Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (Full Version)

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Fightdirecto -> Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (9/29/2011 12:25:54 PM)

National Public Radio Transcripts

quote:

INTERVIEWER: While President Obama travels the country pushing his jobs bill, Republicans insist the White House wants to raise taxes on what they call job creators, to pay for the bill. These days, House Speaker John Boehner often remarks: Job creators are on strike.

Representative JOHN BOEHNER: I can tell you the American people - the private-sector job creators - they're rattled by what they've seen out of this town over the last few years.

INTERVIEWER: So with all the talk of job creators, who, exactly, are they? To help us answer that question, we're joined by Justin Wolfers. He's a professor of business and public policy at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School. Welcome to the program.

Dr. JUSTIN WOLFERS: Melissa, a pleasure to be here.

INTERVIEWER: And Justin, how would you define job creators in the current economy?

WOLFERS: What's funny about that Boehner quote is, I think we used to call them - employers. So obviously, there's some political rhetoric here. But, you know, it depends where we are in the business cycle. Right now, there's a lot of hiring going on, for instance, in health, professional business services. And actually, manufacturing has been one of the bright spots as well.

INTERVIEWER: Which is interesting because for so many months, manufacturing jobs were declining. And now there's a little bit of an upturn, right?

WOLFERS: Well, not only so many months, so many years - and in fact, so many decades. So the fact that there's actually increases in hiring going on, increases in the number of jobs in manufacturing going on, is actually historically unusual.

INTERVIEWER: We hear a lot about small businesses being the engine of job growth in that - country. How true is that?

WOLFERS: Categorically false.

INTERVIEWER: Really?

WOLFERS: Yeah. In the United States right now, the latest numbers suggest there are about 6 million firms with paid employment. Ninety percent of those are small businesses, which means they have, you know, 20 or fewer employees. Those 90 percent of all firms only make up 20 percent of all jobs. So while there's lot of businesses, there's not a lot of jobs in small business.

INTERVIEWER: Does that depend, though, on how, exactly, you define small business? Because a lot of the numbers coming from the government refer to businesses of 500 workers or fewer, and they say two-thirds of all new jobs are created by those small businesses.

WOLFERS: So it sounds like - I'm actually not aware of the statistic you're referring to. The general sense of what I was just telling you, that small businesses are most businesses but very few jobs, is true no matter what the definition is. I think there is no ordinary sense of the word small business that includes firms with 500 employees. It just doesn't make sense. I regard that as a huge firm - and it would be an enormous factory, for instance...

INTERVIEWER: Interesting, too, that a lot of small businesses are so small that it's essentially one person. It's maybe an independent corporation, or someone who's self-employed could be a small business?

WOLFERS: Yeah. And so this is actually one of the parts where the rhetoric of small business, I think, really leads us astray. If you actually look at the data, what we mean by small businesses, what they actually are, they're things like real estate agents or my hairdresser. They're lawyers; they're doctors. You talk to these folks, do they have any interest in innovating or bringing new products to market or any of the things we think of as being the engine of economic growth? The answer is no. My dry cleaner likes to take my clothes and then give them to me four days later. Most small businesses don't even have ambitions of being the engines of economic growth, or the engines of jobs.

I am "President" of a small business - an LLC (Limited Liability Corporation). I have one full-time employee - me. I have three contract employees (a piano player, a bass player and a drummer) and have no need for any other employees. But, according to the GOP, because I am "President" of a small business - I'm a "private sector job creator".

Don't know whether to laugh - or cry...




farglebargle -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (9/29/2011 1:17:06 PM)

Cry.




erieangel -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (9/29/2011 1:30:57 PM)

I work for a GOP-defined "small" business of about 300 employees.  And guess what, they've been laying people off. 




willbeurdaddy -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (9/29/2011 1:36:31 PM)

If this is indicative of his level of thought then don't listen to him on anything.


"INTERVIEWER: We hear a lot about small businesses being the engine of job growth in that - country. How true is that?

WOLFERS: Categorically false.

INTERVIEWER: Really?

