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Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
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Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
Hey Obama's giving a speech over there!
Its sure to be historic! But alas, this can't be good. Old expression that money can't buy happiness, I guess it also can't fix everything. |
Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
Dont you be asking us for any loans now.
And money can buy happiness. Notice how all the poor people are sad and rich people are happy? The only difference is that rich people are hollow inside. |
Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
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I've known several wealthy people in my day, and I have to say that as a whole they tend to be less happy than those of lesser means (but not poor). I think at both extremes money becomes stressful. If you're poor, you're struggling to get more of it but are ahppy with less, if you're rich you're struggling to keep it, it means more to you, and you have a lot more of it to lose. But hell, as $23.7 Trillion... we'll all be poor eventually anyway, and that includes you Canada... we're economically tied at the hip so we'll be more than hapy to drag you down with us! :drool: |
Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
OR DO RICH PEOPLE HAVE NO ORGANS!!???!?!?!?!?!
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Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
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Then ill just make my own country, one that has a bunch of diamond deposits and volcanic activity for thermal energy, and a river for water stuff. Ill even get my own ocean! But how the hell do you get $23.7 trillion, thats just insane. You should just get the richest people in America to donate a couple hundred billion dollars. :p |
Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
And then give individuals control of parts of the gov't? Yeah won't work either.
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Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
So what does this really mean? For all I can tell the article is a political sensational headline.
Has $23 trillion actually been spent? Apparently not, only "less than $2 trillion" (obviously not that much...). Is there actually a chance $23 trillion will be spent? What is the actual amount that will be spent? What can be done to bring that number down? What exactly is costing so much money? Are they including any money that can be recouped, such as the TARP money being repaid or Chrysler and GM being sold back to the private sector? All this article has is a big headline so everyone can comment below how Obama is destroying America (just like every president before him has, or so I imagine there has always been some people who the president is). |
Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
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Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
What I mean is the article lacks any depth. What does the maximum $24.7 trillion mean when it won't actually be spent? Specifically, what does it mean to you and me? And more importantly, how much is actually going to be spent?
If this is such an important issue, which I think it is, I think more details are needed. |
Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
I think being rich would be better than being poor or even middle class, and I think we had a whole thread about this. I do believe money can buy happiness, or at least it can buy you cars, houses, maids, vacations, and health. All that should lead to a longer life and would position you better in the empowered portion of society. I can see the stresses that come with that. I can also see me being a sad and buying a roller coaster. Money, fuck yeah!
24 Trillion is an insane number, but I'm not an accountant so I don't know how that number measures out when weighed against inflation and the global economy. We need Bond to post some sexy graphs. Also, as Mana said, how much of that projected hypothetical will actually get spent? I still think this bail out was a huge mistake and America is going to slip from #1 eventually. We still have the world by the balls because of our insane military spending and our position as ambassadors of the global stage but we obviously have lots of problems at home. Shits gonna happen and sadly it looks like its gonna happen in my lifetime. |
Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
Unfortunately, I don't have any handy graphs for this specific article. But I will say that I think the real issue here is not exactly how big the bailout number ends up being, but rather what percent of GDP the national debt becomes, which I can post a graph on at a later date.
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Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
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Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
I don't really get what bailouts are. The original post is a bit fuzzy on that...
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Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
Hey, that's almost as much as the missile defense system!
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Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
Just to clarify, even at Iraq war spending highs under Bush military spending accounted for about 18% of the total budget. With the massive increase in domestic spending that number will likely be far less of a percentage.
Here is a graph to put things in persepctive: ![]() Source: http://money.cnn.com/2009/03/20/news...ion=2009032016 And I've seen estimates higher than $2 Trillion for 2009 but I don't have time to find them at the moment. And thats real dollars, not allocated dollars that are mentioned in the initial post. As for what this means, it means the same thing it meant under Carter: Printing more money = higher inflation. IMO, we've already started to this the results in the dollar cost for oil. Gas is more expensive, but it isn't worth any more than it was before... the dollar is just worth less. Here is an interesting article from TIME's archives (1980): http://www.time.com/time/magazine/ar...1854-7,00.html |
Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
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Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
Well, our debt to national GDP ratio is becoming quite high, but it is still not as high as compared to other countries, such as Japan and some African countries. The real problem is that this is an issue of path dependence. The more money the government prints at an alarmingly quick rate, the more the people become dependent on that government to do the same. It is a very dangerous cycle.
Moreover, this creates the same cyclical relationship that our economy has been undergoing for quite sometime. While Keynesian economics tries to even out the boom and bust cycle, it simply temporarily alleviates a bust into a semi-boom, but then sets the stage for the next bust. The core problem is that these kinds of economic issues morph into political issues, in which the "correct" economic decision is rarely made. But that's how politics works I suppose. |
Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
Could anyone please explain me what is meant with bailout? Thanks.
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Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
Search for "bailouts" at the top of the forum. There are at least 20 thrads dedicated to the subject since September `08.
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Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
Ah, it's the plan to get the housing market back up again? Or something to do with that.
That's a lot of money. For a while I thought it was about the money that the USA owes to (3rd world?) countries. |
Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
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2) Everything is connected. If the housing market was isolated, this severe recession likely would not have been as bad. Instead, mortgages were essentially sold as stocks, and when the mortgages proved to be bad, the effect was systemic to the economy as markets plummeted and insurers could not afford to pay their commitments to the financial institutions as they all went belly up at the same time. |
Re: Bailouts could cost $23+ Trillion... with a "T"
Ah ok, well, that's why I put it before a question mark and in brackets. :)
I think my country owes a lot of poor countries money. |
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