Level playing fields are systems where your parents success has ZERO effect on you personal success, and where your previous success has ZERO effect on your continued success. Mainly the rich get richer, and the poor get poorer. America may be the land of opportunity, but you are blind if you think the playing field is level.
A true level playing field would have to be socialistic wouldn't it? The upward mobility in this country is good(I think I read it's about the same as the UK, which is probably about the same as most of the western world(that includes Australia)) and I think could be a lot better except a lot of people are happy living in a trailer and eating bologna.
I don't think the metrics used to measure social mobility factor in how much a particular person can move up once they do move. I think it only measures the likelihood that someone will move up.
If you created a social mobility index that factored in the amount which one changes their socio/economic standing, I'm sure the US's would fair much better than most of Europe or Australia. I'd dare say it'd do better than all of them.
The rich get richer in this country because the producer's are allowed more reign than in some other countries. There's not an appointed few of rich people who get to stay in the "rich club" and enjoy more riches. There's a lot of turnover among the rich(or at least new members to the club). There are new rich people in America every day.
And the poor get poorer mostly on account of their own decisions. (I said mostly, I'm not unsympathetic to lower classes since that's where I come from)
People still come to the US from other countries and do well. Really well. The ones who come here and want to work hard and get rich have a really good chance compared to other countries they would go to. The ones who want to sit around and complain about others getting too rich will never get ahead. They will continue to get poorer.
No it's called cheap debt. Where customers spend beyond their ability to earn because debt is freely available. Mainly caused in America by a profligacy of cheap mortgage debt that bouy's consumer spending, which, as I discuss above, has ended in large government buyouts that further screw your poor, and inflate the wealth of your rich, skewing that "level playing field" even further.
People have had it pretty well in America for quite a long time, quite a while before we went completely apeshit with going into debt. The credit insanity of the American consumer seems to be pretty well correlated to the rise of China and their willingness to buy our debt. China needs a rich country to buy their cheap, crappy products and the US consumer is always happy to take on more crappy stuff that they don't need.
Chinese debt buying and export to US + cheap, easy money because of low interest rates(which 9/11 had a lot to do with) + lack of laws to prohibit all the crazy shit that went on in the financials = our current crisis
I agree with hellblazer mostly. I just think not intervening in the market at this point in time would have worse consequences. A depression caused by not intervening is more likely than hyper-inflation caused by intervening. I'm guided more by pragmatism than by principle.