mame
Well-Known Member
fuck yes...can we also go to the metric system....
fuck yes...can we also go to the metric system....
Freidman? We're already "dropping money out of a helicopter".So, the question remains, if socialism works so well in Copenhagen, why doesn't it work here? Surely the answer isn't that we have returned to our founding ideas and Austrian economic principles ... or is it? Is the FED's policy of flooding the nation with new money the policy of Keynes and FDR ... or is it the policy of Friedman, Mises and Hayek?
Uhhh ... that was Milton Freidman the economist, not Freidman the NY Times columnist.Freidman? We're already "dropping money out of a helicopter".
it's funny because your OP sites poverty differences since 1980.
Well, my good sir, the early 1980's is when we first saw the Neo-classicals take hold in American politics. The rest of the world stuck with Kaynesian economic principles (the same ones who got us out of depression in the 30's). Inequality in America has sharply risen in this time frame, not due to liberals, but due to movement conservatism and a bunch of jackasses who thought they could rewrite how economics work based of the premise that they disproved Kaynesianism (they didn't).
Look it up. It's all there.
- Sen. Al Franken
I see, I was thinking of the economist cuz you said Kaynes right before. At least you seem to know a little about economic theory (knowing who Kaynes, Milton Freidman are), I couldn't say the same for many others on these boards... lol.
Uhhh ... that was Milton Freidman the economist, not Freidman the NY Times columnist.
It's a simple spelling error, sue me... It doesn't change anything (including my understanding of the subject).Its Keynes, not KAYnes. Guess you don't know it as well as you think.
Seriously! I never really fucked with the metric system until I started doing hydro. Now I think it's insane that people would want to use anything else.can we also go to the metric system....
It wasn't a spelling error, you have spelled it that way time and time again, and on more than one thread. If you had spelled it correctly even one time it could be construed as a error, but since you have spelled it that way in multiple threads its not a mistake, you truly did not know how it was spelled. And how you were unable to discern that the Friedman being referred to MUST have been an economist especially since his name was in the middle of a bunch of other well known Economists. I actually think you don't know as much about economics as you think you do.It's a simple spelling error, sue me... It doesn't change anything (including my understanding of the subject).
I never said I know everything about economics(I'm a student not a professor), but even with my admittedly limited knowledge of the subject it is clear that many people on these boards lack even this basic knowledge.It wasn't a spelling error, you have spelled it that way time and time again, and on more than one thread. If you had spelled it correctly even one time it could be construed as a error, but since you have spelled it that way in multiple threads its not a mistake, you truly did not know how it was spelled. And how you were unable to discern that the Friedman being referred to MUST have been an economist especially since his name was in the middle of a bunch of other well known Economists. I actually think you don't know as much about economics as you think you do.
from : http://www.speaker.gov/UploadedFiles/JEC_Jobs_Study.pdfWHAT AND HOW TO CUT. Certain kinds of government spending reductions generate significantly larger pro-growth effects than others. For the non-Keynesian effects to be significant, government spending reductions must be viewed as large, credible, and politically difficult to reverse once made. Some examples are:
 Decreasing the number and compensation of government workers. A smaller government workforce increases the available supply of educated, skilled workers for private firms, thus lowering labor costs.
 Eliminating agencies and programs.
 Eliminating transfer payments to firms. Since government transfer payments entice firms to engage in otherwise unprofitable and unproductive activities, eliminating transfer payments will increase efficiency as firms cease these activities.
 Reforming and reducing transfer payments to households. Making major government programs, such as pension and health insurance benefits for the elderly, sustainably solvent will boost real GDP growth by (a) enhancing the credibility of fiscal consolidation plans, and (b) inducing younger workers to work more, save more, and retire later. This is true even if the reforms exempt current beneficiaries, are phased-in slowly, and any short-term spending reductions are very small.
On top of this, the Republicans keep pointing to Sweden as an example and that has turned out to be incorrect. Meanwhile the U.K. who embarked on it's own program of Austerity is feeling more pain.While the tendency for spending cuts to be more effective at driving down debt levels is widely accepted, there is a great deal more controversy concerning the impact of successful consolidation on GDP growth. Although empirical studies have found many consolidations coupled with expansion, the degree to which consolidation drives rather than merely accompanies expansion is disputed. Various mechanisms have been proposed through which consolidation may spur growth, including credibility effects on interest rates and the effects outlined under the expectational view. However, the literature has identified endogeneity issues in many of these studies that may cause them to overstate expansionary effects.
