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United States Businesses The Almighty Buck

Fewer Than Half of Young Americans Are Positive About Capitalism (cnbc.com) 1445

gollum123 writes: According to a new poll from Gallup, young Americans are souring on capitalism. Less than half, 45 percent, view capitalism positively. "This represents a 12-point decline in young adults' positive views of capitalism in just the past two years and a marked shift since 2010, when 68 percent viewed it positively," notes Gallup, which defines young Americans as those aged 18 to 29. Meanwhile, 51 percent of young people are positive about socialism. This age group's "views of socialism have fluctuated somewhat from year to year," reports Gallup, "but the 51 percent with a positive view today is the same as in 2010."
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Fewer Than Half of Young Americans Are Positive About Capitalism

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  • Not surprising (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @11:45AM (#57123710)

    The boomers pulled the ladder up on them.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @11:45AM (#57123716)

    As long there is strong regulation behind it keep things honest and upfront.
     
    No-small-print capitalism.

    • by Stolovaya ( 1019922 ) <skingiii.gmail@com> on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @11:54AM (#57123828)
      This, exactly. Capitalism isn't bad in and of itself. It's when it's unregulated that it becomes a nightmare. And you need to mix in some socialist branches (like we do already, such as libraries, law enforcement, etc.).
    • by Thelasko ( 1196535 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @01:24PM (#57124882) Journal

      As long there is strong regulation behind it keep things honest and upfront. No-small-print capitalism.

      True capitalism assumes perfect information [wikipedia.org] in the market to determine a price. Unfortunately, we live in a world of imperfect information.

    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @01:52PM (#57125176)
      I've got a buddy with Type-I diabetes. The kind your born with and that you die of without insulin. He can't work because the illness kicks the crap out of him for about 2 months every year, and it's a random 2 months. He barely made it through high school. Smart guy, but not Einstein grade smarts so no employer is going to put up with him.

      He's pretty right wing. Has a got family who worked in defense. So he gets his political views from there.

      When asked about healthcare he understands that he needs socialized medicine or he dies. Again, he's smart. He's figured out that in a pure capitalist economy he couldn't possibly earn the money to pay for his care. You should hear the convoluted mess of a healthcare system he came up with that preserves his ideological system while ensuring he gets care. It was like Obamacare but with much bigger subsidies and more guarantees of care. To his credit when I pointed out that he agreed that he'd basically created a socialized medicine but with a 30% surcharge for private insurance profits.

      I'm not saying we can't have a mixed system. I'm in favor of single _payer_, e.g. the gov't pays but otherwise stays out of things. But that's still socialism. At some point I think we have to admit that capitalism as we idolize it just plain doesn't work.
      • by wyHunter ( 4241347 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @05:07PM (#57126726)
        There's a hugely bizarre attitude toward "socialized medicine." In a capitalist country, one can argue having the LARGEST number of people healthy and able to work is best for the economy, so EVERYONE should have access to healthcare. Not unreasonable. One of the problems we have with medicine is that it's outrageously expensive for no reason why anyone can, or will, tell. Why? Why should a 2 day hospital stay where the only thing you get is 6 IVs of (not expensive) drugs over that time cost almost 20K? Why? When the room isn't clean, and you question whether the staff have adequately washed hands before coming in, etc. Capitalism should encourage efficiency and all I see in healthcare is...the opposite.
  • by Narcocide ( 102829 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @11:46AM (#57123722) Homepage

    ... seeing as how fewer than half of them will ever be able to pay off their college loans. Maybe if we want to prove capitalism can work for everyone we should stop letting rich people write all the laws?

    • by Yath ( 6378 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @12:40PM (#57124404) Journal

      If you're blaming capitalism for their student loan issues, you're barking up the wrong tree. The major issue with student loans is that they're guaranteed by the federal government. This is a tried and true way to increase the price of something, massively, and that's exactly what we've seen with rising tuition costs. Government loan guarantees have nothing to do with capitalism - they're central economic planning.

      Blaming capitalism for student loan debt is like blaming Iraq for 9/11 - a classic case of "someone hit me, I'm gonna hit somebody by god!"

      • by Junta ( 36770 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @12:58PM (#57124598)

        Don't forget they protect that debt so that not even bankruptcy can discharge it.

