Who said the stimulus plan isn't working?

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First

Lifer
Jun 3, 2002
10,518
271
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The jokers decrying the bailouts and stimulus continue to look foolish with each passing week.
 

shira

Diamond Member
Jan 12, 2005
9,500
6
81
Originally posted by: irwincur
Wow, it helped overpaid union jobs that probably won't be there next year anyways. Way to go. It only cost how many tens of millions per job saved... Oh yeah, forget about those that it did not save, you know the tens of millions of people that are still looking for work.

So your point is that unless the stimulus lowers the unemployment rate to 4% or whatever the pre-great-recession level was, the stimulus is a failure?
 

Craig234

Lifer
May 1, 2006
38,548
350
126
Originally posted by: bobsmith1492
I still don't get all the hate against the rich by Craig and others.

Straw man alwert. There is none.

What do you think rich people do with their money, hide it in their pillows?

first, what I 'want them to do with it' has nothing to do with much of anything. What they are going to tent to do with it is to put it where it makes them more.

Second, my issue isn't as much what they do with it, as the goal of our society having a general propserity, and that needs a moderate concentration of wealth, not high or low.

Billionaires' money is in the companies they own. These happen to be the same companies that employ millions of people and develop and provide all kinds of products and services for everyone. The dollar figure you see under, say, Bill Gates' name means that Microsoft is a huge and thriving company, with Gates having a controlling interest in the company.

That's a misleadingly simplistic statement. I find it useful to think of a small town in the old west. In one scenario, imaging one guy who owns everything - the store, the hotel, the mine, the ranch, and everyone works for him. They make enough to eat, but they don't own much of anything, while their profits go into his pocket, and his bank account swell.

In the second scenario, take him out of the picture, and you have many citizens each owning part of the town, each increasing in prosperity - and the town more productive.

It's good to be the guy who owns the town - but not good for the town.

Having the trillions of increased dollars that have gone to the most wealthy instead go to a lot more people who start and work at businesses has more benefit IMO.

There's a basic ignorance in our socity about the harmful effects of the excessive concentration of wealth, the stagnation and suffering it brings.

Not to mention the corruption of the politics as the 800 pound gorilla of the few extremely wealthy use the wealth to set up the system to serve them.

Economics is not a zero-sum game. When one person becomes rich, it does not mean he has stolen it from everyone else.

No, it's not a zero sum game, but excessive contentration of wealth reduces the growth of the pie.

Let's put this another way. If you took every single rich person and taxed 90% of their net worth to give away to the poorest portion of the country, the net effect would be that Microsoft et. al would be owned by millions of people and it would falter and fail quickly. Thousands (millions?) in the computer industry would be adversely affected.

Actually, you would quite possibly create a massive surge in people buying computers and Microsoft products, and they'd thrive.

I hate to burst your bubble, but a guy making $1 billion a year doesn't work twice as hard to make $2 billion, he's not twice as productive if he does. It tends to be about manipulting the system to simply take more pie without adding the same amount to the pie - and their motives aren't just money. That's an ideology, a blind theory not much based in fact, to try to make it simple that somehow there's no problem from increased concentration of wealth.

Put all the trust you want in the poor, but there is a good reason they are poor: they make very bad decisions with their money and do not develop useful skills for the modern world.

I'm not suggesting we make the poor CEO's. I am suggesting that I want to see more prosperity for everyone - and that includes increasing productivity, which spreading the wealth around does better than concentrating it. These are lessons a century old and more, largely, but not well understood by many.

Look what more money for the rich has done - it has simply let them gain more political power, change the economic situation so that our non-productive finance sectory has skyrocketed in its share of the economy, where it moves money around over and over not creating value but skimming some off each time for the rich, while the real productive entities in our economy are starved and shrunk - and you get masses poorer and poorer (or at least not getting a fair share of the gains) while the rich just own a larger share.

I wish I could help you get out of the wrong ideology, but it's not easy.

Edit:

You are blinded, it seems, by the visible rich who build big companies - but unaware that spreading the money a bit more would let more and more people build companies, too.

