largest middle class in the world..is in India. By several orders of magnitude From _Business Week_, one year ago: "The next two groups-seekers, earning between 200,000 and 500,000 rupees ($4,376- $10,941), and strivers, with incomes of between 500,000 and 1 million rupees ($10,941-$21,882)-will become India's huge new middle class. While their incomes would place them below the poverty line in the United States, things are much cheaper in India. When the local cost of living is taken into account, the income of the seekers and strivers looks more like $23,000 to $118,000, which is middle class by most developed-country standards. Seekers range from young college graduates to mid-level government officials, traders and business people... "...The middle class currently numbers some 50 million people, but by 2025 will have expanded dramatically to 583 million people-some 41 percent of the population. These households will see their incomes balloon to 51.5 trillion rupees ($1.1 billion)-11 times the level of today and 58 percent of total Indian income." So India's middle class is growing rapidly, but it is still about half the size of the US middle class. Definitions of middle class vary all over the place but the median definition puts America's middle class at around 45% of households -- well over 100 million people. The original post stated, or implied, that the unions were responsible for the develop of the middle class. I replied that it must be a U.S. phenomena as in Asia a middle class was developing without a union. The middle classes in Asia have traditionally been bureaucrats, military, professionals, and entrepreneurs, Bruce. That was true in most of the world before the late Industrial Revolution. It's also true that the middle classes in most of the world are a fraction of the percentage of the population that they make up in the US. The US was the first country in which ordinary workers can legitimately be counted as middle class. How large do you count the middle classes in Asia? I'm shore that developing countries have a smaller middle class then developed countries. In Thailand, for example, approximately 60% of the population still make their living by agriculture and to a great extent by subsistence farming. But still, since the early 60's a middle class has developed and without the aid of a union. The middle class developed without a union in most places. And the middle class thus developed was always small. The phenomenon of the mass middle class, made up largely of workers, is one that parallels the development of large unions. -- Ed Huntress |
we need unions
On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 22:17:25 -0400, "Ed Huntress"
wrote: "Bruce in Bangkok" wrote in message .. . On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 10:18:50 -0400, "Ed Huntress" wrote: "Gunner" wrote in message ... On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 21:02:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 10:55 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. The largest middle class in the world..is in India. By several orders of magnitude From _Business Week_, one year ago: "The next two groups-seekers, earning between 200,000 and 500,000 rupees ($4,376- $10,941), and strivers, with incomes of between 500,000 and 1 million rupees ($10,941-$21,882)-will become India's huge new middle class. While their incomes would place them below the poverty line in the United States, things are much cheaper in India. When the local cost of living is taken into account, the income of the seekers and strivers looks more like $23,000 to $118,000, which is middle class by most developed-country standards. Seekers range from young college graduates to mid-level government officials, traders and business people... "...The middle class currently numbers some 50 million people, but by 2025 will have expanded dramatically to 583 million people-some 41 percent of the population. These households will see their incomes balloon to 51.5 trillion rupees ($1.1 billion)-11 times the level of today and 58 percent of total Indian income." So India's middle class is growing rapidly, but it is still about half the size of the US middle class. Definitions of middle class vary all over the place but the median definition puts America's middle class at around 45% of households -- well over 100 million people. The original post stated, or implied, that the unions were responsible for the develop of the middle class. I replied that it must be a U.S. phenomena as in Asia a middle class was developing without a union. The middle classes in Asia have traditionally been bureaucrats, military, professionals, and entrepreneurs, Bruce. That was true in most of the world before the late Industrial Revolution. It's also true that the middle classes in most of the world are a fraction of the percentage of the population that they make up in the US. The US was the first country in which ordinary workers can legitimately be counted as middle class. How large do you count the middle classes in Asia? Now you are getting into semantics. What constitutes a "middle class". You are correct that as beginners in progress in most Asian countries the "middle class" is largely made up, as you say, of "bureaucrats, military, professionals, and entrepreneurs", but that wasn't the subject of the original conversation. It was the statement that "without unions there will be no strong middle class". That was what I was responding to. But really, in the context of the O.P. what/who makes up the middle class is immaterial. the important fact is that it is there and it does have, at least,some political influence. I'm shore that developing countries have a smaller middle class then developed countries. In Thailand, for example, approximately 60% of the population still make their living by agriculture and to a great extent by subsistence farming. But still, since the early 60's a middle class has developed and without the aid of a union. The middle class developed without a union in most places. And the middle class thus developed was always small. The phenomenon of the mass middle class, made up largely of workers, is one that parallels the development of large unions. I can only comment that the original post credited unions with creating the middle class... which is quite simply false. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) |
we need unions
"Bruce in Bangkok" wrote in message ... On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 22:17:25 -0400, "Ed Huntress" wrote: "Bruce in Bangkok" wrote in message . .. On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 10:18:50 -0400, "Ed Huntress" wrote: "Gunner" wrote in message m... On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 21:02:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 10:55 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. The largest middle class in the world..is in India. By several orders of magnitude From _Business Week_, one year ago: "The next two groups-seekers, earning between 200,000 and 500,000 rupees ($4,376- $10,941), and strivers, with incomes of between 500,000 and 1 million rupees ($10,941-$21,882)-will become India's huge new middle class. While their incomes would place them below the poverty line in the United States, things are much cheaper in India. When the local cost of living is taken into account, the income of the seekers and strivers looks more like $23,000 to $118,000, which is middle class by most developed-country standards. Seekers range from young college graduates to mid-level government officials, traders and business people... "...The middle class currently numbers some 50 million people, but by 2025 will have expanded dramatically to 583 million people-some 41 percent of the population. These households will see their incomes balloon to 51.5 trillion rupees ($1.1 billion)-11 times the level of today and 58 percent of total Indian income." So India's middle class is growing rapidly, but it is still about half the size of the US middle class. Definitions of middle class vary all over the place but the median definition puts America's middle class at around 45% of households -- well over 100 million people. The original post stated, or implied, that the unions were responsible for the develop of the middle class. I replied that it must be a U.S. phenomena as in Asia a middle class was developing without a union. The middle classes in Asia have traditionally been bureaucrats, military, professionals, and entrepreneurs, Bruce. That was true in most of the world before the late Industrial Revolution. It's also true that the middle classes in most of the world are a fraction of the percentage of the population that they make up in the US. The US was the first country in which ordinary workers can legitimately be counted as middle class. How large do you count the middle classes in Asia? Now you are getting into semantics. What constitutes a "middle class". There's a definition in the quote above, from Business Week, that's a reasonable one for economic comparisons: a purchasing-power-parity equivalent of USD $23,000 to $118,000. In India, for example, it's an income that equates to USD $4,376 - $21,882, according to BW (I didn't check the PPP values, but we'll assume BW got it right.) You are correct that as beginners in progress in most Asian countries the "middle class" is largely made up, as you say, of "bureaucrats, military, professionals, and entrepreneurs", but that wasn't the subject of the original conversation. It was the statement that "without unions there will be no strong middle class". That was what I was responding to. OK. I didn't follow the earlier messages in this thread but it would have been more accurate to say that the only systems that have produced large middle classes, in which working people made it into the middle class, have depended on unions pressing for higher wages to get it done. It certainly wasn't happening in the US or Europe before we had large and effective unions. From my reading of history, it's unlikely that it would have happened without them. We'll have to see how Asia develops in this completely new environment. So far, according to BW's figures, India's middle class makes up only 4% of the population -- roughly 1/10 the percentage of the US population that's middle class. China's is much smaller as a percentage. I don't know about Thailand. It's a unique country, economically, historically, and demographically, and it's hard to get