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  1. #371

    Our literacy rate is one of the highest in the world Over 95%, i think. we have more college graduates than the entire population of Singapore..

    Quote Originally Posted by rickflag View Post
    -
    - Educate all children
    -

  2. #372
    Agree! This is good summary


    Quote Originally Posted by al1974 View Post
    Heyperwage theory says:


    But for now, let’s continue our survey of more ways by Hyperwage Theory elegantly handles non-economic problems.

    Rebellion
    The root of rebellion is injustice; the root of injustice is poverty. You solve poverty, you solve rebellion. No need for negotiation panels, no need for a strong army, no need for more armored trucks.

    Consider the current strategy of our government, how many billions spent over the last 30 years on a destructive war against our own people who only original sin was poverty?

    Think. If all those billions were released to the poorest of the poor in terms of minimum wage, and then subjected to the multiplier and accelerator effects, our economy will be in an upward spiral.

    This is the reason, I view our current strategy with the rebels as useless. The rebels are not even asking for P20,000 per month, but Hyperwage is giving it to them.
    Isn’t Hyperwage great?

    Employee forever?
    A bank manager does not want to be an employee forever. He is a prime candidate as an entrepreneur but he doesn’t have capital because his salary is just slightly above that of the domestic helper in Singapore, and all our equipments are purchased from Singapore and Taiwan and Hong Kong or Europe, all hyperwage countries, how can he start this own business?

    With Hyperwage, many middle managers will be able to save enough capital to pursue his own business dreams.

    Currently, you have to wait till you are 65 years old to retire and use your pension funds to start your own business. The prime of your productivity has long since elapsed.

    Export quality
    One furniture exporter told me his business will close down under Hyperwage. Of course, not. Right now, his export quality products are affordable only by the First World countries.

    Given Hyperwage, the domestic market will be as powerful as the export market. Does Intel or Microsoft export abroad to survive? No, they became successful in their own domestic markets.

    Why can’t it be the same for the furniture industry?

    Shift your minds. Don’t look at the expense side, look at the revenue side. You can increase both your volumes and your prices under a Hyperwage regime.

    And another non-economic benefit, our homes will have high quality furniture, unlike the current cheap ones we have.

    Hyperwage will build and expand not destroy the cottage industries and any other industry for that matter.

    All these benefits and above in just one single stroke. Give the worker their true value of labor based on world standards. Isn’t Hyperwage elegant?

    Medical care
    It costs about P5,000 for a normal delivery in hyperwage Hong Kong but about P50,000 here in this country? Why? I don’t know.

    The Hong Kong government has so much money from the taxes of the people who are paid at hyperwage salaries, and no corruption, such that they can subsidize medical care for the general public.

    And did I tell you their public hospitals look like four-star hotels?
    And for those who want private hospitals they can enroll for medical insurance, which they can afford because they have hyperwage salaries. Can you imagine our own country’s insurance industry boom under hyperwage?

    Our medicines are inordinately expensive compared to our incomes because they are invented and copyrighted and priced based on the pharma firm’s hyperwage costs. We are paying for these hyperwage-priced medical products (NMR machines, X-rays) using our Third World wages, isn’t this bad economic strategy?

    Public services
    I have written some time ago the time when one Christmas I entered the newly opened Hong Kong central library. I actually wept. I did not cry. I wept. It’s like a five-star hotel, with wall to wall carpeting, elevators, escalators, and interior decoration. Internet plug points are free if you bring your laptop or you can use their computers. The books are hardbound glossy book paper. Only the novels are paperbacks.

    Our people deserve such high quality of service as much as these Hongkongers do.

    With an economically empowered public, we will demand world-class service after all we will be paying world-class taxes too. In Hong Kong, income tax is maxed at only 15% even if you earn $1 billion.

    Political enrichment
    Actually, if you still don’t realize it, we are partially in Hyperwage status but only for the politicians with their travel expenses and huge allowances and kickbacks from the projects.

    This is grossly unfair, and the only way I see to correct this situation is to slice some of those extremely egregious allowances and give it back to the people in terms of high wages.

    Vote buying
    Speaking of politics, why do well our votes for a kilo of rice, or even for P500? Are we that poor such that we are willing to sell our political souls to the highest bidder?
    How are we addressing this issue?

    I think only Hyperwage will solve this problem realistically. Yes, realistically. An economically empowered people are usually morally upright people.
    I have to go now. More non-economic solutions next time. chool.

  3. #373
    Yes really good summary of the effect of the theory.. very logical, no loopholes.

    Quote Originally Posted by al1974 View Post
    Here are more non-economic but natural consequences of Hyperwage.

