Take any subset of socialist countries of European Union and/or Canada Australia Japan and make any combination of countries that equal 300 million in population.
I’m not aware of any combination that exceeds USA in production, economic growth, unemployment levels, technological innovation, and standard-of-living.
For example, a hypothetical economic coalition of Japan+Germany+France+Britain would not exceed the USA, even though those 4 countries combined exceed the population of USA by ~30 million.
(I don’t know what the composite median income of those 4 countries would be; I didn’t have time to work out the math. In any case, that metric is not important to me.)
Many countries exceed America in standard of living. Assuming of course you include such common sense factors as lifespan, health and likelihood of being assaulted or murdered in that standard instead of just including material goods and ignoring everything else. As for unemployment levels I expect it depends how you count it; America isn’t remotely realistic about how it counts the unemployed.
It’s not important to you, but I consider it important. Is the average working person (in fact, the person exactly in the middle) better off with less government involvement? I’m not bringing up the poor because I don’t want to get into the “poor are lazy and undeserving” argument (that’s been covered in countless other threads).
Per capita GDP is not important to me because it tells us nothing about how a typical person is faring. For example, Bill Gates and 40 homeless bums in a room have a per capita GDP of 1 billion.
This is a bit of an empty game. What are your benchmark metrics. “Less regulation” really isn’t meaningful (never mind that you are presuming laissez faire capitalism is identical to extreme US Libertarianism. Proper laissez faire thought is not ideologically opposed to regulation), social safety net is virtually equally as vague and useless.
I would propose that if you’re seeking comparatives that some baseline index be used. For the purposes of what you want to compare, it would appear that the Heritage Foundation has an index that represents the general view point you think you’re engaging.
The EU is not “socialistic” - that is every bit as stupid as the OP’s vague framing.
As you will see in the Heritage Foundation ranking, several EU members rank quite well, indeed higher than the US
A good number of countries do better than the US in growth and overall standard of living.
What is an “economic coalition”? That’s pure nonsense. Randomly grouping countries together to add up GDP is a meaningless exercise. One could equally throw US into a basket with Mexico and randomly compare with some flattering EU subset to make an equally meaningless point. At least EU, or perhaps core EU is has some comparable characteristics.
There isn’t one simply because the US has the highest PPP of all non-oil producing “real” countries. Besides, I don’t see your point. The US GDP per capita outstrips all of the countries that have less free economies. Isn’t that proof enough?
Give me a break. Lots of sane people describe EU in broad brush strokes as “socialistic” with no negative connotations. That’s how I’m using it here. If there is no such thing as socialism on an absolute scale than that’s fine but EU is “more” socialistic than the USA. I don’t see much disagreement there.
We don’t need another “socialism” is a taboo word thread.
I was trying to emphasize the “combination”.
Does the word “hypothetical” have any meaning to you?
'More economically free" needs to be defined, measured and applied and corrected for.
Then, since the other countries are all not equivalent except from the standpoint of the undefined “economic freedom,” you will need to identify those pertinent differences and correct them through a regression analysis.
What you have done here is the equivalent of picking out 6 women and looking at their incomes, and then rating them according to “prettiness.” Upon finding that the “prettiest” didn’t have the highest income you attempt to draw a conclusion about “prettiness” and income while ignoring factors like education, geography, background, etc.
There’s a couple of other things you are doing wrong, but that should be enough to put a stake in the heart of your idea.
Don’t make me come back and cut off it’s head, bury at a crossroads with garlic and whatnot, 'kay?
Given that the US is a if not the leader of almost every industry in the world, I’m not sure what purpose is meant to be achieved by finding a second country with low taxes and less regulation.
Our median income is perverted by having a significant percentage of our population still recovering from hundreds of years of slavery, followed by segregation and discrimination for a further hundred. We have also always been quite willing to take in the poor, the hungry, the huddled masses yearning to breath free…which again lowers our median since they come in poor and take several generations to work up to an equal standing. We’re not as homogeneous a society as other nations. If you don’t account for that difference, you’re not going to get reliable results.
How does that compare to the cost of living in each country? I honestly don’t know which way that would influence the list, but the fact that you didn’t recognize the need to address it doesn’t speak well for your ability to make economic arguments.
However you want. You could use gross national income per capita, and then do a pareto index thingie.
I always liked refrigerators per capita. Works great except on eskimos.
Lifespan, general health, vacation time, public safety, bankruptcy rates all come to mind. To use an obvious example, you don’t find an epidemic of people in those supposedly inferior “socialist” countries ending up financially ruined due to health care costs.