dependable, detailed data on Thailand. Apparently the middle class is concentrated almost entirely in Bangkok. But really, in the context of the O.P. what/who makes up the middle class is immaterial. the important fact is that it is there and it does have, at least,some political influence. I'm shore that developing countries have a smaller middle class then developed countries. In Thailand, for example, approximately 60% of the population still make their living by agriculture and to a great extent by subsistence farming. But still, since the early 60's a middle class has developed and without the aid of a union. The middle class developed without a union in most places. And the middle class thus developed was always small. The phenomenon of the mass middle class, made up largely of workers, is one that parallels the development of large unions. I can only comment that the original post credited unions with creating the middle class... which is quite simply false. In a strict sense that's certainly true. Even in ancient Rome there was a middle class. In Europe, the middle class grew rapidly as the countries reached out to trade and colonize the world. Their middle class was largely the class of merchants. What's relatively new is a middle class of workers. -- Ed Huntress |
we need unions
On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 23:50:08 -0400, "Ed Huntress"
wrote: "Bruce in Bangkok" wrote in message .. . On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 22:17:25 -0400, "Ed Huntress" wrote: "Bruce in Bangkok" wrote in message ... On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 10:18:50 -0400, "Ed Huntress" wrote: "Gunner" wrote in message om... On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 21:02:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 10:55 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. The largest middle class in the world..is in India. By several orders of magnitude From _Business Week_, one year ago: "The next two groups-seekers, earning between 200,000 and 500,000 rupees ($4,376- $10,941), and strivers, with incomes of between 500,000 and 1 million rupees ($10,941-$21,882)-will become India's huge new middle class. While their incomes would place them below the poverty line in the United States, things are much cheaper in India. When the local cost of living is taken into account, the income of the seekers and strivers looks more like $23,000 to $118,000, which is middle class by most developed-country standards. Seekers range from young college graduates to mid-level government officials, traders and business people... "...The middle class currently numbers some 50 million people, but by 2025 will have expanded dramatically to 583 million people-some 41 percent of the population. These households will see their incomes balloon to 51.5 trillion rupees ($1.1 billion)-11 times the level of today and 58 percent of total Indian income." So India's middle class is growing rapidly, but it is still about half the size of the US middle class. Definitions of middle class vary all over the place but the median definition puts America's middle class at around 45% of households -- well over 100 million people. The original post stated, or implied, that the unions were responsible for the develop of the middle class. I replied that it must be a U.S. phenomena as in Asia a middle class was developing without a union. The middle classes in Asia have traditionally been bureaucrats, military, professionals, and entrepreneurs, Bruce. That was true in most of the world before the late Industrial Revolution. It's also true that the middle classes in most of the world are a fraction of the percentage of the population that they make up in the US. The US was the first country in which ordinary workers can legitimately be counted as middle class. How large do you count the middle classes in Asia? Now you are getting into semantics. What constitutes a "middle class". There's a definition in the quote above, from Business Week, that's a reasonable one for economic comparisons: a purchasing-power-parity equivalent of USD $23,000 to $118,000. In India, for example, it's an income that equates to USD $4,376 - $21,882, according to BW (I didn't check the PPP values, but we'll assume BW got it right.) If you use income as the sole criteria for "middle class" then you are correct. However I had a look at Wiki (certainly not the last word) and it appears that in the context of the U.S. many sociologists feel that the U.S. society is better described by dividing it into as many as six classes based partially on income but with some degree of education and position factored into the equation. This makes better sense to me then an arbitrary division based only on money as apparently there is no official measurement of middle class. According to one site I found (www.pbs.org) the middle class appears to be simply the middle 20%, or so, of the population, based on income. Quote America is sometimes called a "middle-class country," but nobody — not economists, sociologists, or the U.S. Census Bureau — seems to have a clear definition of who the middle class actually is. The notion of where a dividing line between "middle class" and "working class" might be is an elusive