Neshant wrote: In order for the productive to have the option of keeping money under their pillow, it should retain its purchasing power. Since the crooked middle man industry produces nothing, its only means of income is stealing it from others - hence the need for 'promoting' inflation. Now to stop the thievery, central banking would have to be disbanded. Except that won't happen because the middle man industry's primary means of looting the people of their wealth will be gone. So there's no option for me to keep it under my pillow.
I don't need it, but I have the option of having it if I agree to trade my hard earned money for it. When I do and Apple makes a sale. Its a reward for having produced a product somebody wants to have. Nobody opts to be scammed by banking crooks. Again where's the option to sign off?
Sounds good if the whole world be put in a free market. Why just cabbies?
So to retain purchasing power the market must also ensure that it is not creating artificial demand at artificially inflated prices for products that people do not need. Then there would be no need for any sector (private or public) to ask for wage increases. If the pvt sector does its bit and stops scamming the public in general by providing unnecessary goods and services - I'm sure the banks and govt would follow suit.
If someone 'needs' to buy an apple iphone and that is not construed as a 'scam' for the only reason that it originates in the private sector and therefore the market, then surely the govt (and banks) have the right to buy / sell products that they feel is required by their 'clients'.
Sure re cabbies - but then what do you think the US feels about free movement of labour? If there is no free labour market - then there is no 'free market', so why create useless strawmen arguing that 'markets are the true determinant of worth'?
I'm afraid 'sillyness' lies not only in the repository of the 'middleman' and banks. And lobbyists can reasonably argue that they are providing a service to direct govt buying / selling behaviour that is best suited to their clients who need it (just like private sector advertising).