- Aug 9, 2001
- 4,808
- 1
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Originally posted by: winnar111
Originally posted by: Mani
Originally posted by: winnar111
Originally posted by: Mani
Originally posted by: winnar111
Originally posted by: Mani
Originally posted by: alchemize
OK Mani you stupid fuck - why don't you describe WHY those charts as you seem to think are true, are? Please, enlighten us as to HOW a president enables high stock market returns.
I eagerly await your next bout of stupidfuckishness.
Relax - wouldn't want you to suffer an aneurysm and possibly lose your lone brain cell. Tell you what, because I feel sorry for you, I'll take the time to educate you a little.
There's about a million ways a president can and does affect fiscal policy, which can and does affect stock market returns during his tenure. Just to give you an inkling: Taxation, free trade policy, running a deficit, appointees to treasury secretary and thus fed monetary policy, tax incentives, policy influence over GSEs like Fannie and Freddie, government investment into private industry, government subsidization of industry, and regulation/de-regulation tendencies. ALL of these things are either directly or indirectly influencable by Presidents, and ALL can and do have impacts on stock market performance within 4 years.
Now let's see if you're capable of comprehending this without responding with your usual verbal diarrhea.
The market tanked in 2001. Please explain which of these were implemented/altered by by Bush.
lol...picking an unprecedented and one-of-a-kind event in history and using it to attempt to disprove a president's affect on the economy is just ridiculous. Try actually disproving any of the points I made above.
You don't think 2008 is an unprecedented and one-of-a-kind event? Greenspan has called it exactly that.
You didn't make any points; that's just rattled off a list of nonsense.
If you think was I wrote was nonsense, that evidences that you don't understand it. What part of tax policy doesn't affect an economy in-term? How about fed policy?
Big difference between 2001 and 2008 - 2008 had entirely preventable economic causes. 2001 was an unprecedented attack on American soil. Do you really see no difference there?
S&P 500 in August 2000: 1517
S&P 500 on September 10, 2001: 1092
The markets were tanking well before 9/11. Unless you're referencing tax policy he had yet to implement, and a fed chairman he had yet to appoint for 4 years.
Well then if your question is if he was responsible for the what happened in the first half of 2001 prior to 9/11, obviously no. That was a correction for an irrational buying period during the tech boom.
He WAS responsible for the rest of the activity under his term however, including today. Solely responsible - obviously not, dems and congressional republicans were not exactly innocent bystanders to the Bush directive to increase home ownership artificially.