one. In November 2003, Chris Baker of THE WASHINGTON TIMES reported in "What is middle class?" that the Census Bureau shows the middle 20% of the country earning between $40,000 and $95,000 annually. The Drum Major Institute for Public Policy, a non-partisan and non-profit organization, reports that the middle class has conventionally come to mean families with incomes between $25,000 and $100,000 each year. Unquote If the classification of "middle class" is that simple then the same criteria can be applied to any society - take the middle 20% and the number depends on total population. There has to be more to it then that. You are correct that as beginners in progress in most Asian countries the "middle class" is largely made up, as you say, of "bureaucrats, military, professionals, and entrepreneurs", but that wasn't the subject of the original conversation. It was the statement that "without unions there will be no strong middle class". That was what I was responding to. OK. I didn't follow the earlier messages in this thread but it would have been more accurate to say that the only systems that have produced large middle classes, in which working people made it into the middle class, have depended on unions pressing for higher wages to get it done. It certainly wasn't happening in the US or Europe before we had large and effective unions. From my reading of history, it's unlikely that it would have happened without them. Undoubtedly true. We'll have to see how Asia develops in this completely new environment. So far, according to BW's figures, India's middle class makes up only 4% of the population -- roughly 1/10 the percentage of the US population that's middle class. China's is much smaller as a percentage. I don't know about Thailand. It's a unique country, economically, historically, and demographically, and it's hard to get dependable, detailed data on Thailand. Apparently the middle class is concentrated almost entirely in Bangkok. As a general statement some 60% of the population is employed in agriculture and contribute about 11% to the economy. Some 13% of the population live in Bangkok and generate approximately 45% of the country's economy. Given these figures the bulk of the middle class are located in Bangkok. Interestingly, the bulk of the anti-Taksin movement is in Bangkok and his major support lies in the, much poorer, N.E. farming region. I suspect that other developing nations have this same variation in population and income so the same deviation will occur in any measurement of "middle class". But really, in the context of the O.P. what/who makes up the middle class is immaterial. the important fact is that it is there and it does have, at least,some political influence. I'm shore that developing countries have a smaller middle class then developed countries. In Thailand, for example, approximately 60% of the population still make their living by agriculture and to a great extent by subsistence farming. But still, since the early 60's a middle class has developed and without the aid of a union. The middle class developed without a union in most places. And the middle class thus developed was always small. The phenomenon of the mass middle class, made up largely of workers, is one that parallels the development of large unions. I can only comment that the original post credited unions with creating the middle class... which is quite simply false. In a strict sense that's certainly true. Even in ancient Rome there was a middle class. In Europe, the middle class grew rapidly as the countries reached out to trade and colonize the world. Their middle class was largely the class of merchants. What's relatively new is a middle class of workers. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) |
we need unions
"Bruce in Bangkok" wrote in message ... Now you are getting into semantics. What constitutes a "middle class". There's a definition in the quote above, from Business Week, that's a reasonable one for economic comparisons: a purchasing-power-parity equivalent of USD $23,000 to $118,000. In India, for example, it's an income that equates to USD $4,376 - $21,882, according to BW (I didn't check the PPP values, but we'll assume BW got it right.) If you use income as the sole criteria for "middle class" then you are correct. However I had a look at Wiki (certainly not the last word) and it appears that in the context of the U.S. many sociologists feel that the U.S. society is better described by dividing it into as many as six classes based partially on income but with some degree of education and position factored into the equation. This makes better sense to me then an arbitrary division based only on money as apparently there is no official measurement of middle class. Ha-ha! Well, if you want to get into it in a big way, it's easy to get yourself thoroughly confused. I was reacting to Gunner's comment that India's middle class is "several orders of magnitude" larger than that of the US. In fact, it's about half as large, so Gunner's error here was even larger than usual: He was off by a factor of about 2,000. d8-) "Middle class," in economic comparisons, usually is calculated based on comparable PPPs. One country's "middle class" may mean people who have a metal roof over their head and two pairs of socks. Unless you use a PPP-comparable basis, there's no meaningful way you can compare one country's middle class with another. According to one site I found (www.pbs.org) the middle class appears to be simply the middle 20%, or so, of the population, based on income. That's a meaningless definition, though, if you're comparing countries. snip -- Ed Huntress |
