Anonymous wrote:Really interesting perspective on deficits and investments. She's crass, but makes a compelling argument.
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https://medium.com/@girlziplocked/why-amazon-isn-t-a-fucking-idiot-and-runs-a-deficit-f9d5734b68ec

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Amazon could flip a switch tomorrow and start making massive profits. Not so for the U.S. government. Further, Amazon is making what it believes to be productive investments; most of the function of the U.S. government is redistribution of money. Vanishingly little of government spending can be characterized as productive investment. It's really a terrible analogy.
What? Government R&D money to universities, government-run research labs, and private corporations have funded - and will continue to fund - our greatest technological and productivity breakthroughs.
Examples: GPS, internet, personal computing, materials sciences, microprocessors, etc.
The fact of the matter is that government-organized research and infrastructure is still the most efficient means for pushing forward our economy. Ever tech company today is reaping the dividends of U.S. government investment. That seed has sprouted into a veritable forest. Hell, the technology used in these new private sector space companies is OLD - it was developed by NASA engineers (in conjuction with private sector engineers - GE, HP, etc) decades ago.
And what percentage of the federal budget do you think goes to such endeavors?
Anonymous wrote:Really interesting perspective on deficits and investments. She's crass, but makes a compelling argument.
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https://medium.com/@girlziplocked/why-amazon-isn-t-a-fucking-idiot-and-runs-a-deficit-f9d5734b68ec
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Amazon could flip a switch tomorrow and start making massive profits. Not so for the U.S. government. Further, Amazon is making what it believes to be productive investments; most of the function of the U.S. government is redistribution of money. Vanishingly little of government spending can be characterized as productive investment. It's really a terrible analogy.
What? Government R&D money to universities, government-run research labs, and private corporations have funded - and will continue to fund - our greatest technological and productivity breakthroughs.
Examples: GPS, internet, personal computing, materials sciences, microprocessors, etc.
The fact of the matter is that government-organized research and infrastructure is still the most efficient means for pushing forward our economy. Ever tech company today is reaping the dividends of U.S. government investment. That seed has sprouted into a veritable forest. Hell, the technology used in these new private sector space companies is OLD - it was developed by NASA engineers (in conjuction with private sector engineers - GE, HP, etc) decades ago.
And what percentage of the federal budget do you think goes to such endeavors?
Not enough and those research dollars are declining. Hence why I agree with the kernal of truth put forth by the author of that article.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hah. Her premise isnt terrible, but Amazon is not a good example. Amazon's Prime program costs them way more money than they get out of it -- the original idea was that it would pay for itself within 5 years, but 5 years came and went and they still lose money with every item with free shipping. They are damaging many other businesses with their free guaranteed shipping, that they can't afford and that other businesses can't afford. Not just shipping costs, all their pricing is too low to be sustainable, for then or their competitors. Not a win.
So America should stop trying to be great because it might make some other countries not feel as great? That's all I get from your example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Amazon could flip a switch tomorrow and start making massive profits. Not so for the U.S. government. Further, Amazon is making what it believes to be productive investments; most of the function of the U.S. government is redistribution of money. Vanishingly little of government spending can be characterized as productive investment. It's really a terrible analogy.
What? Government R&D money to universities, government-run research labs, and private corporations have funded - and will continue to fund - our greatest technological and productivity breakthroughs.
Examples: GPS, internet, personal computing, materials sciences, microprocessors, etc.
The fact of the matter is that government-organized research and infrastructure is still the most efficient means for pushing forward our economy. Ever tech company today is reaping the dividends of U.S. government investment. That seed has sprouted into a veritable forest. Hell, the technology used in these new private sector space companies is OLD - it was developed by NASA engineers (in conjuction with private sector engineers - GE, HP, etc) decades ago.
And what percentage of the federal budget do you think goes to such endeavors?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Amazon could flip a switch tomorrow and start making massive profits. Not so for the U.S. government. Further, Amazon is making what it believes to be productive investments; most of the function of the U.S. government is redistribution of money. Vanishingly little of government spending can be characterized as productive investment. It's really a terrible analogy.
What? Government R&D money to universities, government-run research labs, and private corporations have funded - and will continue to fund - our greatest technological and productivity breakthroughs.
Examples: GPS, internet, personal computing, materials sciences, microprocessors, etc.
The fact of the matter is that government-organized research and infrastructure is still the most efficient means for pushing forward our economy. Ever tech company today is reaping the dividends of U.S. government investment. That seed has sprouted into a veritable forest. Hell, the technology used in these new private sector space companies is OLD - it was developed by NASA engineers (in conjuction with private sector engineers - GE, HP, etc) decades ago.
Anonymous wrote:Amazon could flip a switch tomorrow and start making massive profits. Not so for the U.S. government. Further, Amazon is making what it believes to be productive investments; most of the function of the U.S. government is redistribution of money. Vanishingly little of government spending can be characterized as productive investment. It's really a terrible analogy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hah. Her premise isnt terrible, but Amazon is not a good example. Amazon's Prime program costs them way more money than they get out of it -- the original idea was that it would pay for itself within 5 years, but 5 years came and went and they still lose money with every item with free shipping. They are damaging many other businesses with their free guaranteed shipping, that they can't afford and that other businesses can't afford. Not just shipping costs, all their pricing is too low to be sustainable, for then or their competitors. Not a win.
So America should stop trying to be great because it might make some other countries not feel as great? That's all I get from your example.
Anonymous wrote:Hah. Her premise isnt terrible, but Amazon is not a good example. Amazon's Prime program costs them way more money than they get out of it -- the original idea was that it would pay for itself within 5 years, but 5 years came and went and they still lose money with every item with free shipping. They are damaging many other businesses with their free guaranteed shipping, that they can't afford and that other businesses can't afford. Not just shipping costs, all their pricing is too low to be sustainable, for then or their competitors. Not a win.