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@Wheylous I agree that it is definately possible that there are plenty of jobs out there that require no degree but that is not the issue here...the issue is whether most jobs require a degree or not. Generally, people take claims with a grain of salt. It is best to back it up.
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[quote user="Wheylous"] the standard opinion of most employers is that you need a certificate to even get throught the door for an interview I don't agree. There are a lot of jobs which require no degree. Experience, yes, but not a degree. [/quote] Does anyone have sources backing up the claims above? One is claiming that one needs a degree
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The system is and will be inadequate if these demands are met, but people do not usually see this, most people, especially Americans, simply ask for more help from the system whenever the State fails, thus increasing State power. I simply view this as a positive feedback effect. While I agree that it is a good time for people to listen to anarchists
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BP, I think that is where we differ because as I stated, they are merely doing what the current system wants them to do, beg for help via government aid. Also, one does not have to be anarchist to see that the current system is crap. The problem with these protestors though is that even though they generally advocate anti-coporatism, crony capitalism
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For the most part, I agree with Birthday Pony here... I think most here forget the market-socialistic/mutualistic influence that anarcho-capitalism has (tucker, Spooner). While personal debt is the individual's responsibility, there is still a much bigger picture here, and that is that the system as a whole is screwed up and needs to change. The
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this article might help...
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[quote user="GavinPalmer1984"] I guess I need to read "Money and Credit" - by Karl Knies... seems he was on a better course of thought than Mises... considering that Mises did not understand money to be a medium of exchanging information. [/quote] Read whatever you want but don't strawman Mises (makes you look like an idiot.
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The Hayek source is unsatisfactory b/c he is not specifically talking about the Solow model, he doesn't even mention Solow in that book at all. I know the general Austrian critique of aggregation and how it applies to models but I was looking for specific critiques on the Solow model. Also, where is the Mises quote from?
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hannamurphy, how would a program like the SEA allocate the number of people they decide to give money to start a business? And since the money is given to unemployed and/or low credit people, thus increasing the risk, how would a SEA program deal with the consequences of bad investments?
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also, the only austrian articles that i found critiquing Solow's capital theory (briefly though) are by Ludwig Lachmann, which is not a shocker since Lachmann did specialized in Capital theory. On Austrian Capital Theory and Austrian Economics in the Age of Neo-Ricardian Counterrevolution are the two articles