Please tell me, why should we grow an economy and who should benefit from a growing economy?
The first question is a very interesting one. I think fundamentally, it comes from our desire as humans to improve ourselves. This, together with competition (both with others and with ourselves), drives the desire for growth. This is true for kids wanting to be on the starting team, to teens wanting to get the highest grades, to adults trying to provide the best for themselves and their families. Nothing new there, but just some context.
Specifically, growing an economy provides employment and reduces unemployment. Extra taxes can be raised to fund public serices and the mood of the people is generally "good".
The second question is difficult to answer and I say that not wanting to avoid the question, but rather, again, it depends. Like most things in live, the amount of money people get paid is never going to be fair, for everyone. There are those who happen to be at the right place at the right time and who get lucky. I would recommend Malcolm Gladwell's book Outliers - it's a great read on this topic.
For most people though, we get paid what the market can bear. For employees this generally comes down to individual skills (the level and market demand for same) and the profitability / solvency of their employer. For those in the private sector, this comes down to the profitability of their employer, for those in the public sector, it comes down to the current level of spending, raising taxes or borrowing. At some stage for either, there are limits to what can be paid before either goes down the swanney.
For a growing economy, we should expect to see wages (in the main) increasing. The breakdown of how much of the extra money goes to workers and how much goes to the owners is always going to be difficult to assess. Again, the market helps here - those with the best skills (experience, marketability) will tend to be rewarded more. It is up to the owner to decide on how much to allocate to wages. If they don't spend enough their people will leave (unless they can't get something better somewhere else, which is the case for a lot of people but they won't admit it!).
Just because an economy is growing should not mean that all wages should rise however, and certainly not by the same amount. If there were to happen we sould have equality of outcome and we certaily don't want this unless we want to live in a communist / solcialist utopia.
The government could borrow to build or buy houses for the homeless.How would borrowing remove homeless people from the streets?
I'm sorry to bring public sector wage rises into this again, but it is for illustrative purposes as this wage demand is obviously current. According to Colm McCarthy, if the increases given to the Gardai recently were replicated across the public sector, it would require 1bn or more in spending. Let's instead say this money went into housing for the homeless. According to Daft, the average price of a house in Dublin is 314,311. 1bn buys 3,182 houses per year. According to the Peter McVerry Trust, there are 6,709 homeless people in Ireland. This figure includes 2,426 children, so it's probably 4,283 adults & families. This means that instead of increasing wages in the public sector, we could eradicate homelessness in 2 years, plus the State would own the houses outright. You might argue that that level of purchasing would increase prices, but if you offered any builder 315k for a development of 6,000 houses I'm sure you'd get them built.
http://www.independent.ie/opinion/c...l-lead-to-fresh-fiscal-disaster-35191635.html
http://www.thejournal.ie/house-prices-rising-across-the-country-2-2860216-Jul2016/
https://www.pmvtrust.ie/news-media/facts-and-figures/
Edit: Can you please remove your 3rd sentence in post #299 ?
Do you expect private sector workers to pay deposits on housing? Or are you talking about state agencies implementing a housing development plan? Or other?
I'm genuinely not sure where this question comes from or what it means. If you wish to expand further, I will gladly reply.
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