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billvon 3,107
Ah. Well, the tax cuts worked well then. We're in great shape. No problems with the debt.
And to think you were worried.
ShcShc11 0
QuoteQuoteQuoteYeah? How's that been working out, the last 3 years?
The stimulus enacted by Obama in 2009 were inadequate to plug a U.S output gap of 3 trillion+ $.
The comment was in response to government spending creating jobs - care to respond in light of that?
The stimulus stopped the hemorrhagic economy from freefalling, but too small to bring anything near to full-employment.
mnealtx 0
Quote>Revenues up, jobs down. Your logic seems to be a bit off center.
Ah. Well, the tax cuts worked well then. We're in great shape. No problems with the debt.
And to think you were worried.
Way to play the ball and not the player, Mr. "Moderator".
I love you, Shannon and Jim.
POPS 9708 , SCR 14706
Coreece 190
QuoteQuote>Lower tax rates do not always equal less money.
Nor does government spending always equal more debt.
I never claimed it did - why do you always have to use strawman arguments, bill?
Those aren't strawmen, they are billvonian analogies. (out of left field comparisons that leave you with a hairy eyeball.)
He uses them fairly often. I actually coined the term back in 2009:
http://www.dropzone.com/cgi-bin/forum/gforum.cgi?post=3545442;search_string=billvonian%20analogies;#3545442
ShcShc11 0
QuoteQuote>Revenues up, jobs down. Your logic seems to be a bit off center.
Ah. Well, the tax cuts worked well then. We're in great shape. No problems with the debt.
And to think you were worried.
Way to play the ball and not the player, Mr. "Moderator".
I'm just curious. What are your thought processes behind this? Do you not know that the stimulus 2009 consisted in large-part of tax cuts?
Are you willing to bring any numbers?
Cheers!
Shc
mnealtx 0
QuoteThe stimulus stopped the hemorrhagic economy from freefalling, but too small to bring anything near to full-employment.
Then why the huge difference from other recessions?
I love you, Shannon and Jim.
POPS 9708 , SCR 14706
ShcShc11 0
QuoteQuoteThe stimulus stopped the hemorrhagic economy from freefalling, but too small to bring anything near to full-employment.
Then why the huge difference from other recessions?
Because by comparing the 2008-2009 crisis as being any similar to previous recession shows a lack of understanding what truly happened.
When 3 out of 4 major banks are in crisis mode and they hold [B] SEVENTY-PERCENT of American assets, then you are in crisis mode.
I'm sure that even you, mr. Mike, would have realized that.
ShcShc11 0
I'l bring my charts.
The 2008 crisis had two distinct effects on spending.
1) It was obviously the housing bubble during the "Bush boom" where housing investment went down big time.
2) Consumers increased their savings ... dramatically thus reducing and slowing the economy (see the picture)
The difference was approximately six percent of USA's GDP. In terms of ACTUAL spending contained in the stimulus bill, it was approximately 1.3 to 1.5 percent of GDP.
Its like getting a squirt gun out to take out the fire.
mnealtx 0
QuoteQuoteQuoteThe stimulus stopped the hemorrhagic economy from freefalling, but too small to bring anything near to full-employment.
Then why the huge difference from other recessions?
Because by comparing the 2008-2009 crisis as being any similar to previous recession shows a lack of understanding what truly happened.
When 3 out of 4 major banks are in crisis mode and they hold [B] SEVENTY-PERCENT of American assets, then you are in crisis mode.
I'm sure that even you, mr. Mike, would have realized that.
And that crisis mode was mostly over by the end 1Q 2009, after TARP and the first bailouts.
I love you, Shannon and Jim.
POPS 9708 , SCR 14706
ShcShc11 0
QuoteQuoteQuoteQuoteThe stimulus stopped the hemorrhagic economy from freefalling, but too small to bring anything near to full-employment.
Then why the huge difference from other recessions?
Because by comparing the 2008-2009 crisis as being any similar to previous recession shows a lack of understanding what truly happened.
When 3 out of 4 major banks are in crisis mode and they hold [B] SEVENTY-PERCENT of American assets, then you are in crisis mode.
I'm sure that even you, mr. Mike, would have realized that.
And that crisis mode was mostly over by the end 1Q 2009, after TARP and the first bailouts.
Well no.
1) End Q1 2009, the banks were probably in their make-it or break-it stage. We have to remember citi hit 1$ (from 50$) April 2009 and is still doing it fairly pitifully
2) The American banks, even to this day in 2012, are still extremely vulnerable to any shocks (the most obvious and deadly one would be Europe's situation).
That said, you have to look at the 6% output gap that was caused by the housing bubble and by Lehman Brother's bankruptcy. You can't fill that 6% output gap by slashing spending.
ShcShc11 0
Let's take for example two bubbles under two different Presidents:
Here is the public + private debt in comparison to the GDP.
In the chart, you can visibly see the tech bubble during the Clinton era and the housing bubble during the Bush era.
In general, most people didn't buy dotcom with burrowed money where it contrasts to the housing bubble because the private sector did in fact burrow an outstanding amount of money. When the bubble burst due to the housing crisis, the private sector had to immediately reduce their debt and undergo deleveraging. The economy was put at a stop.
The 2008-2009 shock is just that much bigger than any of the other recessions the U.S has experienced previously (up until the 1930s).
...
Another thing that people should look up is the liquidity trap. The monetary policy is at near 0 bound, which means people can borrow at a very very very (historically low) cost. If the economy is lagging in spite of the 0 bound rate, then we have a liquidity trap.
The other time where there was truly a major liquidity trap was in the 1930s with the Great Depression.
Read:
http://www.voxeu.org/index.php?q=node/4227
Outside of the U.S, Japan 1990 lost decade provides a good example too. They too focused heavily by cutting spending and the 90s are now dubbed as the "lost decade" for Japan.
Cheers
Shc
billvon 3,107
An excellent dodge when you're out of logical answers!
But no worries. Conservatives who push "it's not taxes - IT'S ALL SPENDING!" neatly balance out the democrats who push "it's not spending - THE RICH DON'T PAY ENOUGH!" And as long as you ignore those two sets of extremists you're left with the center, who will be able to consider a solution that will actually work.
QuoteWhat happened to Louis XVI, Czar Nicholas, Marie Antoinette etc. when people got pissed off about the lack of fairness in the system.
They ate cake?
Oh, wait....I'm heading in the wrong direction here.
I think we're all Bozos on this bus.
Falcon5232, SCS8170, SCSA353, POPS9398, DS239
>the inevitable for a year or two?
Dramatically increasing taxes AND dramatically reducing spending.
We're like a guy with an insane balance on his credit card who is paying $500 in interest a month. What does he do? He can't afford to pay those bills and keep his car! And why pay anything above the minimum if the balance is just going to go up and up?
The answer, of course, is:
1) stop spending money on the card even if you don't want to
2) pay off the card even if it means selling your car.
Just saying "well, I won't spend any more; then the problem will go away" won't work. Neither will "keep spending on the card and pay it off." Gotta do both.
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