There's a reason why the FDR policies that TOOK AWAY from the rich led to the explosion of the middle class's wealth and growth in the economy, while the right-wing policies of the 20's created tycoons with far more than they could spend, led to the Great depression, and did not create much real wealth for most.
 

Munky

Diamond Member
Feb 5, 2005
9,372
0
76
Originally posted by: bobsmith1492
I still don't get all the hate against the rich by Craig and others. What do you think rich people do with their money, hide it in their pillows?

Billionaires' money is in the companies they own. These happen to be the same companies that employ millions of people and develop and provide all kinds of products and services for everyone. The dollar figure you see under, say, Bill Gates' name means that Microsoft is a huge and thriving company, with Gates having a controlling interest in the company.

Economics is not a zero-sum game. When one person becomes rich, it does not mean he has stolen it from everyone else. Take Microsoft, again, as an example. Most of their income is from software (let's say Windows and Office). You might say they are stealing money from everyone who buys Office and Windows. But before they developed these programs, no one could buy them in the first place. And, now, no one can force you to buy them. So, Microsoft has created wealth because they created a useful product (since it can be used for so many purposes and speed up and enhance all other kinds of business, research, and production).

This of course does not apply to everyone; Madoff, for example, simply ripped people off (which was illegal by the way).

Let's put this another way. If you took every single rich person and taxed 90% of their net worth to give away to the poorest portion of the country, the net effect would be that Microsoft et. al would be owned by millions of people and it would falter and fail quickly. Thousands (millions?) in the computer industry would be adversely affected.

Put all the trust you want in the poor, but there is a good reason they are poor: they make very bad decisions with their money and do not develop useful skills for the modern world.

Hmm, here's some things the rich do with their money:
1. Buy expensive mansions, cars, yachts, islands, etc....
2. Make "political donations" to congressmen in exchange for favorable policy decisions
3. Establish partnerships, foundations and organizations with the goal of using the money to make even more money.
4. Buy out or merge companies - that usually involves job losses, not gains.

So far, I see nothing in there which directly serves to benefit the middle class average joe, nevermind benefiting the lower class poor, or those who have lost their jobs and homes. So when I see claims that bailing out the speculators on Wall St will somehow boost the economy, it doesn't seem too convincing that it will help the interests of American citizens as a whole, as opposed to just lining the pockets of the rich.
 

Fern

Elite Member
Sep 30, 2003
26,907
174
106
Originally posted by: First
The jokers touting the economy and stimulus continue to look foolish with each passing week.

Fixed.

About 500K job losses each week?

Record foreclosures as of the last quarter reported?

Yeah, it's kick'in man! [/sarcasm]

We're still looking at about 750 Billion in ARMs coming up for reset and no more money for bailouts should they hit/go into default (they are all bundled into MBS's and CDS's). Equally as ominous is the continuing rise in defaults on standard home mortgages due to unemployment.

I'm glad the MSM is no longer bashing the economy, thus making it worse - but I still believe it's too soon to celebrate. Just getting a little bit LESS worse ain't all that hot. That's about as comforting as jumping out of an airplane without a parachute and getting all happy that your rate of fall isn't accelerating as much as it was.

Fern
 

bamacre

Lifer
Jul 1, 2004
21,029
2
81
Originally posted by: bobsmith1492
I still don't get all the hate against the rich by Craig and others. What do you think rich people do with their money, hide it in their pillows?

No, there's merit to their complaints in many cases. We like to think sometimes that it's the poor that suck on the government's tit, but often wealthy are doing the same. For Christ's sake, our whole government has become nothing less than a timeshare owned by a handful of industries.

Where I disagree with them is how we got there, and where to go next.
 

StageLeft

No Lifer
Sep 29, 2000
70,150
5
0
Put all the trust you want in the poor, but there is a good reason they are poor: they make very bad decisions with their money and do not develop useful skills for the modern world.

Not always. Simple case in point what if you were born in Somalia? I bet you'd be poor as fvck and so would I. And since the US is not a perfect nation/economy in which your dreams can all be realized with just a little elbow grease, it's somewhere in between that ideal and Somalia, the end result being that luck/birthdright still plays a huge role in how you end up.

The jokers decrying the bailouts and stimulus continue to look foolish with each passing week.

