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		General_Tao wrote:But what's important for the purpose of discussion here is that the methodology is the same across OECD countries, so you have a valid platform for comparing across countries, ie difference in median income between the US and say, Germany.




















		General_Tao wrote:I would guess that the baby isn't included. As to the rest, that's why income figures are often quoted in terms of households, where all of this is lumped in. The old lady makes her own household, or is part of a great er one if she`s dependent.
But what's important for the purpose of discussion here is that the methodology is the same across OECD countries, so you have a valid platform for comparing across countries, ie difference in median income between the US and say, Germany.




















		thegreekdog wrote:General_Tao wrote:I would guess that the baby isn't included. As to the rest, that's why income figures are often quoted in terms of households, where all of this is lumped in. The old lady makes her own household, or is part of a great er one if she`s dependent.
But what's important for the purpose of discussion here is that the methodology is the same across OECD countries, so you have a valid platform for comparing across countries, ie difference in median income between the US and say, Germany.
Okay, thanks.
My concern is less with comparing the US to Germany and more with wondering whether $25K is a valid number for the United States (and by extension whether $25K is really a "bad" number).

















			BigBallinStalin wrote:thegreekdog wrote:General_Tao wrote:I would guess that the baby isn't included. As to the rest, that's why income figures are often quoted in terms of households, where all of this is lumped in. The old lady makes her own household, or is part of a great er one if she`s dependent.
But what's important for the purpose of discussion here is that the methodology is the same across OECD countries, so you have a valid platform for comparing across countries, ie difference in median income between the US and say, Germany.
Okay, thanks.
My concern is less with comparing the US to Germany and more with wondering whether $25K is a valid number for the United States (and by extension whether $25K is really a "bad" number).
Isn't it less meaningful to use individuals to determine a median income?
A family can share costs; whereas, a single guy renting an apartment pays all of that himself.




















		General_Tao wrote:Ginis are extremely relevant when you compare the indices of two countries with fairly similar GDP per capita, like comparing the US to Sweden and Norway. We`re not talking about Mongolia or Pakistan here...
General_Tao wrote:...because in the US the top 20% own 85% of the total national income.
General_Tao wrote:To further illustrate my point, while the US' GDP per capita is $46k, the median income is actually only $25k...huge difference.
General_Tao wrote:also you can't count southern Europe -- that's all quaint poverty
General_Tao wrote:also you can't count this because of XYZ
General_Tao wrote:also you'll need to exempt that because of ABC
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
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			thegreekdog wrote:General_Tao wrote:I would guess that the baby isn't included. As to the rest, that's why income figures are often quoted in terms of households, where all of this is lumped in. The old lady makes her own household, or is part of a great er one if she`s dependent.
But what's important for the purpose of discussion here is that the methodology is the same across OECD countries, so you have a valid platform for comparing across countries, ie difference in median income between the US and say, Germany.
Okay, thanks.
My concern is less with comparing the US to Germany and more with wondering whether $25K is a valid number for the United States (and by extension whether $25K is really a "bad" number).
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
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			Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
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		BigBallinStalin wrote:Dukasaur wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:In addition, your story covers a very small section of his life, but then you declare that the French waiter is enjoying his life. Honestly, you can't reasonably make that assumption because you extremely little about that man's life.
The same is seen with your other stories. You're covering only the good parts of the story for the European, and to counter ways in the US, you only insert the undesirable parts for the American. It's a biased account, but it's a lovely picture. I'm not saying that you are a bad person for doing this. My main point is that you should be aware of how you're erroneously portraying reality. Your stories portray a reality perceived through fictional accounts, or at the very least, very incomplete stories.
Ah, oui, monsieur! C'est la vie!
<takes a drag from a cigarette>
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"








		
















		General_Tao wrote:You do realize that your numbers are from 2007, right?
General Tao's WSJ link wrote:This comes from an income study done by Emmanuel Saez and Thomas Picketty, with 2004 being the latest data year.
http://blogs.wsj.com/wealth/2007/02/01/ ... h-o-meter/
General_Tao wrote:Put differently, the military-industrial complex in Europe is not as big or as good at brainwashing and scaring its citizens.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
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		General_Tao wrote:Follow the conversation here saxi, the issue here is poverty as it relates to military spending. Regardless of how brainwashed Europeans are, they're not going to be convinced of spending 10% of their GDP on the military. The US on the other hand has been feeling the adverse economic impact of spending more on the military than the rest of the world combined.
As to the data, I used mine to illustrate that there was a huge income disparity in the US and that the gap between the median income and the GDP per capita is huge. US GDP/cap in 2004 was $38k (http://www.indexmundi.com/g/g.aspx?c=us&v=67), whereas the median income was only $25k. That's a difference of 50%! That ratio has not changed much recently. If anything, the income inequalities in the US have grown since, as illustrated by the evolution of the Gini curve.
This huge difference between the median and average is due to the fact that the latter figure is greatly skewed by the huge incomes in the top brackets (the top 20% earning 85% of the income!). You don`t have the same level of inequality in Europe (this is what the Gini tells you). This is a crucial fact if you want a real picture of income levels of average Europeans, the raw GDP/capita numbers give you a false picture of the difference between average americans and average europeans and they hide the fact that the poorer europeans are probably better off.
You on the other hand used your data set to compare US income levels to Europe's, but those numbers are now outdated as those two data sets have been moving in different directions due to the large changes in currency and economic growth.
But what's important for the purpose of discussion here is that the methodology is the same across OECD countries, so you have a valid platform for comparing across countries,
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
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			saxitoxin wrote: In this thread we're trying to figure out how the world can advance social justice and give Europe a helping hand up.