WOLFERS: Yeah. In the United States right now, the latest numbers suggest there are about 6 million firms with paid employment. Ninety percent of those are small businesses, which means they have, you know, 20 or fewer employees. Those 90 percent of all firms only make up 20 percent of all jobs."

The statistics, even if it categorized "small business" properly, does not address the issue of small business job creation. DUCY?




joether -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (9/29/2011 1:47:13 PM)

To start with, its important one has the Proper Defination of a small business in America. Its not a One-Size-Fits-All. Some of the OP's quotes come in-part from The Christian Science Monitor. That article actually contains some really good numbers. Such that the number of small businesses that report paying a wage directly to the owner of the company (The company's owner is quite literally the 'Da Boss').

It helps if people actually took the time to Read the Bill rather than blindly and/or obediently accept talking points from either political party. Like it or not, that bill is currently on 'the table', structured to help a considerable number of Americans immediately and potentially create better economic states across the nation as times progresses. The document doesnt explain what a small business *is* and *isnt* as its authors foolishly believe most Americans are already educated on the definations relating to small businesses that operate in America.





erieangel -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (9/29/2011 1:49:19 PM)

One of the major problems, as I see it, is that the GOP and the Dems have different definitions of just how large as small actually is.




farglebargle -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (9/29/2011 5:02:05 PM)

20% of Small Business can't "Create Jobs" ( i.e.: "Hire Employees") fast enough to offset the 80% of NOT Small Business who is laying of thousands and thousands of employees.

And those NOT Small Businesses? They're essentially unregulated...




Edwynn -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (9/29/2011 5:28:35 PM)



Privately run prisons.

A growth industry if ever there was one. But we were led to believe that the cocaine-importing Reagan was only implementing the policy of harsher sentencing and sending 18 yr. old kids to 3-5 yrs. in prison to teach them the important things in life at an impressionable age as some response in efforts to "the War on Drugs/War on Crime."


Uh huh.


No wonder so many people want guns now.








mnottertail -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (9/29/2011 5:32:53 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: willbeurdaddy

The statistics, even if it categorized "small business" properly, does not address the issue of small business job creation. DUCY?



Having proved unremittingly your innumeracy many times, UR not going to be other than laffed at, DUCY?




Fellow -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (9/29/2011 6:55:20 PM)

It is no news jobs are created all the time. Jobs are also eliminated at the same time. In macroeconomic sense it would be better to speak about net job creation. I have read during last 10 years the private sector has not generated any net jobs. The net job growth has been only in the government sector. The last kept G.W. Bush presidency unemployment figures down. At the same time ca 40,000 factory jobs moved abroad. This indicates the US economy has structural problems and without addressing these, and just throwing some money into the system, the progress is in doubt. The first Obama stimulus results gave some data to think about.




Sanity -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (9/30/2011 6:19:35 AM)

FR -

Obama's jobs bill can't get through Democrat-controlled senate...




farglebargle -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (9/30/2011 6:31:15 AM)

Yes. That's because the Republicans in the Senate aren't going to vote for it because their partisan loyalties get in the way of them doing the right thing.

This surprises you exactly how?




Sanity -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (9/30/2011 7:27:41 AM)


Did the words "Democrat controlled Senate" not get through your blinders? [:D]




Sanity -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (9/30/2011 7:34:11 AM)


Something else that will never make it through your blinders is the fact that this isnt a jobs bill, this is a raise taxes bill - and even Obama is on record saying that you dont raise taxes in a recession

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aufAtuTwKlE








NeedToUseYou -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (9/30/2011 11:00:55 AM)

Ummm, successful small businesses eventually aren't small businesses anymore.

So, take google, which was a small business at one point, Well that small business eventually resulted 10's of thousands of jobs, however, apparently they want to ignore the numbers after it hits 500 employee cap, or 20 or whatever.

Microsoft was a small business, Apple was a small business, Cisco was a small business. The company that owned the factory I worked in started in a guys basement, of course it grew, then was bought buy a larger corp.