Foolish to me is that graph the Obama administration put out before the stimulus and promptly creamed in the rear without lube. The truth is nobody has a clue how positive or negative the stimulus has been. However, we can say, if we're being honest, that the economy is certainly much worse than the Obama administration said it would be. And that's going on their numbers, not mine.

Anyway, Craig is right the rich and poor divide continues to get huge and the middle and lower classes in the US are about flat while the increasing size of the US pie trends very heavily toward those at the top.
 

bamacre

Lifer
Jul 1, 2004
21,029
2
81
Originally posted by: Skoorb
The jokers decrying the bailouts and stimulus continue to look foolish with each passing week.

Foolish to me is that graph the Obama administration put out before the stimulus and promptly creamed in the rear without lube. The truth is nobody has a clue how positive or negative the stimulus has been. However, we can say, if we're being honest, that the economy is certainly much worse than the Obama administration said it would be. And that's going on their numbers, not mine.

:thumbsup:

Anyway, Craig is right the rich and poor divide continues to get huge and the middle and lower classes in the US are about flat while the increasing size of the US pie trends very heavily toward those at the top.

Craig is absolutely correct. But again, we'll disagree on why that's happening, and thus the solution, too.
 

Ausm

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
25,213
14
81
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Put all the trust you want in the poor, but there is a good reason they are poor: they make very bad decisions with their money and do not develop useful skills for the modern world.

Not always. Simple case in point what if you were born in Somalia? I bet you'd be poor as fvck and so would I. And since the US is not a perfect nation/economy in which your dreams can all be realized with just a little elbow grease, it's somewhere in between that ideal and Somalia, the end result being that luck/birthdright still plays a huge role in how you end up.

The jokers decrying the bailouts and stimulus continue to look foolish with each passing week.


Anyway, Craig is right the rich and poor divide continues to get huge and the middle and lower classes in the US are about flat while the increasing size of the US pie trends very heavily toward those at the top.

That's because the right likes to pawn off Middle class jobs overseas for the sake of profits.
 

bamacre

Lifer
Jul 1, 2004
21,029
2
81
Originally posted by: Ausm
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Put all the trust you want in the poor, but there is a good reason they are poor: they make very bad decisions with their money and do not develop useful skills for the modern world.

Not always. Simple case in point what if you were born in Somalia? I bet you'd be poor as fvck and so would I. And since the US is not a perfect nation/economy in which your dreams can all be realized with just a little elbow grease, it's somewhere in between that ideal and Somalia, the end result being that luck/birthdright still plays a huge role in how you end up.

The jokers decrying the bailouts and stimulus continue to look foolish with each passing week.


Anyway, Craig is right the rich and poor divide continues to get huge and the middle and lower classes in the US are about flat while the increasing size of the US pie trends very heavily toward those at the top.

That's because the right likes to pawn off Middle class jobs overseas for the sake of profits.

Don't fret.

I'm sure the Rep's and Dem's will fuck up the economy so much that eventually China will be outsourcing jobs here for the sake of profits.

:p
 

Ausm

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
25,213
14
81
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: Ausm
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Put all the trust you want in the poor, but there is a good reason they are poor: they make very bad decisions with their money and do not develop useful skills for the modern world.

Not always. Simple case in point what if you were born in Somalia? I bet you'd be poor as fvck and so would I. And since the US is not a perfect nation/economy in which your dreams can all be realized with just a little elbow grease, it's somewhere in between that ideal and Somalia, the end result being that luck/birthdright still plays a huge role in how you end up.

The jokers decrying the bailouts and stimulus continue to look foolish with each passing week.


Anyway, Craig is right the rich and poor divide continues to get huge and the middle and lower classes in the US are about flat while the increasing size of the US pie trends very heavily toward those at the top.

That's because the right likes to pawn off Middle class jobs overseas for the sake of profits.

Don't fret.

I'm sure the Rep's and Dem's will fuck up the economy so much that eventually China will be outsourcing jobs here for the sake of profits.

:p

lol It's already happening because the dollar is so weak now.

 

First

Lifer
Jun 3, 2002
10,518
271
136
Originally posted by: Fern
Originally posted by: First
The jokers touting the economy and stimulus continue to look foolish with each passing week.