		Symmetry wrote:saxitoxin wrote: In this thread we're trying to figure out how the world can advance social justice and give Europe a helping hand up.
There's a fair bit of resistance from within the EU to that kind of US interference. The EU-nuchs kind of argue that they tend to get shafted when it comes to these transactions.
The Eunuchs, essentially, don't have the balls to ask for yank assistance. I think the US is doing a fair bit to massage the world economy, but I don't see this having a happy ending unless Europe is willing to pay a bit more. You'd think things would be hard enough in the EU for them to stop acting like asses and ask for the US to reach around the obstacles and offer a bit of a helping hand.
I'm sure that some of the discomfort, part of which is surely a kind of phobia about the discomfort felt in dealing with the US, would be helped if the US was a bit more slick in how it approached the EU.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
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			saxitoxin wrote:I didn't have time to read your entire speech

















		saxitoxin wrote:Symmetry wrote:saxitoxin wrote: In this thread we're trying to figure out how the world can advance social justice and give Europe a helping hand up.
There's a fair bit of resistance from within the EU to that kind of US interference. The EU-nuchs kind of argue that they tend to get shafted when it comes to these transactions.
The Eunuchs, essentially, don't have the balls to ask for yank assistance. I think the US is doing a fair bit to massage the world economy, but I don't see this having a happy ending unless Europe is willing to pay a bit more. You'd think things would be hard enough in the EU for them to stop acting like asses and ask for the US to reach around the obstacles and offer a bit of a helping hand.
I'm sure that some of the discomfort, part of which is surely a kind of phobia about the discomfort felt in dealing with the US, would be helped if the US was a bit more slick in how it approached the EU.
Differentiate the EU - which has been a US puppet since the European Commission was flooded with votes of US client states (in what Mitterand described as the "American Trojan Horse operation") like Poland, Ceska, Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania, etc. (recall the US was the biggest backer of their ascension, just like it is pressuring Turkey be allowed to join now) - from Europeans and I have no part with which to disagree with you.
US attempts to massage the world economy include the creation and expansion of the EU and are having a horrific impact on everyone while the US maintains relative wealth and stability. The only way Europe will escape their cycle of poverty - a poverty that is imposed from North America - is to make some attempt at unifying in a legitimate manner, not the hilarious front group called the EU. They had many chances from the 1940s to 1980s to do so and rejected all of them, bought-off by buying-into the romantic vision of their own poverty and the fiction of their independence. In that sense they've sealed their own fate and I have little sympathy for them now.



		General_Tao wrote: Actually, there has been plenty of US aid in Europe, directed towards former eastern block countries like Poland, the CR or Bulgaria, who do need this help. Those are the countries that depress EU averages.
General_Tao wrote: Germany exports more goods and services than the US, a country four times its size. That`s a lot of manufacturing jobs there.
Symmetry wrote:I think the EU would like to see a bit more romance when it all comes down to the actual business. Instead, we end up with Santorum and all that shit. He basically argues that Europe is dying, and has no sympathy, yet he is the direct product of this whole thing.
People look at things like that and feel disgusted, perhaps a little irrationally.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
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		General_Tao wrote:Let me make things simple for you saxi:
General_Tao wrote:"the methodology is the same across OECD countries, so you have a valid platform for comparing across countries"
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
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			saxitoxin wrote:The five highest nations by median income according to the OECD were in 2007:
1 Luxembourg 34,407
2 United States 31,111
3 Norway 31,011
4 Iceland 28,166
5 Australia 26,915
You had a good run and made a good effort, kiddo, but now you're just throwing anything against the wall you can get your hands on, hoping something will stick to ideate this Hollywood image you have of European craftsmen cobbling away in family shops, lunching on marzipan squares and spending their weekends climbing the Matterhorn. Run along now as the grown-ups would like to have a chat. There's a good lad.

















		General_Tao wrote:saxitoxin wrote:The five highest nations by median income according to the OECD for the last year data was available:
1 Luxembourg 34,407
2 United States 31,111
3 Norway 31,011
4 Iceland 28,166
5 Australia 26,915
fixed. Those BTW were also PPP-adjusted income figures. I don't think the raw figures with today's exchange rates ($1.41/Eur) give you the same rankings...
I grew up in Europe.
How long did you live there? I would guess the usual "if it's tuesday it must be Brussels" tour?
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
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			General_Tao wrote:BBS, Norway and other European countries are not "freeriders". Their people are smart enough to know that there is no need to spend the equivalent of one third of government revenue on the military to defend themselves against some people living in caves in Afghanistan. Put differently, the military-industrial complex in Europe is not as big or as good at brainwashing and scaring its citizens.

















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