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Re: The Stimulus Package
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Re: The Stimulus Package
Nice to know where my parent's money is going.
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Re: The Stimulus Package
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Re: The Stimulus Package
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Here's my question: Why are Chemistry and Physics required classes to graduate from high school, but Economics is not? Why can most high school seniors solve any basic chemical formula, but not balance a check book? Maybe there is something in keeping people uninformed. It creates the ability to tap in to these "feelings" arguments. |
Re: The Stimulus Package
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By the way, if you haven't noticed I've pulled out of the economic discussion in his thread. The reason being that I don't want to argue off of anything but results. Everyone is quickly jumping on Obama's back about his plan, even though nothing he has done so far has affected the economy whatsoever. The republicans had their chance to help the economy, but had a historic fail. The reason for the big fallout is the government not taking enough action and setting stricter regulations for the banks. The reason they didn't do that is because the republicans where over the government at the time, and allowed it to happen. |
Re: The Stimulus Package
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Also Fannie Mae was compensated by the government for every "bad loan" they acquired from loan originators (those asses are another topic), so literally we all helped to create this mess using our tax dollars. We can thank Barney Frank for that mess, who is a democrat and somehow got out of this entire debacle unscathed. Not every lender abided by the CRA, and while they lost out on immediate government incentives, those that didn't follow the act have proved to be more resillient in these times (Wells Fargo for example) but even these companis are getting hammered by the credit crunch because most large companies traditionally work on credit, not liquid assets. Now I'm not saying tat there weren't other factors (loan originators beign a big one), but the topic you posed is about regulation and making blind statements blaming one party or another doesn't help the matter. The fact is that regulation doesn't, the right kind of regulation helps. Also, more than one party was responsible for this debacle, so our discussion should be about IDEAS, not who came up with those ideas. Keep in mind FDR installed more regulations than one would care to remember, and also resided over the longest (8 years, and it was getting WORSE before WWII, not better) and most severe economic duldrum in American history. If we'e not careful, rushing to place blame and change the nature of economy can do far more harm than good. |
Re: The Stimulus Package
Back to the stimulus package, probably the biggest and most obvious mistake is the complete lack of any incentives for investment. Our stock market is down almost 50% and from what I've read there were ZERO credits or tax cuts for capital gains or anything else that would spur investment. We can see the effects of this ommission in how the market has reacted, IMO
Also, most the tax "cuts" appear to be credits based on specific qualifiers, which is a big mistake, IMO. Just let EVERYONE share in the relief, not just those with childen or kids in college. I may be wrong, but from what I understand tax credit monies are realized during the refund process making then work more like the useless stimulus checks we got last year. Tax CUTS would have put more money in the pockets of everyone on a regular basis, which makes them less "found money" and more of a manageable boost. Not only that, but I believe tax credits are a trick the government plays on you to give the impression that it's THEIR money, not YOURS. To me refundable tax credits are the equivalent and getting a Christmas present, then rewrapping it and giving back to the person who gave it to you with the thought they'll never notice. I may be wrong on this, though, as the recovery website was VERY vague about pretty much everything. |
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This idea of how to break out of a recession is nothing new. The results will be rather predictable: a short-term boost that sets our economy up for the next, inevitable, bust. |
Re: The Stimulus Package
Looks like Gov. Jindal is going to refuse some of the stimulus money. I am proud.
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Re: The Stimulus Package
The stimulus package tax breaks offers an extra $13 per paycheck on average through 2009...
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Stimul...-14422717.html Woohoo? |
Re: The Stimulus Package
I find that part to be an interesting theory....The idea being that if someone receives a $600 check, they'll probably save that and throw it right in the bank. But, if they have an extra 10 bucks, maybe they'll go out for dinner or a movie because it seems like a more frivolous amount it might turn into frivolous spending. A small step, but probably a good one.
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Re: The Stimulus Package
Gov. Jindal talks about the Stimulus Package on Meet the Press:
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I'm not a fan of tax payers receiving a big check once a year, for reasons I've talked about earlier, but I also don't think an extra $13 a week is going to help anyone pay their mortgage, spring for the extra bedroom addition they need or buy a new car. Stimulus is intended to stimulate the economy that makes work, and work creates jobs. I've been biding my time on judging the stimulus, hoping that it will work despite my philisophical objections, but I'm confident enough to say that this stimulus bill will fail. The more I read about this stimulus, the more I realize that it isn't one. Small businesses have receive little to no help (unless small business regularly give out huge bonuses and buy private aircraft), and they employ over half of Americans. The middle class has received little to no help. So far the only groups that have made out on any of these legislative actions are large corporations and those that don't pay taxes in the first place because they'll be receiving free money through "tax credits", and are very unlikely to create any jobs with only a few hundred dollars extra a year. There is NO stimulus to investment at all, and we see the results in how the stock market has reacted to the bill. Investment FUNDS our private enterprise and creates jobs, and it's been ignored. The housing bill aids those that entered into bad mortgages and speculated using risky loan products, but doesn't help people who signed good motgages but have been laid-off and are having trouble making payments. It's pathetic and rewwards people for making poor choices, rather than helping everyone in trouble across the board. You know what would help people pay these mortages? Keeping a lot more of their own money. Meanwhile small businesses and the middle class are left holding the bag, with the slim hope that public works projects will get the economy going again... the only problem is public works have NEVER improved the economy or created long term jobs, as illustrated in the Great Depression. It's just so frustrating to see such opportunity get squandered because politicians only care about private enterprise as far as their campaign contributions take them. It's either big business or no business when it comes to stimulus help... meanwhile storefronts in my area keep emptying and unemployment rises. |
Re: The Stimulus Package
Here we go!
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0209/19165.html If we won't let companies fail, we only enable more failure. LET THEM FAIL. The fact is whethere or not the assets they hold are toxic, they are worth a lot, and someone will purchase them and the company. If the government continues to enable this type of poor management, we will never see an organic, darwinistic reformantion of the financial sector. Every great success is the result of failure. Failure informs us, while not letting companies fail simply promotes medicrity or worse. Its actions like these that will EXTEND our recession, not improve it. |
Re: The Stimulus Package
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