Obviously if you don't count the numbers after 20 employees it will look as if the cumulative total of small business job creation is less than a mature corp.

I really don't know how people don't get that, megacorps generally take decades to grow, and a large fraction of the time they started as sub 20 employees, and almost everytime as sub 500 employees.

Anyway, that whole interview is retarded, it ignores the seed, and is trying to focus on the tree.

Look the tree is bigger, seeds suck they are small, what good is that... LOL. sarcasm










willbeurdaddy -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (9/30/2011 12:19:15 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: NeedToUseYou

Ummm, successful small businesses eventually aren't small businesses anymore.

So, take google, which was a small business at one point, Well that small business eventually resulted 10's of thousands of jobs, however, apparently they want to ignore the numbers after it hits 500 employee cap, or 20 or whatever.

Microsoft was a small business, Apple was a small business, Cisco was a small business. The company that owned the factory I worked in started in a guys basement, of course it grew, then was bought buy a larger corp.

Obviously if you don't count the numbers after 20 employees it will look as if the cumulative total of small business job creation is less than a mature corp.

I really don't know how people don't get that, megacorps generally take decades to grow, and a large fraction of the time they started as sub 20 employees, and almost everytime as sub 500 employees.

Anyway, that whole interview is retarded, it ignores the seed, and is trying to focus on the tree.

Look the tree is bigger, seeds suck they are small, what good is that... LOL. sarcasm





It only took about 10 posts for somebody to "CY" Wolfers didnt really address the question. Gold Star for NTUY!




mnottertail -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (9/30/2011 12:35:25 PM)

All cute and stupid and shit, but we are pretty much talking about today, not what was years ago or shall be at some future time.

DUCY?




gman992 -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (10/4/2011 10:56:29 PM)

People who have dreams, ideas, goals, and motivation...




Termyn8or -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (10/4/2011 11:38:51 PM)

FR

None of youse people understand anyfuckingthing. I will splain it ONE MORE TIME just for posterity because if you didn't get it the last ten fucking times you never will. But there may be new members or visitors looking on.

There has been no real job creation in this country, what people think is, is just internal bullshit. You see when "we" do things for ourselves we are doing nothing but pushing the same fucking pile of money around. Real job creation means designing, manufacturing and building something that will sell to people in other countries. This is necessary as long as we buy things from other countries. DO YOU UNDERSTAND ? We cannot keep buying without eventually selling SOMETHING TO THEM, NOT TO OURSELVES.

The GDP is a lie, it is a product that we ourselves consume. This is pushing the same pile of money around. We need new money, money from someone else. Consider a poker game with five old Men. If no new mopney comes in it is just a game, some new money must come in whether by their SS checks or something, or the game means nothing, like playing with chips, but without having to buy them. It means NOTHING, do you understand ? So as we play pinochle for a penny a point the Chinese, Indonesians, Belgians, Germans and almost everyfuckingbody else is skimming our pot and we supposedly have no fucking clue as to what to do about it.

Know why ? Because CERTAIN PEOPLE have taken over and destroyed our educational system. CERTAIN PEOPLE have monopolized our media and government. CERTAIN PEOPLE have taken this country over, and they don't give a fuck about us because they don't give a fuck about any host.

Infer what you like now, but before you get pissed, look carefully at what I wrote.

T^T




Edwynn -> RE: Who actually are the "Job Creators"? (10/19/2011 6:59:01 PM)



Look at this too, Termy.

It's been a world game since ships sailed, and that was long ago. China was hell bent on isolationism, and succeeded greatly in that regard, and look where it has gotten them. They had no good answer for the multitude of invasions from the two Boxer rebellions, had no good answer for Japan, ....  they just freakin' gave up and turned it over to some nutcase named Mao. And they outnumbered everybody else by a wide margin in every case.


That is where isolationism get's you, eventually. It's like incest, on an economic and cultural scale.

Germans and Scandinavians and other-Europe deals with the same thing. The whine and whimper somewhat less in that regard. The French are still the funniest though, no question.



















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