Fixed.

About 500K job losses each week?

Record foreclosures as of the last quarter reported?

Yeah, it's kick'in man! [/sarcasm]

We're still looking at about 750 Billion in ARMs coming up for reset and no more money for bailouts should they hit/go into default (they are all bundled into MBS's and CDS's). Equally as ominous is the continuing rise in defaults on standard home mortgages due to unemployment.

I'm glad the MSM is no longer bashing the economy, thus making it worse - but I still believe it's too soon to celebrate. Just getting a little bit LESS worse ain't all that hot. That's about as comforting as jumping out of an airplane without a parachute and getting all happy that your rate of fall isn't accelerating as much as it was.

Fern

When the hell was 500K job losses per week happening? Maybe you meant per month (which, btw, occurred months ago)? In any case, "if the current ARM mortgages default" is a meaningless statement; they always default, the question is what % do. There's no indication they'll be any worse than historical norms and, certainly, the bailouts and stimulus made things far better than they would have been had mortgage relief for underwater owners not been enacted; and even though just 6% new contracts have been accepted by banks like BOA, it's still far better than the alternative proposition from the opposition, which was that 0% of mortgages be renegotiated. Again, that was all part of the stimulus.

And again, all impossible without bailing out these (admittedly horribly irresponsible) financial institutions that put 60% of $10T financial industry at risk of default. It's why a majority of economists agree the stimulus clearly had a major impact on new mortgages, home buying, and job creation. And it's why those same economists all say we're out/heading out of the recession, with positive GDP growth already here and (hopefully) job creation to begin sometime next year (jobs almost universally lag GDP growth, btw, so that's not an excuse). And besides, let's not pretend that Obama had anything to do with job losses in, say, January or February or even March. Bush era policies (with some terrible holdover Clinton decisions) created a good deal of this boondoggle over the last year. Though, despite Bush's ineptitude and utter failings to create sustainable job growth, he did at least adhere to the bailouts, something history will look well upon him for.

And Fern, you used to be a good poster but you have gone entirely off the deep end since Obama was elected, whether it's the birther nonsense or your baseless notion that the economy hasn't clearly recovered.
 

First

Lifer
Jun 3, 2002
10,518
271
136
Originally posted by: Ausm
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: Ausm
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Put all the trust you want in the poor, but there is a good reason they are poor: they make very bad decisions with their money and do not develop useful skills for the modern world.

Not always. Simple case in point what if you were born in Somalia? I bet you'd be poor as fvck and so would I. And since the US is not a perfect nation/economy in which your dreams can all be realized with just a little elbow grease, it's somewhere in between that ideal and Somalia, the end result being that luck/birthdright still plays a huge role in how you end up.

The jokers decrying the bailouts and stimulus continue to look foolish with each passing week.


Anyway, Craig is right the rich and poor divide continues to get huge and the middle and lower classes in the US are about flat while the increasing size of the US pie trends very heavily toward those at the top.

That's because the right likes to pawn off Middle class jobs overseas for the sake of profits.

Don't fret.

I'm sure the Rep's and Dem's will fuck up the economy so much that eventually China will be outsourcing jobs here for the sake of profits.

:p

lol It's already happening because the dollar is so weak now.

The Chinese yuan is semi-pegged to the dollar and they have absolutely zero interest in seeing the dollar plummet given their $1T+ dollar reserves, so while you said this in jest, it's actually not really accurate.
 

Ozoned

Diamond Member
Mar 22, 2004
5,578
0
0
As of Sept.01, 2009 Only approx 14.5% of the stimulus money had been spent. A little research and you can see that the economy is pretty much on its own. The real stimulus spending hasn't started, and is yet to come. You WILL see a huge up-tick in the economy 3 to 5 months prior to the 2010 elections.

Here is a link to the leading economic indicator of our real economy. It sucks.
 

Infohawk

Lifer
Jan 12, 2002
17,844
1
0
Creating "jobs" is easy. They don't mean much if they aren't creating value though. Government-subsidized jobs don't often create value.
 