Fair enough. However, I'm not saying our debt isn't a problem... My position has always been that its a problem but a full recovery from recession needs to be tackled in the short term, with the deficit being solved shortly after (you could even tie reform and cuts to targeted spending if you really wanted to do it all at once... this happened during The New Deal as well).dude, almost half of all the income tax collected in the US goes to pay for the interest on all the damn treasuries we have sold. Guess how much is left over to run Government? Government could completely cease right now and every single federal employee could be on the street, every office closed, every politician on permanent vacation and the US citizen will still owe $500 Billion every year. The US needs to roll over 43% of that debt every 12 months. What would happen if the 1 and 2 year yields went to oh I don't know some ridiculously high yield like say .6% and an ungodly 1.6%? it would cost Taxpayer $1 trillion a year just to make the interest payments, mind you that isn't even making a dent into the actual principal of the debt.
Some people will espouse we soak the rich, unfortunately if you took all the money earned by everyone in the USA making over $250k a year you would still only come to $1.3 trillion, which wouldn't even run government for 6 months at the rate we are going. We have DEFICITS of 1.6 TRILLION, in other words we spent every penny in taxes collected and fines and fees and whatever nefarious taxing structure we can come up with and we are still short $1.6 trillion
Then how do you explain this rapid decline in unemployment numbers so quickly? When he came into office 12 million people were unemployed(near 25% unemployment). Prior to to WW2 unemployment was at 14.6% - leaving 8 million still unemployed, yes, but the other 4 million people represent the fastest (non-war induced ala WW2) economic recovery in history. You might have seen me post this before, but it supports this position seemingly flawlessly:FDR didn't do jack shit, unemployment hardly budged until the fucker was nearly DEAD!! FDR was a great con man, conned everyone into believing he and government were going to save the every man.Overall his policies effect came to nil.
sourceROOSEVELT PRE-WWII NEW DEAL
1932 Unemployment Rate: 23.6% (12.8 million total unemployed)
1940 Unemployment Rate: 14.6% (8.1 million total unemployed)
Unemployment Rate Change: -9.0
Total unemployment percentage change: -36.7%
ROOSEVELT WWII
1941 Unemployment Rate: 9.9% (5.5 million total unemployed)
1944 Unemployment Rate: 1.2% (670,000 total unemployed)
Unemployment Rate Change: -8.7
Total unemployment percentage change: -87.9%
TRUMAN
1945 Unemployment Rate: 1.9% (1.0 million total unemployed)
1952 Unemployment Rate: 3.0% (1.8 million total unemployed)
Unemployment Rate Change: +1.1
Total unemployment percentage change: +81.0%
EISENHOWER
1953 Unemployment Rate: 2.9% (1.8 million total unemployed)
1960 Unemployment Rate: 5.5% (3.8 million total unemployed)
Unemployment Rate Change: +2.6%
Total unemployment percentage change: +110.03%
KENNEDY
1961 Unemployment Rate: 6.7% (4.7 million total unemployed)
1963 Unemployment Rate: 5.7% (4.0 million total unemployed)
Unemployment Rate Change: -1.0%
Total unemployment percentage change: -13.6%
JOHNSON
1964 Unemployment Rate: 5.2% (3.7 million total unemployed)
1968 Unemployment Rate: 3.6% (2.8 million total unemployed)
Unemployment Rate Change: -1.6%
Total unemployment percentage change: -25.6%
NIXON
1969 Unemployment Rate: 3.5% (2.8 million total unemployed)
1974 Unemployment Rate: 5.6% (5.1 million total unemployed)
Unemployment Rate Change: +2.1%
Total unemployment percentage change: +82.0%
FORD
1975 Unemployment Rate: 8.5% (7.9 million total unemployed)
1976 Unemployment Rate: 7.7% (7.4 million total unemployed)
Unemployment Rate Change: -0.8%
Total unemployment percentage change: -6.6%
CARTER
1977 Unemployment Rate: 7.1% (6.9 million total unemployed)
1980 Unemployment Rate: 7.1% (7.6 million total unemployed)
Unemployment Rate Change: 0.0
Total unemployment percentage change: +9.24%
REAGAN
1981 Unemployment Rate: 7.6% (8.2 million total unemployed)
1988 Unemployment Rate: 5.5% (6.7 million total unemployed)
Unemployment Rate Change: -2.1%
Total unemployment percentage change: -19.0%
BUSH I
1989 Unemployment Rate: 5.3% (6.5 million total unemployed)
1992 Unemployment Rate: 7.5% (9.6 million total unemployed)
Unemployment Rate Change: +2.2
Total unemployment percentage change: +47.2%
CLINTON
1993 Unemployment Rate: 6.9% (8.9 million total unemployed)
2000 Unemployment Rate: 4.0% (5.6 million total unemployed)
Unemployment Rate Change -2.9
Total unemployment percentage change: -36.3%
It's Keynesian. I'm pretty sure FDR wasn't from Kenya, although you might want to check his birth certificate first.Is it Keyensian or Kenyan?