        They saw a problem (cost to do college was getting a bit too high and becoming too needed) and inadvertently poured gasoline on the problem by triggering a huge escalation of cost through trying to provide relief while compromising with the private sector (you can spend government money and the debts *will* be repaid, but the government will not step in to negotiate terms because *that* would just not be capitalist enough).

        The state of college funding represents the worst blend of capitalism and government intervention. More government control over pricing or less government meddling in the loans would likely work better.

  • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @11:46AM (#57123726)
    The young always think there is a better way. As they grow up, they realize that the current way works, while most "good ideas" don't. But, enough new ideas do work to keep the system changing.
  • by The Original CDR ( 5453236 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @11:47AM (#57123738)
    When you got millionaires and billionaires putthing themselves ahead at the expense of the public, people are not going to have a positive opinion of capitalism.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @11:47AM (#57123744)

    The people who came before them are rigging the system against them so only they and their kids who made it can benefit. The ladder has been pulled up and these young folks are starting to realize this more and more.

  • by Eclectic Engineer ( 830396 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @11:48AM (#57123754)

    If you're not a liberal at 20... https://quoteinvestigator.com/... [quoteinvestigator.com]

    • Hearts and brains. (Score:4, Informative)

      by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @11:55AM (#57123832) Journal

      Darn. You beat me by two minutes. B-b

      For those not familiar with it, and who don't want to follow the link and read a page, the current version of the old saw is:

      If You Are Not a Liberal at 25, You Have No Heart. If You Are Not a Conservative at 35 You Have No Brain

      (The article linked by the parent poster tracks variants back as far as 1875 in France.)

    • by KixWooder ( 5232441 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @11:59AM (#57123874)
      I was a die-hard conservative at 20. At 38, Iâ(TM)m pretty liberal.

      I make plenty and own my home mortgage-free, but too much of the country is getting the short end of the stick.
      • by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @12:54PM (#57124552)

        I was a die-hard conservative at 20. At 38, Iâ(TM)m pretty liberal.
        I make plenty and own my home mortgage-free, but too much of the country is getting the short end of the stick.

        I followed the same path- only less extreme. I've gone from right of centre to left of centre (stayed pretty centrist over all- even now).

        I probably didn't have much of a heart at 20. I was pretty cold and rational. Getting older, being married, experiencing life, having children, I realised there is more to life than money and society matters. I gained empathy with age whereas many people get jaded and lose empathy.

    • by known_coward_69 ( 4151743 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @12:05PM (#57123948)

      liberalism is not about socialism. here in the USA there is lots of socialism for the government hating conservatives. Free money for farmers, unending highway construction and expansion when public transit is cheaper, socialism for rural airports with no real flights, government bailouts when property rights idiots build in flood zones in houston and then run to the government to rebuild their homes, socialism for police and prison unions and corporations via sending people to jail for minor crimes, etc.

      Its not the liberals protesting legalization of marijuana. It's the conservatives and police who will see a reduction in their jobs

  • by Bodhammer ( 559311 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @11:53AM (#57123816)
    Just remember, half the people are stupider than that...
  • by cats-paw ( 34890 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @11:56AM (#57123834) Homepage

    The system we have now is really corporatism. Very large, essentially immortal, companies that are able to achieve regulatory capture and get laws written for themselves.

    Look at the way that the coal companies were able to get an exemption to clean water laws to blow the tops off of mountains and destroy streams and creeks. All so they could reduce labor costs. That's one hell of an externality they got out of.

    small "c" capitalism is something a free society has to have, i.e. the ability to buy and sell goods in a relatively unfettered market. No you don't get to sell nuclear weapons, so there has to be some manner of regulation.

    corporatism is all about shifting costs to the public and creating a bullshit concept that companies are somehow outside of morality and ethics. They want to be outside of morality and ethics but that doesn't mean we have to let them.

    • by Skuld-Chan ( 302449 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @12:17PM (#57124086)

      The other thing that is really bad about our system is we largely privatize all the profits and socialize all the risk (think bailouts, or welfare money to prop up farmers over trade wars, or corporate welfare in general).

    • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @01:02PM (#57124664) Homepage Journal

      Capitalism means that capital controls the means of production. Corporatism means that corporations control the capital. Corporatism is therefore simply a form of capitalism.