    Traffic
    I have always wondered why the First World countries such as Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, and European countries have lighter traffic jams. Yes, New York is a mess, Los Angeles is another mess but compared to Bangkok or Manila, their traffic jams are a minor event. In general, taxis in Hong Kong can speed up to 100 kph in the business district. Take a land trip across Europe and you will wonder where the people are.

    One way to reduce the traffic jams in Third World countries is to resort to Hyperwage. Sounds obtuse?

    Not really. Under a hyperwage regime, we will value our time and productivity. We will refrain from unnecessary trips. If it costs you P700 per day to maintain a messenger, you will think twice about keeping one. Instead, you will rely on intra-city couriers who will pick up and deliver your packages within the same day. Result: lesser traffic due to lesser number of in-house messengers.

    Also, since one can engage his time productively such as babysitting, unnecessary trips will be reduced.

    Taxi fares will be expensive, bus fares will be expensive and our personal times will be expensive (though still affordable given Hyperwage) leading to cost rationalization. In short, Hyperwage will tend to reduce traffic especially if the government can afford high speed trains and tunnels. After all, for every dollar given the minimum wage workers the entire economy gets five dollars assuming a multiplier of five.

    Reservation wage and indolence
    A reservation wage is threshold that will force the voluntarily unemployed to seek employment. Remember that some unemployment in Third World countries are voluntary. Why?

    To work across town, you need food, clothing and transportation expenses. But if wages in the factory are just about the same as these expenses, there is no incentive to work. It would be better to stay at home.

    Say, if the wages are only P4,000 per month, and your monthly expenses in going and coming from the factory is also P4,000, why bother? That is the reservation wage.

    Given Hyperwage, many of those who are voluntarily unemployed will be going to work. There will be no shortage of plumbers, carpenters, and electricians.

    In fact, those who are unskilled will be forced by the new economic situation to attend trade skills programs by the government.

    Who says the Filipinos are indolent. Is it because they are lazy or it is because of the reservation wage?

    How many wives are breadwinners because their husbands are unwilling to find work? In this way, the indolence of the husbands will be cured. Under a Hyperwage regime, he will learn plumbing because plumbers will be handsomely paid and could now afford to buy their own cars or yatchs.

    Rape, abuse and dignity
    I once interviewed a 50-year old male OFW operating heavy equipment. I said, “Frankly, even at your age, how many times have you been sodomized by your boss in the Middle East?”

    He was shocked I asked that question but he confessed: “There’s was nothing I can do about it. If I refuse, my daily life will be hard, and my boss can ship me out anytime.”

    How many women and men have been raped and sodomized and remained silent about it to avoid embarrassment?

    Everyday, our embassies and consulates are full of young women forced to do oral *** on their bosses, punched and whipped by the wives of their employees, their faces burned with sizzling flat irons.

    Yet, what is our government doing? If you survey our OFWs you will realize that our government is inutile when it comes to defending our OFWs. The ‘new hero’ slogan is a mere slogan. Our government is only interested in getting its share of fees, charges, and taxes.

    And I’m not being a cynic. This is the actual day to day experience of our abused OFWs.

    Our government “requests” the foreign companies or employers. If such abuse was perpetrated on a US citizen, the USA will “demand.”

    As poor citizens, we are not assertive enough to demand action from our government to demand action from the governments with abusive employers.

    Given Hyperwage, our citizens will find courage and assertiveness. Economically empowered citizens demand for better service from the government.

    Of course, our politicians don’t care. They get special treatment every time.

    Strategy of broken homes
    The government thanks the overseas migrant workers for their inward dollar remittances.

    Yet, despite the short term benefit to the economy in terms of government dollar reserves, what is the long-term effect of encouraging our people to leave this country?

    Broken homes, separated families, homesick fathers. The mother works as a sexually abused maid in Hong Kong.

    This is the strategy of broken homes ironically being perpetrated by the state.

    I know of one employer who places a camera inside the bathroom, and the maid knows about it but can’t do anything about it These are the kinds of abuses that they never tell their husbands back home.

    Back in the country, her daughter gets pregnant at 16, her son is into drugs, and her husband has a woman. This is very common among OFWs, that if these are your only problems, your fellow OFWs will simply ignore your complaints and continue their karaoke singing.

    You need to have a greater problem to catch their attention such a husband impregnating the daughter to be of value to the OFWs. This is the reality not seen by our families back in the country.

    Politics
    Why is it that our daily fare is political gossip? Because we have no business to run, no employment, and nothing to do. We consider politics as a way to climb up economically, via corruption obviously.

    Third World countries spend so much time politicking. In Hong Kong, during elections, about 50 to 75 positions are automatic because only one is running as representatives. In some districts nobody runs at all. This despite the salary of the of about half-million pesos a month (how many TVs can that buy per month given that TV prices in HKG and the Philippines are about the same anyway?)

