Comments on: Tech lobbyists: Spend $30 billion in tax dollars, get a million jobs
A new report by the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation suggests spending $30 billion on IT infrastructure would create or save 949,000 U.S. jobs.
A new report by the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation suggests spending $30 billion on IT infrastructure would create or save 949,000 U.S. jobs.
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It looks as if India is going to have another stellar year.
While it mentions 'innovations' as a result of such an investment, it appears as much thought went into the study as went into the reasons for the financial bailout.
And is it "fair" to use the police power of government to take my property (money) and give it to an industry that either is working on its own fine or cannot make it on its own?
He gave us NARFTA and "most favored nation" status with Communist China, there went the good paying middle class factory jobs!
Of course Bill Clinton sold out the very people who elected him and now he is a multi millionaire!
You can't buy a new home or a new car on a Walmart wage!
Walmart had the most to gain from these trade deals, and Hillary served on the Walmart Board.
Connect the dots!
If they REALLY want us to get out of this recession and avoid a depression - and I'm not so sure thats what the politicians want since this 'crisis' gives them the ability to seize more power over people's lives - then what the govt should definately NOT do is repeat all the same mistakes Hoover and FDR did which turned a run of the mill recession into the 'Great Depression'. So far it IS repeating them.
- by ajbright January 8, 2009 11:30 AM PST
- I've long argued that the money spent on the Iraq war could have overhauled the broadband infrastructure in the US.
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(14 Comments)What people have difficulty grasping here is that it isn't only IT jobs that get created. Cable doesn't lay itself, new buildings aren't made out of computers, the metals, plastics and other materials that are needed to create a new fiber network do not come from Google or Microsoft.
Besides the enormous number of non-IT related jobs created by something like a $1 billion per state investment in broadband infrastructure, besides the potential of hundreds of new entrepreneurs taking advantage of the new technology, faster internet speeds and therefore becoming yet another source of job creation, the knock on effect of creating hundreds of thousands of high paying tech jobs has nothing but good repercussions in any community that they exist.
Everything from the construction of new homes, remodeling of existing and refurnishing of both to things like buying groceries and eating out. Watching movies, gym memberships, baseball camps and tourism. All of them would be affected by creation of large numbers of high paying jobs, no matter what industry they come from.
But with the investment made in communications infrastructure, the US would then have a broadband network that can compete with countries like Japan and South Korea. If you like that the US has been a leader in innovation from everything like IT to Aerospace, this sort of thing is important.
It is important for our future that we build the best planes, we build the best computers, we build the best ships and cars. And while high speed broadband is hardly the cure-all for such things, it does have an indirect effect on many.