SigArms08

Member
Apr 16, 2008
181
0
0
Originally posted by: Ausm
Originally posted by: Skoorb
Put all the trust you want in the poor, but there is a good reason they are poor: they make very bad decisions with their money and do not develop useful skills for the modern world.

Not always. Simple case in point what if you were born in Somalia? I bet you'd be poor as fvck and so would I. And since the US is not a perfect nation/economy in which your dreams can all be realized with just a little elbow grease, it's somewhere in between that ideal and Somalia, the end result being that luck/birthdright still plays a huge role in how you end up.

The jokers decrying the bailouts and stimulus continue to look foolish with each passing week.


Anyway, Craig is right the rich and poor divide continues to get huge and the middle and lower classes in the US are about flat while the increasing size of the US pie trends very heavily toward those at the top.

That's because the right likes to pawn off Middle class jobs overseas for the sake of profits.

I forget, what adminstration formally signed NAFTA into law?
 
Sep 12, 2004
16,852
59
86
Originally posted by: Ausm
That's because the right likes to pawn off Middle class jobs overseas for the sake of profits.
Right on. Business owners on the left would never outsource. Everybody knows this.
 

rudder

Lifer
Nov 9, 2000
19,441
86
91
Originally posted by: loki8481
Originally posted by: Ausm
Originally posted by: loki8481
it's working beyond Joe Biden's wildest dreams.

in related news, expect a chicken in every pot this winter.

Do you have any relevant proof to the contrary?

maybe my understanding of this is wrong, but it seems like the stimulus money didn't "fix" the CA budget problem, it just kicked the can down the road and let them ignore their issues for a few more months. the fact hat California is up shit's creek without a paddle doesn't seem to have changed and job losses as a whole are significantly above where the administration projected them to be.

the construction jobs are an obviously nice boost, but what happens to them once the projects are completed?

The Government can print more Money.

I doubt we can get more loans.. in 2009 it will cost the U.S. Government $383 billion in interest payments on our national debt.

Sure the stimulus saved those jobs. But what does the OP think is gong to happen in the long run? With the CBO projected trillion dollar deficits over the next decade... what do you think debt payments will be on that?
 

totalnoob

Golden Member
Jul 17, 2009
1,389
1
81
The problem is this is all based on artificial and temporary demand. Government expenditure can certainly create jobs in the short run, but it does nothing to fix the structural problems of the economy. As a general rule: Government spending = thousands of visible beneficiaries but MILLIONS of invisible victims

You never see the people who don't start a business due to excessive red tape or high taxation.. You never hear about the people who don't get loans due to the "crowding out" effect of the government siphoning trillions away from the debt market..But you do see people painting walls and do other money-losing projects funded by government spending. They are ALWAYS visible and can be pointed to as signs of "success", but nothing that hide the fact that they are engaged in something that not based on market demand. There is no hiding that all forms of fiscal "stimulus' are draining and diverting resources from the real economy and creating many invisible victims in the process.
 

Ausm

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
25,213
14
81
Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Originally posted by: Ausm
That's because the right likes to pawn off Middle class jobs overseas for the sake of profits.
Right on. Business owners on the left would never outsource. Everybody knows this.


Hey your showing signs of having a brain..:Q
 

BoberFett

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
37,562
9
81
Originally posted by: Ausm
Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Originally posted by: Ausm
That's because the right likes to pawn off Middle class jobs overseas for the sake of profits.
Right on. Business owners on the left would never outsource. Everybody knows this.


Hey your showing signs of having a brain..:Q

Hey, your [sic] not.
 

Jaskalas

Lifer
Jun 23, 2004
36,409
10,716
136
Originally posted by: SigArms08
Originally posted by: Ausm
That's because the right likes to pawn off Middle class jobs overseas for the sake of profits.

I forget, what adminstration formally signed NAFTA into law?

One of which we will not speak. ;)
 

Ausm

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
25,213
14
81
Originally posted by: BoberFett
Originally posted by: Ausm
Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Originally posted by: Ausm
That's because the right likes to pawn off Middle class jobs overseas for the sake of profits.
Right on. Business owners on the left would never outsource. Everybody knows this.


Hey your showing signs of having a brain..:Q

Hey, your [sic] not.

Opinions are like assholes everyone has one ;)