    People with purchasing power usually have a reduced interest in politics.

    Petty crimes and corruption
    It’s very sad. You hear about people stealing telephone cables, rice kettles, manhole covers, and even street railings.

    You hear about police stopping foreigners for a pack of cigarettes, or a government clerk asking for P5.00 for a xerox copy of a government form that is supposedly free.

    Due to the very low wages, we sell our souls for a few pesos. We cannot obtain a permit with giving some grease money.

    And let me make this generalization: The poor people are not angry at high corruption but they are angry at petty corruption. The former does not affect them. Millions in kickbacks for fat contracts do not bother the citizens. It is the petty corruption at the local government units that angers the people.

    And petty corruption will be wiped out in a large way with Hyperwage. There is high crime in Singapore, Hong Kong or Japan, but the people in the street don’t care because there are no petty crimes.

    Yet, what is our solution to petty corruption? Large banners of “beware of fixers?” No sir, that is not the way. Hyperwage is the only viable solution. An economically-empowered citizens will be assertive enough to stand up to petty corruption and the government worker will not steep so low as to sell his morality and dignity.

    High corruption
    Large infrastructure contracts always mean high corruption in Third World countries. Yet, if the individuals comprising the bureaucracy will not sell their souls, high corruption will be minimized.

    Furthermore, if the wages of the workers are of hyperwage levels, there will be lesser money to corrupt because while the government official can get kickbacks from the materials, it would be difficult to get kickbacks from wages.

    Therefore, instead of kickbacks, the money goes to the workers as high wages. Before hyperwage, 40% goes to kickback because wages are low. Under a hyperwage regime, the kickback will only be 10% because the budget for labor is transparent.

    And the contractors cannot simply overprice the project otherwise the project will be more expensive than its American equivalent.

    Factor prices
    The economists are an amusing group. They always preach about paying for market price, that markets should be left alone. They call it factor prices or prices for the factors of production.

    Okay, what is the factor price for oil? Then all economies, rich or poor, have no choice but to pay for the world market price of oil. And the economists will tell you that a poor country like the Philippines should not tamper with market price and that we should pay that. They don’t even favor any form of subsidy. Indedd, they even add import duties, specific taxes, and VAT for oil.

    Now, what is the factor price for labor? We have a reference. In the US, the federal minimum wage by 2007 will be $7 per hour or about P3,000 per day at today’s exchange rates.

    Yet, what is the reaction of the economists when I say that we should pay workers using the factor price for labor in the world market which is P3,000 per day? (Actually, P20,000 per month works out to only P770 per day!!). They say, that’s impossible.

    I can’t even imagine the logic. We pay for market price for oil but we don’t pay for market price for labor. Is human labor of lesser importance than a mere commodity like oil?

    The computers, the cars, the mobile phones, the photocopy machines, printers, the control circuits all are produced in First World countries using hyperwage salaries. Their selling prices include hyperwage labor, and we are paying for these equipment.

    In other words, every day, we use imported equipment and machines and yet we claim we can’t afford hyperwage? Are you telling me that our businesses and the government can afford to pay the hyperwages of some foreigners who built these imported equipment but cannot afford to pay locally-made machines if hyperwage is imputed? Isn’t that reverse discrimination? Where is the logic of it all?

    Or is it because the government can afford to abuse its own people while at the same time protect the rights and pay the hyperwage of the foreigners who built the imported equipment?

    Is this what is called dignity of labor? Hyperwage is probably the most Christian of all economic theories. The Church should support it.

    Gini coefficient
    The Gini coefficient one way to measure the distribution of wealth. According to the world bank, the top 5% of the country owns 33% of the wealth. Surely, that is obscene.

    Yet given the current economic policies pursued by the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank and other poverty-alleviating banks the Gini coefficient has illustrated an increasing gap between the rich and the poor.

    Distribution of wealth
    What is the economic solution to the problem of extreme inequality in the distribution of wealth? Not much. Taxation is usually their answer. Very lame, very questionable solution. Taxation can be evaded, and in the hands of the government taxes can be corrupted.

    The only realistic solution is Hyperwage. Excessive profits at the expense of the dignity of the workers is injustice.

    And yet, the businesses should be concerned because all of these hyperwages will be spent by the minimum wage workers to buy own goods and service.

    Plus the economic multiplier. The government will be extremely happy with the quantum increase in the number of commercial transactions and the multiplier effect on our GNP.
    Isn’t hyperwage elegant? It solves poverty and unequal distribution of wealth and hundreds of non-economic problems with one single stroke. It is actually a cheap and efficient solution.

    Center of the intellectual universe
    I envy the capacity of the US as the center of the intellectual universe. Given our current economic policies, there is no way we can be such a center. No way.

