I was just watching Loews Chairman, Jonathan Tisch, on CNBC, arguing that the government should make it easier for foreign tourists to get into the US so we can have more tourists and more guests for his hotels. That's all good, as I have nothing against tourists coming to America. Moreover, it's understandable that Tisch views foreign tourists as a source of revenue for his business since most Americans have experienced stagnant or falling incomes over the past four years and probably can't do much vacationing. Come to think of it, real earnings for wage earners in America haven't gone up in over 40 years so their consumption of leisure, especially at the high end, is quite low. On the other hand, Mr. Tisch and his fellow CEOs have seen their earnings increase something like 250% in that time, but I digress.
Listening to Mr. Tisch plead for greater visa leniency made me wonder why he wasn't showing the same degree of fervor and support for working Americans so that they, too, could have the means to travel and stay at his properties? After all, we are a nation of 310 million and if regular folks (not just CEOs and rich foreigners) had the wherewithal to travel, his hotels would be booked solid all year 'round. In fact, there'd be wait lists to get a room.
Perhaps the answer lies in the fact that the hotel and hospitality industry, which is where Mr. Tisch's businesses operate, are notoriously low payers. The average hotel employee earns far below the nation's median income. If Mr. Tisch and other CEOs in low paying industries simply paid their employees more, then people would have more money to spend on travel and leisure and his hotels would be booked solid.
But that doesn't interest Mr. Tisch because he's found a really profitable business model that's a lot easier to arrange and it doesn't entail providing economic well being to lowly working Americans. All he has to do is lobby his friends in Washington for visa rule changes (which Mr. Tisch said he was able to finegle) so that foreigners with money can come here instead. And the real beauty of it is, when they're done with their vacations, they just go home and Mr. Tisch doesn't have to deal with them anymore. Actually, I'm sure Mr. Tisch wishes he could send the rest of us lowly Americans packing, too, so that so he an his billionaire friends could enjoy America all to themselves. But don't worry, he's working on that, too.
It's time that the rest of wake up and smell the complimentary coffee. The plan that Mr. Tisch and his friends have for America is to keep Americans in low paying jobs and bend the rules so that foreigners can come here and spend. That way, their profits and wealth continue to climb higher and higher, while the rest of us go nowhere or worse, down. And if you're wondering about jobs, well, their attitude is, just take our shit jobs and shut up.
In a nation that has monetary sovereignty, like ours, WE are the boss, not them. We have the means to raise incomes and make the investments that benefit all people, not just a few. The problem, however, is getting people to understand that.
Mike,
ReplyDeleteDon't forget to throw in the free football stadium from the State of New Jersey for their football team while we're at it.....
rsp,
The Tish family is everywhere, not only in hotel business.
ReplyDeleteDo you believe they pay administrative assistant-floater (that's administrative assistant who replaces regular assistants when they take vacation or day off) under $30k/year before taxes?
And yes such assistant sometimes assists even them – the Tishes.
Guess it's time for me to stop doing business with Lowes.
ReplyDeleteShame too because they're only 1/4 mile from my house.
The nearest Home Depot is about 8-10 miles away.
Of course, Home Depot is run by knuckle-draggers too.
Next up, my local board store.
Loews Corp is different from Lowes the home improvement chain.
ReplyDeleteIs it the movie theatre group?
ReplyDeleteThanks, It would be a hassle to have to go to Home Depot.
They used to own the movie theatres but sold it.
ReplyDeleteHere you can see which industries they are in:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loews_Corporation
HD and Menard's are both headed up by right-wing nut cases.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteThe Japanese beetle has nested and found a way to infiltrate our land.
They have a huge huge hoarding at the Treasury in form of a bank account that far exceeds our own.
They come to the south to get around the unions and all that.
They provide a lot of quantified financial engineering in the math journals and possibly in Wall Street, but they don't implement it in Japan for themselves since there are laws against sucking up housing debt and blowing out of proportion the market prices like they had in the 80's.
So they come to the USA and pay lower wages worldwide as well as here to exact huge profits from the cars, movies, electronics, etc
which are all funded and fueled by and on the easy liquidity of easy debt by the Federal Reserve.
The easy lending is small in it's own right as shown in the foreclosure market which is only a $500 billion problem but it is compounded by the Japanese German Russian USA quant math models of CDS swaps MWD and all that which blows it up by factors of 10 or whatever.
It is a silly circus, and I cannot see even how MMT can help either.
We saw that taxation on Bear Stearns COULD ACTUALLY HAVE SAVED BEAR STEARNS !!
This was assumed by the various Mike Norman invariant analysis posted here and communicated to everyone in this blog years ago like 2009.
Taxation could have been a method of overseeing and protecting the very institutions that were too good to be taxed and thus they were in the shadows.
Taxation would have leveled the playing field and not left things so lumpy and in the hands of JP-Morgan-Chase-Goldman-Sachs-Henry-Paulson-Rubin-INC.
The taxation loop is a feedback monitor like that found in electrical circuit design which has analogs in all other phenomena such as plasma physics, hydraulic systems, etc.
Americans are poor because they are made poor.
The Mike Norman invariant that we stop focusing on Puritanical Exporting Fetishes which may mean we import more materials but we focus on "we the people" and their jobs, employment, and their wages - and raising the overall standard of living for all Americans which is lost in the drive to send something overseas which is a loss
according to Mosler.
Couldn't have put it better Goog,
ReplyDeletehere is the record of their fetishism:
http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/data-chart-center/tic/Documents/mfh.txt
Read it and weep... rsp,