we need unions
without unions there will be no strong middle class, http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Do Asian countries lack businesses that exploit workers too? Because if you know anything about the history of business in the US it's replete with business exploitation of labor. Unions are not necessary where business owners are fair with the workers. Our bosses have a history like our slave owners, which is to pay the absolute minimum for labor, create workplace environments that are dangerous and dirty, and take all the profits for the themselves. That is why we have unions. I guess it's a workers paradise in Asia. Like for all those children rolling cigarettes or breaking down ships in India. They don't need a union or child labor laws, right? Hawke |
we need unions
"Gunner" wrote in message ... On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 21:02:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Jul 26, 10:55 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 16:08:10 -0700 (PDT), wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. The largest middle class in the world..is in India. By several orders of magnitude Figures you would point that out. Also that you would neglect to mention the largest class of people in abject poverty that lives there as well. Never give a fair picture of things, right? Hawke |
we need unions
without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. The largest middle class in the world..is in India. By several orders of magnitude Yes, I know that - the same for China, Indonesia, and a few others - they could buy and sell us all out of petty cash, so numerous are they. (And if China stops propping up the US, your well and truly stuffed - its unlikely, they are holding so many USD that would turn in Pesos if they did - a bad deal for both partys. Thank heavens their pragmatic and not run by the Wingers in their government)) BUT - are they 1%, 20 % = what? - never mind the numbers, (millions?) - do they have a middle class large enough to control the government to have at least the semblance of self determination, or is it the traditional 5% who control 95% of the wealth who still run things? Pointless, but I persist, in between pruning my roses.... Andrew VK3BFA. In 1992 the military government led by General Suchinda fell as a result of street demonstrations led by Chamlong, a retired general and ex governor of Bangkok. If you were watching television you would have seen the crowds of people in the street wearing white shirts, dark trousers and shoes. These were the middle class and their protests, and the responding actions of the Army were the cause of the coup collapsing. Why don't you tell us what the net worth is of the average middle class Thai? I'm guessing that it doesn't amount to jack ****. Hawke |
we need unions
without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. The largest middle class in the world..is in India. By several orders of magnitude From _Business Week_, one year ago: "The next two groups-seekers, earning between 200,000 and 500,000 rupees ($4,376- $10,941), and strivers, with incomes of between 500,000 and 1 million rupees ($10,941-$21,882)-will become India's huge new middle class. While their incomes would place them below the poverty line in the United States, things are much cheaper in India. When the local cost of living is taken into account, the income of the seekers and strivers looks more like $23,000 to $118,000, which is middle class by most developed-country standards. Seekers range from young college graduates to mid-level government officials, traders and business people... "...The middle class currently numbers some 50 million people, but by 2025 will have expanded dramatically to 583 million people-some 41 percent of the population. These households will see their incomes balloon to 51.5 trillion rupees ($1.1 billion)-11 times the level of today and 58 percent of total Indian income." So India's middle class is growing rapidly, but it is still about half the size of the US middle class. Definitions of middle class vary all over the place but the median definition puts America's middle class at around 45% of households -- well over 100 million people. The original post stated, or implied, that the unions were responsible for the develop of the middle class. I replied that it must be a U.S. phenomena as in Asia a middle class was developing without a union. The middle classes in Asia have traditionally been bureaucrats, military, professionals, and entrepreneurs, Bruce. That was true in most of the world before the late Industrial Revolution. It's also true that the middle classes in most of the world are a fraction of the percentage of the population that they make up in the US. The US was the first country in which ordinary workers can legitimately be counted as middle class. How large