    But with Hyperwage, there is hope.

    I dream of such a center. I will create a center for theoretical physics or mathematics or economics right in Panglao or El Nido. Those studies that don’t require heavy machinery, for a start. I will pay the Nobel Prize winners to come and stay for a year, and they can do all their thinking while scuba diving and lying in a hammock among the coconut trees.

    Given the same amount of salaries but with the ambience of the beach within walking distance from the center, will the Nobel Prize winners come?

    Yes! And they will teach in the local universities and hire research assistants.

    They only reason why the Philippines is not the center of the intellectual universe despite its beautiful landscape and weather is the lack of financial enticement for the intellectual giants to come and converge in the beaches of Boracay for a year or two. The internet has bridged the world but the low wages perpetrates the intellectual divide.

    Anyway, this is the only realistic way to stop and even to reverse the brain drain.

    How I wish. A home in the beautiful beaches of the Philippines for 1,000 intellectual giants in their own respective disciplines -

  4. #374
    Pareho ta sir, the more you read and think about Hyperwage, the more you wonder why NOBODY has thought of it before.


    Quote Originally Posted by tapsikret View Post
    im very much convinced about this hyperwage theory..
    i always listened to DYAB's aragnkada kanang kang leo lastimosa..
    it was there in DYAB that i first heard about this theory and the author gamely answered all questions thrown at him.. and i was convinced..

  5. #375
    Sir, I supposed you had biology and physics in high school.

    What do you mean theoretical only? Hyperwage is a theory used to explain an already existing event (the author repeated that many times)

    Its like Newton. He came up with a theory of gravitation to explain an already existing fact which is apples falling down to the ground.

    Did newton invent gravity? No!

    Did he invent a theory to explain gravity? Yes.

    Did betntulan invent hyperwage? no, hyperwage already exists in the First World countries. Did he invent a theory to explain why rich countries are rich? Yes.

    Yan ang logic nyan,. very clear, very real, very common sense, very self-evident.




    Quote Originally Posted by Tarmac View Post
    What I meant to ask was, has hyperwage transcended the realm of intellectual or theoretical discussion? Is there a third world country out there like the Philippines that has used it to claw out of poverty? To solve in "a single stroke" as the author says, their country's economic ills? And how many years did it take?
    Last edited by foolonthehill; 06-23-2009 at 07:58 PM. Reason: typo

  6. #376
    family planning jud ang need anah.. and education..

  7. #377
    yes the book is funny and intelligently done, that is why many read it despite the boring topic of economics. Did economic ever generate as much interest in us, than this theory? No. Econ is very boring, the book hYperwage makes economics alive in the way he writes.

    However, aside from being funny and intelligent, it really has a POINT. and that is the important deal. He has a point, one which is we should have seen all along all this time.

    When he explains how Hyperwage operates, he is NOT inventing hyperwage, He is merely describing how it is already being adopted in rich countries.

    He is explaining why rich countries are rich. ANd his answer: high wages of the poorest worker is what made these countries rich (compared to other countries)

    If you dont agree, try come up with your own reason? And then use your chosen reason to explain how it will help us become first world country DO it step by step liike the hyperwgge book

    how to solve \brain drain, low tax colelctsion etc.. can you one chose reason answer the problems like high purchasing power does?>

    Thats the test of whether your own theory is correct.

    So far hyperwage theory can explain how and why things happen in rich world and in poor worlds.



    Quote Originally Posted by unsay_ngalan_nimo View Post
    @ MR.Fool

    UP sir... ) im reeadint the articles.. im still at part 2 though.. eto lang masasbi ko as of the moment... the book is funny... and intelligently done but the author loves himself too much...

    dont worry im rereading your book... or mr.bentuka's book arther...

    has he presented the theory to econ journals? just asking.. i've searched for hium in the internet.. but i did not get anything except for DYAB something...

  8. #378
    The real causes of poverty in the Philippines are massive corruption, indiscriminate debt servicing, war, and economic mismanagement (poor government policies). These do more to affect the government's ability to bring economic opportunities to the people, and our productive capacity than anything else. Things like "overpopulation" are just scapegoats.

  9. #379
    Quote Originally Posted by mannyamador View Post
    The real causes of poverty in the Philippines are massive corruption, indiscriminate debt servicing, war, and economic mismanagement (poor government policies). These do more to affect the government's ability to bring economic opportunities to the people, and our productive capacity than anything else. Things like "overpopulation" are just scapegoats.
    do you think civil war would be the last option if its getting worst??
    i would certainly agree that this might happen because
    there are so much poverty in the philippines and corruption..

  10. #380
    maraming gutom dahil may swapang.

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