The government should be more pro-small business - lower taxes and reduce restrictions for small businesses, mom-and-pop shops, and startups. It should also provide subsidies for startups and broader tax incentives to help businesses grow instead of burying them under regulations and costs.
When I see a new post from you I've come to know I will be reading a unique perspective. Thank you for not repeating what everyone else seems to be writing about.
3 "The government should be more pro-small business"? Why should it? It acquires and expands
its power by utilizing the accumulation (and concentration) of capital. The ruling class in China attempts to ridicule Marx's account:
"we can enjoy trhe author´s fluent writing styles, vivid and deteiled description, which will place
us in that specific period´s HISTORY ..."
(Capital, printed in the PRC, ISBN 978-7-5100-2129-9, Foreword). Whether the findings presented in Capital are relevant to the PRESENT DAY is something best left for each individual to discover
for themselves!
4 This book sets forth the logical development of capital as an economic object of study. Anyone wishing to understand how state apparatuses structure and regulate the competition among capitalist entrepreneurs will likely find the most pertinent insights right here: https://en.gegenstandpunkt.com/books/competition-capitalists
The reason I say we should be pro-small business is because, in China, it is also a way to maintain stability. You have to understand, if all the capital becomes concentrated in a few large corporations, like you said, maybe it becomes easier to manage and easier to control, but that also means more people lose jobs and more people face economic pressure. Their lives become controlled by those large corporations, and they lose that sense of freedom.
Being pro-small business gives more people options when they lose their jobs or when they simply do not want to work for big companies. They can start small businesses or do something on their own. For social stability and diversity, this is very useful.
In China, making money is important. Economic development is important. But stability is also very important. This may be difficult to understand in the Western world, but in China, maintaining stability and building a harmonious society is a very important topic.
The government should be more pro-small business - lower taxes and reduce restrictions for small businesses, mom-and-pop shops, and startups. It should also provide subsidies for startups and broader tax incentives to help businesses grow instead of burying them under regulations and costs.
When I see a new post from you I've come to know I will be reading a unique perspective. Thank you for not repeating what everyone else seems to be writing about.
thank you !!!!
1 A highly accurate depiction of the experiences.
2 There are many empirical examples illustrating the phenomenon described here:
CompuGroup Medical SE & Co. KGaA (also known as CGM) is a German publicly listed software company …
In 1992, Frank Gotthardt took over all the ordinary shares and merged Compudent with his company "Gotthardt Computer GmbH" in Koblenz, …
In the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Poland the company soon entered the field of hospital information systems.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CompuGroup_Medical
3 "The government should be more pro-small business"? Why should it? It acquires and expands
its power by utilizing the accumulation (and concentration) of capital. The ruling class in China attempts to ridicule Marx's account:
"we can enjoy trhe author´s fluent writing styles, vivid and deteiled description, which will place
us in that specific period´s HISTORY ..."
(Capital, printed in the PRC, ISBN 978-7-5100-2129-9, Foreword). Whether the findings presented in Capital are relevant to the PRESENT DAY is something best left for each individual to discover
for themselves!
4 This book sets forth the logical development of capital as an economic object of study. Anyone wishing to understand how state apparatuses structure and regulate the competition among capitalist entrepreneurs will likely find the most pertinent insights right here: https://en.gegenstandpunkt.com/books/competition-capitalists
The reason I say we should be pro-small business is because, in China, it is also a way to maintain stability. You have to understand, if all the capital becomes concentrated in a few large corporations, like you said, maybe it becomes easier to manage and easier to control, but that also means more people lose jobs and more people face economic pressure. Their lives become controlled by those large corporations, and they lose that sense of freedom.
Being pro-small business gives more people options when they lose their jobs or when they simply do not want to work for big companies. They can start small businesses or do something on their own. For social stability and diversity, this is very useful.
In China, making money is important. Economic development is important. But stability is also very important. This may be difficult to understand in the Western world, but in China, maintaining stability and building a harmonious society is a very important topic.