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Sunday, 03.04.2011.

15:54

“Slow, uneven development main problem”

United Regions of Serbia (URS) leader Mlađan Dinkić stated Sunday that Serbia had a lot of problems, and that the two key ones were slow and uneven development.

Izvor: Tanjug

“Slow, uneven development main problem” IMAGE SOURCE
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pre 13 godina

"The very essence of free market capitalism is unevenness."
(Lazar, 3 April 2011 17:00)

True. While socialsm is evenness, making everything equal. But in this case, it's about taxes collected by the STATE that are NOT evenly distributed when the major part goes to the Belgrade region, unproportional to the number of people living there. This is not at all connected to 'free market capitalism', but it's simply a state centralism policy. State regulation would be sending MORE money to poorer regions. But here, it's quite the opposite: The state pushing the unevenness even more.

Lazar

pre 13 godina

The very essence of free market capitalism is unevenness. Heck, it's even worse... a key characteristic of capitalism is class based segregation. It goes on to regions too... so Dinkic clearly does not understand that the problem is not in segregation of wealth or the distribution of it... the problem is with the system that he is advocating, as these things are almost necessarily part of that system. Hence he is a hypocrite.

Now, yeah, people can say oh but the state can come in and regulate stuff. Well, Dinkic is not that kind of guy. He supports neoliberalism, a system under which the state has minimal influence in the economy. So, the guy's clearly a nutcase, as is the current government and part of the opposition.

Top

pre 13 godina

"The very essence of free market capitalism is unevenness."
(Lazar, 3 April 2011 17:00)

True. While socialsm is evenness, making everything equal. But in this case, it's about taxes collected by the STATE that are NOT evenly distributed when the major part goes to the Belgrade region, unproportional to the number of people living there. This is not at all connected to 'free market capitalism', but it's simply a state centralism policy. State regulation would be sending MORE money to poorer regions. But here, it's quite the opposite: The state pushing the unevenness even more.

Lazar

pre 13 godina

The very essence of free market capitalism is unevenness. Heck, it's even worse... a key characteristic of capitalism is class based segregation. It goes on to regions too... so Dinkic clearly does not understand that the problem is not in segregation of wealth or the distribution of it... the problem is with the system that he is advocating, as these things are almost necessarily part of that system. Hence he is a hypocrite.

Now, yeah, people can say oh but the state can come in and regulate stuff. Well, Dinkic is not that kind of guy. He supports neoliberalism, a system under which the state has minimal influence in the economy. So, the guy's clearly a nutcase, as is the current government and part of the opposition.

Lazar

pre 13 godina

The very essence of free market capitalism is unevenness. Heck, it's even worse... a key characteristic of capitalism is class based segregation. It goes on to regions too... so Dinkic clearly does not understand that the problem is not in segregation of wealth or the distribution of it... the problem is with the system that he is advocating, as these things are almost necessarily part of that system. Hence he is a hypocrite.

Now, yeah, people can say oh but the state can come in and regulate stuff. Well, Dinkic is not that kind of guy. He supports neoliberalism, a system under which the state has minimal influence in the economy. So, the guy's clearly a nutcase, as is the current government and part of the opposition.

Top

pre 13 godina

"The very essence of free market capitalism is unevenness."
(Lazar, 3 April 2011 17:00)

True. While socialsm is evenness, making everything equal. But in this case, it's about taxes collected by the STATE that are NOT evenly distributed when the major part goes to the Belgrade region, unproportional to the number of people living there. This is not at all connected to 'free market capitalism', but it's simply a state centralism policy. State regulation would be sending MORE money to poorer regions. But here, it's quite the opposite: The state pushing the unevenness even more.