people actually wanted to live in liberal-controlled states, fueling the housing bubble, which allowed states to base their budgets on property tax income that has since disappeared in the crash?vast majority of states in trouble are liberal controlled states. why aren't they examples of economic solvency??
people actually wanted to live in liberal-controlled states, fueling the housing bubble, which allowed states to base their budgets on property tax income that has since disappeared in the crash?
Throck, do you think we have this money?
Fail, sorry. This is not meant to Fix "Bankruptcy"(which is a false statement to begin with). It is meant to maintain essential Services during an Economic Downturn. I realize that doesn't invoke the necessary Outrage talking point, but it is the truth of the matter.
Do you honestly for a second believe they will balance the budget when the recession ends (if it ends)?
I see you are trying to attack me in your last paragraph(and no, I dont think you were arguing with me), so I'll take the high road and just ignore that. It makes you look dumb as fuck.
LOL Republicans claim that Obama hasn't helped unemployment and bash him for it, then when he wants to give more money to states so they don't have to lay workers off they bash him for that.
If anyone really thinks this isn't purely political gamesmanship, wake up.
Some federal support to states is understandable for unemployment etc and to cushion the downturn (although has supposidly passed).
However, my complaint has always been that government jobs do not produce GDP. Gov jobs do not generate the income to be self-supporting like private sector jobs. This is another 'temporary', and expensive, patch that does little to nothing to solve the economic problem. We need more GDP to pull us of out of this, to generate jobs and revenue. Throwing our recourses at this is just giving rise to other problems without providing a long term (or real) solution.
Fern
Which results in higher GDP, a teacher at home collecting unemployment and spending that out in the economy, or collecting a full salary and spending that out in the economy?
I don't understand what you're saying about government not producing GDP. If the government buys 100 bombers to drop bombs on the Nazis, how is that production not a part of the GDP?
I sure as hell hope we do get back to the surplus we had at the end of the Clinton administration so we can reduce the national debt.
That would be dependent on not getting a Republican president who "gives back" the surplus to the people in the form of tax cuts .
What makes YOU look dumb as fuck is refusing to understand the very basic concepts of stimulus spending and borrowing from the future to fund the present.
Do you not see that even George W. Bush understood stimulus spending? The current rightwing politicaly posturing hasn't changed that, only convinced gullible people like you that stimulus is bad and government should cut spending during a recession or depression.
You can bet that if conservatives were in power they'd also be deficit spending
I hope one day you post on this forum that you're starting a business with a loan from the bank, so I can ask you if you "have the money" and bash you for borrowing from the future to fund your business. After all, isn't the concept that you'd be better off in the future thanks to borrowing now completely alien to you?
Where is that extra money for a full salary gonna come from?
You wish to leave that out of your above equation.
Sooner or later it's going to be sucked out of the regular economy, damaging our prospects for recovery and growth. Does the phrase "no free lunches" ring a bell?
The government didn't produce those bombs. The government just took OPM (other peoples' money) and purchased the bombs. I.e., the government is just a clearing house, a transfer agent, and it takes a big cut out of the transaction 9in addition to producing exactly zip).
Fern
Yes, and because it will be later and not sooner, it helps us now so that later we'll be better off economically.
Not other peoples' money, borrowed money. It won't be "OPM" until later, by which the "OP" will have more money thanks to the government spending X amount of borrowed money to add X to the GDP.
I disagree. It's not working well at all, not for the huge debt it's running up.It's not "hiding the damage", it's maintaining a stable Economy until it gets back on it's feet. It's working very well.
at a certain point, the solution has got to be spending cuts over printing out more money.
if states have overextended themselves, and I know mine certainly has, I feel like cleaning up the mess is a much preferable long-term solution rather than continuing the clusterfuck on the fed's dime.
Possibly. If the government had surplus funds to begin with things would be much different--and much better--right now. Instead it's basically watching late night tv up to its eyeballs in debt and wondering if that slick talker selling a get rich scheme is worth maxing out the credit card for because sometimes they do work, those schemes, just not most of the time.If the government does nothing and lets the economy take its course, and it tanks even further, then the deficits, federal AND state, will be even worse even though we spent nothing to stimulate the economy. That said, we are in terrible trouble this time because we didn't have fiscal discipline BEFORE the worst recession since the 1930's hit the country, and hence we are now faced with a Hobson's choice where there is no good solution. Whether the federal government should pump in more stimulus money to fix this, and if so, how much, I honestly do not know.
- wolf
Possibly. If the government had surplus funds to begin with things would be much different--and much better--right now. Instead it's basically watching late night tv up to its eyeballs in debt and wondering if that slick talker selling a get rich scheme is worth maxing out the credit card for because sometimes they do work, those schemes, just not most of the time.
That's funnt, because when they did the exact same thing in $trillion stimulous bill it was said to stimulate the economy.
So, no, it's not maintain essential services. It's for political purposes. November is rapidly approaching. Otherwise unemployment figures will look worse (can no longer count each renewed teacher job as 3 or 4 "new jobs") and the unions (AFSCME) want some 'payback' for their support.
Fern
Sandorski -
Why do you Insist on capitalizing Random words in your Posts? Is this Something Canadian or do you Do it just to Stand out?