      If you want to solve the problem of corporatism without throwing away the very real benefits of capitalism, you have to regulate corporations. They are not even strictly necessary things; everything they do could be done by co-ops, and co-ops of co-ops. And that would actually mean that the workers had a share and a say.

      Capitalism is itself amoral. Humans, on the other hand, are frequently immoral. And since corporations are controlled by humans... well, you know.

    • by mx+b ( 2078162 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @02:24PM (#57125428)

      small "c" capitalism is something a free society has to have, i.e. the ability to buy and sell goods in a relatively unfettered market.

      You're confusing a free market with capitalism, which is not the same thing. It's also a very common mistake to make given the propaganda in the US that intentionally wants us to associate "freedom" with capitalism.

      Capitalism simply means private ownership and control of resources -- land, natural resources, and modern industrial means of production. Private ownership means generally speaking a person (a dictator or monarch) or a small board of directors (an oligarchy) make all the decisions about the use of resources and production. On the surface, this seems like a very fair thing -- you own it, why shouldn't you get to decide? -- but the problem with this line of thought is the scale we're talking. When a capitalist decides to clear cut a forest, that forest is now gone and even if he sells the land later, no other person gets to use that forest ever again. What if someone else wanted to create a park? Too late, capitalist decided already. What if a majority of people in the area wanted a park instead of a clear cut field? What if that forest and all those tree roots helped soak up water and prevent flooding, but now without it, surrounding neighborhoods easily flood? What if that forest held a rare species of tree or animal that could have lead to a medical discovery? Even if we needed to cut the trees down for firewood or paper or whatever, maybe we would have preferred to the wood go to local community members and not sold in China or wherever? Too late, capitalist already decided.

      That's the problem with private ownership of resources and production. Most if not all resource use decisions actually impact all of us, at least community-wide if not planet-wide (as climate change is producing). And yet we are allowing monarchs and oligarchs make those decisions for our communities and nations without any input. Is that fair and just for someone else to decide things that impact your family and community without you having any say in the process whatsoever? I understand you might not always get what you want, but right now you don't even have a vote. A CEO decides and that's it, can legally do what they want (within broad confines of regulation that politicians continually cut and weaken) and completely ignore you and your family and your community. If it makes your house flood more, they don't care. If it causes environmental damage that gives you and your family lung cancer, they don't care. You don't have any say.

      Socialism is the idea that resources and production should be publicly-owned and democratically managed. That's really all it is. Because of certain historical events people confuse socialism with authoritarian takeovers of those countries, but again, like the free market and capitalism, they are not the same thing. All we're talking about it more democracy, that you and your family and your community should have a vote and decide how those resources are used and that it should not be left to private decision-making behind closed doors by people who don't necessarily live in your community or even country.

      Note also, as a common misconception, that socialist theory typically distinguishes between "private property", which is private ownership of natural resources and industrial means of production, and "personal property" which is your family home. Socialists don't generally care about your family home or your toothbrush or your clothes or your car, do whatever you want at home when you're not bothering anyone. No one is going to take your house. It's about democratizing economic decisions for the big industrial questions that affect all of us, it's about making sure no one businessperson CEO can force their economic vision on you and the community, you have to all agree together democratically. You get more individual freedoms and more say-so under a democratic system -- both politic

  • by Sir_Eptishous ( 873977 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @12:17PM (#57124094)
    Once upon a time, most of the value of the American economy was from actual goods and services, and not so intrinsically tied to the stock market. Since about the late 1970s, the American economy has been tied to the stock market, which has engendered dangerous short term thinking.

    This, combined with the hollowing out of organized labor and the ever widening wealth disparity in the US has led to inevitable situation.

    What would anyone expect? A heart warming embrace of a system geared to enrich and empower those who are already rich and powerful?
    • by Lucas123 ( 935744 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @12:29PM (#57124264) Homepage

      This.

      It's no longer just about the quality of the product you or whether your company grew. It's about meeting financial analysts' numbers. Meet them or risk having your stock sold off. And, now with new computer algorithms trading billions of share a day, millions a second, the market is more volatile than ever before.

      A butterfly flaps its wings in Bali and an EU company's stock plummets.

