• Tja@programming.dev
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    9 months ago

    Seems like a Canada problem, not a capitalism problem. Germany is a capitalist country where things are kind of okay. France is a capitalist country and they banned throwing away food that’s is still edible. Many countries tax residential properties that are empty, encouraging renting or selling them and fueling supply. There are easy and straightforward solutions to all of those problems. You just need to vote for people willing to implement them.

    And those are not tax havens or microstates, BTW. I’m talking about countries with 50+ Million people, a lot of immigration, and not even a lot of natural resources. For countries with oil look what Norway is doing. Also capitalist, BTW.

    • LadyAutumn@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      9 months ago

      Yeah, I specified in the first line that Germany is a socialist market economy. As are the Scandinavian countries to varying degrees. Those are not features of capitalism. Those are features of those specific countries. You could do away with market capitalism and still not throw away food, or leaving residential properties empty. Free market capitalism actually dictates that food and housing are private industries that should be controlled by private interests with little (or no) government oversight. Socialism is what says that those thing should be government regulated and that measures should be taken to ensure everyone has access to food and shelter.

      The socialist market economy is not the same thing as a capitalist free market. To be clear, I also believe that a socialist market is insufficient. Simply taking half or quarter measures to ensure people don’t starve to death and have homes isn’t enough either. A modest step in the right direction, but not what the end goal should be.

      • Tja@programming.dev
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        9 months ago

        It is an economy centered around capital, so a capitalist economy.

        And nobody is talking about half homes. You get something like 50m2 for the first person and 20m2 for each subsequent family member.

        • LadyAutumn@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          9 months ago

          That is not what capitalism is lol

          I said half measure not half homes. They could just, you know, provide homeless people with homes. Taxing property owners for not renting properties is doing pretty well nothing for people who are homeless and half no income. Over half a million Germans are homeless.

          Edit: I see where the half home confusion is coming from, that was a typo meant to say “have homes”.

            • LadyAutumn@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              9 months ago

              No, a market using currency does not make it capitalist. Capitalism is the free market. Capitalism is the economic ideology of private markets. Capitalism is the labor ideology of private ownership of the means of production. That one person can own a hundred factories and be entitled to the fruits of labor of those factories.

              A country is more capitalist the less government control of its free market. It is more capitalist the more privatized its industries are. It is more socialist the greater the government control of its markets are, and the more nationalized its industries are.

              Communist nations still use currency. Currency, or capital, has existed long before capitalism came into existence.

              If you want to know more there are plenty of freely available resources online that explain it in much grater detail than I will here.