do you count the middle classes in Asia? Now you are getting into semantics. What constitutes a "middle class". You are correct that as beginners in progress in most Asian countries the "middle class" is largely made up, as you say, of "bureaucrats, military, professionals, and entrepreneurs", but that wasn't the subject of the original conversation. It was the statement that "without unions there will be no strong middle class". That was what I was responding to. But really, in the context of the O.P. what/who makes up the middle class is immaterial. the important fact is that it is there and it does have, at least,some political influence. I'm shore that developing countries have a smaller middle class then developed countries. In Thailand, for example, approximately 60% of the population still make their living by agriculture and to a great extent by subsistence farming. But still, since the early 60's a middle class has developed and without the aid of a union. The middle class developed without a union in most places. And the middle class thus developed was always small. The phenomenon of the mass middle class, made up largely of workers, is one that parallels the development of large unions. I can only comment that the original post credited unions with creating the middle class... which is quite simply false. That's true. Because what really created the middle class was the US government. It did this by putting people to work in WWII, paying them high wages, and making it legal for unions and collective bargaining to work. Without that most Americans would still be in the working class or working poor class. Hawke |
we need unions
On Sun, 27 Jul 2008 13:49:04 -0700, "Hawke"
wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class, http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Do Asian countries lack businesses that exploit workers too? Because if you know anything about the history of business in the US it's replete with business exploitation of labor. Unions are not necessary where business owners are fair with the workers. Our bosses have a history like our slave owners, which is to pay the absolute minimum for labor, create workplace environments that are dangerous and dirty, and take all the profits for the themselves. That is why we have unions. I guess it's a workers paradise in Asia. Like for all those children rolling cigarettes or breaking down ships in India. They don't need a union or child labor laws, right? Hawke I think you first have to define "exploit workers". If you use the usual touchy feelie statement "Oh! My God! they only pay them $1.50 an hour, Oh! Oh!" then probably they are exploited, but if you use the explanation "they are paid more money then they ever made before in their lives", then I'd say no. So define "exploited" first. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) |
we need unions
On Sun, 27 Jul 2008 13:55:11 -0700, "Hawke"
wrote: without unions there will be no strong middle class,http://www.unionworld.us Must be a U.S. phenomena as there is a strong middle class in many Asian countries with either no unions or Government controlled unions. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) You got figures on how many middle class there are as a percentage of the population, versus the western world?? - must be a GREAT place to work, why else would the western world offshore its manufacturing there? - maybe, no unions to put a brake on the excesses of capitalism. Andrew VK3BFA. The largest middle class in the world..is in India. By several orders of magnitude Yes, I know that - the same for China, Indonesia, and a few others - they could buy and sell us all out of petty cash, so numerous are they. (And if China stops propping up the US, your well and truly stuffed - its unlikely, they are holding so many USD that would turn in Pesos if they did - a bad deal for both partys. Thank heavens their pragmatic and not run by the Wingers in their government)) BUT - are they 1%, 20 % = what? - never mind the numbers, (millions?) - do they have a middle class large enough to control the government to have at least the semblance of self determination, or is it the traditional 5% who control 95% of the wealth who still run things? Pointless, but I persist, in between pruning my roses.... Andrew VK3BFA. In 1992 the military government led by General Suchinda fell as a result of street demonstrations led by Chamlong, a retired general and ex governor of Bangkok. If you were watching television you would have seen the crowds of people in the street wearing white shirts, dark trousers and shoes. These were the middle class and their protests, and the responding actions of the Army were the cause of the coup collapsing. Why don't you tell us what the net worth is of the average middle class Thai? I'm guessing that it doesn't amount to jack ****. Hawke In what currency? In US dollars? Or in terms of the cost of living? Quality of life? If I quote in US dollars what do you compare it to? US prices? Asian prices? If you are really interested in a valid comparison then you first have to state the criteria. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct Address is bpaige125atgmaildotcom) |
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