  • by Thelasko ( 1196535 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @12:19PM (#57124128) Journal
    Capitalism really has a cult like following. It's not some magical thing that we should all worship. It's a tool! A very useful one too. I would call capitalism analogous to a hammer. Damn useful for a lot of things. However, it can't do everything.

    Capitalism is bad at:
    • High risk investing
    • Very long time horizons
    • Valuing some types of natural resources (more on this later)
    • Valuing human life

    No where on earth is there a purely capitalist society outside of complete anarchy (e.g. Somalia). Once a government is established, the first thing it does is socialize something: defense.

    Some other things most countries socialize:

    • police
    • roads
    • fire protection
    • education

    Education is a prime example of capitalism dealing poorly with long time horizons. If we took loans out to pay for our entire education, it would be 20 years before we could make the first payment. Most debt is expected to be paid off in less than 30 years.

    In terms of natural resources, the value placed on them is based on the labor required to extract them. However, air requires minimal labor to extract. You do it every time you breath. Because of this, we have subconsciously, and collectively agreed that no one owns the air. It is shared by all of us as a community. It's a communist system.

    In summary, capitalism is a tool in our economic system, that works along side socialism and communism to get resources to people that need them. The trick is choosing the correct tool for the task!

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @12:28PM (#57124258)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by AmazingRuss ( 555076 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @01:14PM (#57124804)

    ... 3 hours in.

  • by King_TJ ( 85913 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @01:30PM (#57124948) Journal

    The thing I find so disheartening is how many younger Americans reject Capitalism, in favor of a form of Socialism -- without realizing that this isn't as simple as an A or B pair of options. If you want Socialism, fine .... There are many places in the world actively practicing it, and you're welcome to move there. America was created as a unique experiment in the world, creating a Democratic Republic. IMO, it's proven itself not only viable but arguably superior to many other forms of rule by central governments. I wholeheartedly believe that as a U.S. citizen, I should do everything in my power to preserve this framework.

    Obviously, we have a lot of flaws, corruption and other negatives. But show me ANY government that's perfect, except on paper.

    IMO, what we need to be focusing on in America is how to move forward, to PRESERVE the Democratic Republic that our Founders created and made into a reality. Corporatism is really what most people are complaining about when they say they're anti-Capitalist. Corporatism is simply a situation where big business managed to collude with government to avoid being governed fairly by it. This can be addressed and mitigated without resorting to Socialism!

    America has already done too much dabbing in Socialist practices to appease various groups. Even when it creates a "workable" solution to a specific problem? It weakens our whole system of government, because it means we took an "easy way out" or shortcut, copy-catting what other countries did, rather than finding an answer that doesn't go against the principles that built what we've got here.

    Perhaps the place this "battle" is most evident, today, is the healthcare debate. Single-payer or Socialized medicine is something I just can't accept, even though I accept that it's ONE solution that basically works for other countries. If we stick to our core values and principles that defined America, I think we have to conclude it's unfair to demand medical professionals all get paid a fixed salary, as dictated by Federal government. I think we have to conclude that no, healthcare is NOT a right in America. You have every right to pursue better health for yourself, obviously. But as soon as you need medical care, you're demanding the services of another person or group of people who invested many years into education and training to be good enough to perform those services. They aren't your slaves, nor do you have a right to force other American citizens to pay their fees to treat you. We DO need to stop the collusion/ Corporatism that allows big pharma to get protectionist treatment by government for exclusive rights to sell medications, and to prevent competitors in other countries from importing their offerings here as legal alternatives.

  • by Qbertino ( 265505 ) <moiraNO@SPAMmodparlor.com> on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @03:24PM (#57125994)

    What remains is a plutocratic corporate socialism sold to the masses as free market capitalism. No wonder they don't like it.

  • by strikethree ( 811449 ) on Wednesday August 15, 2018 @10:19AM (#57130790) Journal

    I am curious about how other age ranges feel about capitalism right now too.

    The funny thing is that capitalism is still the best method for managing resources since the inputs and outputs are decentralized; however, once everything gets centralized like it is right now, I would have to ask if it is really capitalism or if it has morphed into something else.

    TL;DR, asking today's youth about capitalism is absurd since we do not really have capitalism right now. Maybe a form of corporate fascism since companies seem to be able to buy laws with impunity.

Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes, and not rather a new wearer of clothes. -- Henry David Thoreau

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